At Corumba our entire party, and all
their belongings, came aboard our good little river
boat, the Nyoac. Christmas Day saw us making our
way steadily up-stream against the strong current,
and between the green and beautiful banks of the upper
Paraguay. The shallow little steamer was jammed
with men, dogs, rifles, partially cured skins, boxes
of provisions, ammunition, tools, and photographic
supplies, bags containing tents, cots, bedding, and
clothes, saddles, hammocks, and the other necessaries
for a trip through the “great wilderness,”
the “Matto Grosso” of western Brazil.
It was a brilliantly clear day, and,
although of course in that latitude and at that season
the heat was intense later on, it was cool and pleasant
in the early morning. We sat on the forward deck,
admiring the trees on the brink of the sheer river
banks, the lush, rank grass of the marshes, and the
many water-birds. The two pilots, one black and
one white, stood at the wheel. Colonel Rondon
read Thomas a Kempis. Kermit, Cherrie, and Miller
squatted outside the railing on the deck over one
paddle-wheel and put the final touches on the jaguar
skins. Fiala satisfied himself that the boxes
and bags were in place. It was probable that
hardship lay in the future; but the day was our own,
and the day was pleasant. In the evening the after-deck,
open all around, where we dined, was decorated with
green boughs and rushes, and we drank the health of
the President of the United States and of the President
of Brazil.
Now and then we passed little ranches
on the river’s edge. This is a fertile
land, pleasant to live in, and any settler who is willing
to work can earn his living. There are mines;
there is water-power; there is abundance of rich soil.
The country will soon be opened by rail. It offers
a fine field for immigration and for agricultural,
mining, and business development; and it has a great
future.
Cherrie and Miller had secured a little
owl a month before in the Chaco, and it was travelling
with them in a basket. It was a dear little bird,
very tame and affectionate. It liked to be handled
and petted; and when Miller, its especial protector,
came into the cabin, it would make queer little noises
as a signal that it wished to be taken up and perched
on his hand. Cherrie and Miller had trapped many
mammals. Among them was a tayra weasel, whitish
above and black below, as big and blood-thirsty as
a fisher-martin; and a tiny opossum no bigger than
a mouse. They had taken four species of opossum,
but they had not found the curious water-opossum which
they had obtained on the rivers flowing into the Caribbean
Sea. This opossum, which is black and white,
swims in the streams like a muskrat or otter, catching
fish and living in burrows which open under water.
Miller and Cherrie were puzzled to know why the young
throve, leading such an existence of constant immersion;
one of them once found a female swimming and diving
freely with four quite well-grown young in her pouch.
We saw on the banks screamers big,
crested waders of archaic type, with spurred wings,
rather short bills, and no especial affinities with
other modern birds. In one meadow by a pond we
saw three marsh-deer, a buck and two does. They
stared at us, with their thickly haired tails raised
on end. These tails are black underneath, instead
of white as in our whitetail deer. One of the
vagaries of the ultraconcealing-colorationists has
been to uphold the (incidentally quite preposterous)
theory that the tail of our deer is colored white
beneath so as to harmonize with the sky and thereby
mislead the cougar or wolf at the critical moment
when it makes its spring; but this marsh-deer shows
a black instead of a white flag, and yet has just as
much need of protection from its enemies, the jaguar
and the cougar. In South America concealing coloration
plays no more part in the lives of the adult deer,
the tamandua, the tapir, the peccary, the jaguar,
and the puma than it plays in Africa in the lives of
such animals as the zebra, the sable antelope, the
wildebeeste, the lion, and the hunting hyena.
Next day we spent ascending the Sao
Lourenco. It was narrower than the Paraguay,
naturally, and the swirling brown current was, if anything,
more rapid. The strange tropical trees, standing
densely on the banks, were matted together by long
bush ropes lianas, or vines, some very
slender and very long. Sometimes we saw brilliant
red or blue flowers, or masses of scarlet berries
on a queer palm-like tree, or an array of great white
blossoms on a much larger tree. In a lagoon bordered
by the taquara bamboo a school of big otters were
playing; when they came to the surface, they opened
their mouths like seals, and made a loud hissing noise.
The crested screamers, dark gray and as large as turkeys,
perched on the very topmost branches of the tallest
trees. Hyacinth macaws screamed harshly as they
flew across the river. Among the trees was the
guan, another peculiar bird as big as a big grouse,
and with certain habits of the wood-grouse, but not
akin to any northern game-bird. The windpipe
of the male is very long, extending down to the end
of the breast-bone, and the bird utters queer guttural
screams. A dead cayman floated down-stream, with
a black vulture devouring it. Capybaras stood
or squatted on the banks; sometimes they stared stupidly
at us; sometimes they plunged into the river at our
approach. At long intervals we passed little clearings.
In each stood a house of palm-logs, with a steeply
pitched roof of palm thatch; and near by were patches
of corn and mandioc. The dusky owner, and perhaps
his family, came out on the bank to watch us as we
passed. It was a hot day the thermometer
on the deck in the shade stood at nearly 100 degrees
Fahrenheit. Biting flies came aboard even when
we were in midstream.
Next day we were ascending the Cuyaba
River. It had begun raining in the night, and
the heavy downpour continued throughout the forenoon.
In the morning we halted at a big cattle-ranch to get
fresh milk and beef. There were various houses,
sheds, and corrals near the river’s edge, and
fifty or sixty milch cows were gathered in one corral.
Spurred plover, or lapwings, strolled familiarly among
the hens. Parakeets and red-headed tanagers lit
in the trees over our heads. A kind of primitive
houseboat was moored at the bank. A woman was
cooking breakfast over a little stove at one end.
The crew were ashore. The boat was one of those
which are really stores, and which travel up and down
these rivers, laden with what the natives most need,
and stopping wherever there is a ranch. They are
the only stores which many of the country-dwellers
see from year’s end to year’s end.
They float down-stream, and up-stream are poled by
their crew, or now and then get a tow from a steamer.
This one had a house with a tin roof; others bear
houses with thatched roofs, or with roofs made of
hides. The river wound through vast marshes broken
by belts of woodland.
Always the two naturalists had something
of interest to tell of their past experience, suggested
by some bird or beast we came across. Black and
golden orioles, slightly crested, of two different
species were found along the river; they nest in colonies,
and often we passed such colonies, the long pendulous
nests hanging from the boughs of trees directly over
the water. Cherrie told us of finding such a colony
built round a big wasp-nest, several feet in diameter.
These wasps are venomous and irritable, and few foes
would dare venture near bird’s-nests that were
under such formidable shelter; but the birds themselves
were entirely unafraid, and obviously were not in any
danger of disagreement with their dangerous protectors.
We saw a dark ibis flying across the bow of the boat,
uttering his deep, two-syllabled note. Miller
told how on the Orinoco these ibises plunder the nests
of the big river-turtles. They are very skilful
in finding where the female turtle has laid her eggs,
scratch them out of the sand, break the shells, and
suck the contents.
It was astonishing to find so few
mosquitoes on these marshes. They did not in
any way compare as pests with the mosquitoes on the
lower Mississippi, the New Jersey coast, the Red River
of the North, or the Kootenay. Back in the forest
near Corumba the naturalists had found them very bad
indeed. Cherrie had spent two or three days on
a mountain-top which was bare of forest; he had thought
there would be few mosquitoes, but the long grass
harbored them (they often swarm in long grass and
bush, even where there is no water), and at night they
were such a torment that as soon as the sun set he
had to go to bed under his mosquito-netting.
Yet on the vast marshes they were not seriously troublesome
in most places. I was informed that they were
not in any way a bother on the grassy uplands, the
high country north of Cuyaba, which from thence stretches
eastward to the coastal region. It is at any
rate certain that this inland region of Brazil, including
the state of Matto Grosso, which we were traversing,
is a healthy region, excellently adapted to settlement;
railroads will speedily penetrate it, and then it
will witness an astonishing development.
On the morning of the 28th we reached
the home buildings of the great Sao Joao fazenda,
the ranch of Senhor Joao da Costa Marques.
Our host himself, and his son, Dom Joao the younger,
who was state secretary of agriculture, and the latter’s
charming wife, and the president of Matto Grosso,
and several other ladies and gentlemen, had come down
the river to greet us, from the city of Cuyaba, several
hundred miles farther up-stream. As usual, we
were treated with whole-hearted and generous hospitality.
Some miles below the ranch-house the party met us,
on a stern-wheel steamboat and a launch, both decked
with many flags. The handsome white ranch-house
stood only a few rods back from the river’s
brink, in a grassy opening dotted with those noble
trees, the royal palms. Other trees, buildings
of all kinds, flower-gardens, vegetable-gardens, fields,
corrals, and enclosures with high white walls stood
near the house. A detachment of soldiers or state
police, with a band, were in front of the house, and
two flagpoles, one with the Brazilian flag already
hoisted. The American flag was run up on the
other as I stepped ashore, while the band played the
national anthems of the two countries. The house
held much comfort; and the comfort was all the more
appreciated because even indoors the thermometer stood
at 97 degrees F. In the late afternoon heavy rain
fell, and cooled the air. We were riding at the
time. Around the house the birds were tame:
the parrots and parakeets crowded and chattered in
the tree tops; jacanas played in the wet ground just
back of the garden; ibises and screamers called loudly
in the swamps a little distance off.
Until we came actually in sight of
this great ranch-house we had been passing through
a hot, fertile, pleasant wilderness, where the few
small palm-roofed houses, each in its little patch
of sugar-cane, corn, and mandioc, stood very many
miles apart. One of these little houses stood
on an old Indian mound, exactly like the mounds which
form the only hillocks along the lower Mississippi,
and which are also of Indian origin. These occasional
Indian mounds, made ages ago, are the highest bits
of ground in the immense swamps of the upper Paraguay
region. There are still Indian tribes in this
neighborhood. We passed an Indian fishing village
on the edge of the river, with huts, scaffoldings
for drying the fish, hammocks, and rude tables.
They cultivated patches of bananas and sugar-cane.
Out in a shallow place in the river was a scaffolding
on which the Indians stood to spear fish. The
Indians were friendly, peaceable souls, for the most
part dressed like the poorer classes among the Brazilians.
Next morning there was to have been
a great rodeo or round-up, and we determined to have
a hunt first, as there were still several kinds of
beasts of the chase, notably tapirs and peccaries,
of which the naturalists desired specimens. Dom
Joao, our host, and his son accompanied us. Theirs
is a noteworthy family. Born in Matto Grosso,
in the tropics, our host had the look of a northerner
and, although a grandfather, he possessed an abounding
vigor and energy such as very few men of any climate
or surroundings do possess. All of his sons are
doing well. The son who was with us was a stalwart,
powerful man, a pleasant companion, an able public
servant, a finished horseman, and a skilled hunter.
He carried a sharp spear, not a rifle, for in Matto
Grosso it is the custom in hunting the jaguar for riflemen
and spearmen to go in at him together when he turns
at bay, the spearman holding him off if the first
shot fails to stop him, so that another shot can be
put in. Altogether, our host and his son reminded
one of the best type of American ranchmen and planters,
of those planters and ranchmen who are adepts in bold
and manly field sports, who are capital men of business,
and who also often supply to the state skilled and
faithful public servants. The hospitality the
father and son extended to us was patriarchal:
neither, for instance, would sit at table with their
guests at the beginning of the formal meals; instead
they exercised a close personal supervision over the
feast. Our charming hostess, however, sat at
the head of the table.
At six in the morning we started,
all of us on fine horses. The day was lowering
and overcast. A dozen dogs were with us, but only
one or two were worth anything. Three or four
ordinary countrymen, the ranch hands, or vaqueiros,
accompanied us; they were mainly of Indian blood,
and would have been called péons, or caboclos,
in other parts of Brazil, but here were always spoken
to and of as “camaradas.” They
were, of course, chosen from among the men who were
hunters, and each carried his long, rather heavy and
clumsy jaguar-spear. In front rode our vigorous
host and his strapping son, the latter also carrying
a jaguar-spear. The bridles and saddles of the
big ranchmen and of the gentlefolk generally were
handsome and were elaborately ornamented with silver.
The stirrups, for instance, were not only of silver,
but contained so much extra metal in ornamented bars
and rings that they would have been awkward for less-practised
riders. Indeed, as it was, they were adapted
only for the tips of boots with long, pointed toes,
and were impossible for our feet; our hosts’
stirrups were long, narrow silver slippers. The
camaradas, on the other hand, had jim-crow saddles
and bridles, and rusty little iron stirrups into which
they thrust their naked toes. But all, gentry
and commonalty alike, rode equally well and with the
same skill and fearlessness. To see our hosts
gallop at headlong speed over any kind of country toward
the sound of the dogs with their quarry at bay, or
to see them handle their horses in a morass, was a
pleasure. It was equally a pleasure to see a
camarada carrying his heavy spear, leading a hound
in a leash, and using his machete to cut his way through
the tangled vine-ropes of a jungle, all at the same
time and all without the slightest reference to the
plunges, and the odd and exceedingly jerky behavior,
of his wild, half-broken horse for on such
a ranch most of the horses are apt to come in the
categories of half-broken or else of broken-down.
One dusky tatterdemalion wore a pair of boots from
which he had removed the soles, his bare, spur-clad
feet projecting from beneath the uppers. He was
on a little devil of a stallion, which he rode blindfold
for a couple of miles, and there was a regular circus
when he removed the bandage; but evidently it never
occurred to him that the animal was hardly a comfortable
riding-horse for a man going out hunting and encumbered
with a spear, a machete, and other belongings.
The eight hours that we were out we
spent chiefly in splashing across the marshes, with
excursions now and then into vine-tangled belts and
clumps of timber. Some of the bayous we had to
cross were uncomfortably boggy. We had to lead
the horses through one, wading ahead of them; and
even so two of them mired down, and their saddles
had to be taken off before they could be gotten out.
Among the marsh plants were fields and strips of the
great caete rush. These caete flags towered above
the other and lesser marsh plants. They were
higher than the heads of the horsemen. Their two
or three huge banana-like leaves stood straight up
on end. The large brilliant flowers
orange, red, and yellow were joined into
a singularly shaped and solid string or cluster.
Humming-birds buzzed round these flowers; one species,
the sickle-billed hummer, has its bill especially adapted
for use in these queerly shaped blossoms and gets
its food only from them, never appearing around any
other plant.
The birds were tame, even those striking
and beautiful birds which under man’s persecution
are so apt to become scarce and shy. The huge
jabiru storks, stalking through the water with
stately dignity, sometimes refused to fly until we
were only a hundred yards off; one of them flew over
our heads at a distance of thirty or forty yards.
The screamers, crying curu-curu, and the ibises, wailing
dolefully, came even closer. The wonderful hyacinth
macaws, in twos and threes, accompanied us at times
for several hundred yards, hovering over our heads
and uttering their rasping screams. In one wood
we came on the black howler monkey. The place
smelt almost like a menagerie. Not watching with
sufficient care I brushed against a sapling on which
the venomous fire-ants swarmed. They burnt the
skin like red-hot cinders, and left little sores.
More than once in the drier parts of the marsh we
met small caymans making their way from one pool to
another. My horse stepped over one before I saw
it. The dead carcasses of others showed that
on their wanderings they had encountered jaguars
or human foes.
We had been out about three hours
when one of the dogs gave tongue in a large belt of
woodland and jungle to the left of our line of march
through the marsh. The other dogs ran to the sound,
and after a while the long barking told that the thing,
whatever it was, was at bay or else in some refuge.
We made our way toward the place on foot. The
dogs were baying excitedly at the mouth of a huge hollow
log, and very short examination showed us that there
were two peccaries within, doubtless a boar and sow.
However, just at this moment the peccaries bolted
from an unsuspected opening at the other end of the
log, dove into the tangle, and instantly disappeared
with the hounds in full cry after them. It was
twenty minutes later before we again heard the pack
baying. With much difficulty, and by the incessant
swinging of the machetes, we opened a trail through
the network of vines and branches. This time
there was only one peccary, the boar. He was at
bay in a half-hollow stump. The dogs were about
his head, raving with excitement, and it was not possible
to use the rifle; so I borrowed the spear of Dom Joao
the younger, and killed the fierce little boar therewith.
This was an animal akin to our collared
peccary, smaller and less fierce than its white-jawed
kinsfolk. It is a valiant and truculent little
beast, nevertheless, and if given the chance will bite
a piece the size of a teacup out of either man or
dog. It is found singly or in small parties,
feeds on roots, fruits, grass, and delights to make
its home in hollow logs. If taken young it makes
an affectionate and entertaining pet. When the
two were in the hollow log we heard them utter a kind
of moaning, or menacing, grunt, long drawn.
An hour or two afterward we unexpectedly
struck the fresh tracks of two jaguars and at
once loosed the dogs, who tore off yelling, on the
line of the scent. Unfortunately, just at this
moment the clouds burst and a deluge of rain drove
in our faces. So heavy was the downpour that
the dogs lost the trail and we lost the dogs.
We found them again only owing to one of our caboclos;
an Indian with a queer Mongolian face, and no brain
at all that I could discover, apart from his special
dealings with wild creatures, cattle, and horses.
He rode in a huddle of rags; but nothing escaped his
eyes, and he rode anything anywhere. The downpour
continued so heavily that we knew the rodeo had been
abandoned, and we turned our faces for the long, dripping,
splashing ride homeward. Through the gusts of
driving rain we could hardly see the way. Once
the rain lightened, and half a mile away the sunshine
gleamed through a rift in the leaden cloud-mass.
Suddenly in this rift of shimmering brightness there
appeared a flock of beautiful white egrets. With
strong, graceful wing-beats the birds urged their
flight, their plumage flashing in the sun. They
then crossed the rift and were swallowed in the gray
gloom of the day.
On the marsh the dogs several times
roused capybaras. Where there were no ponds of
sufficient size the capybaras sought refuge in flight
through the tangled marsh. They ran well.
Kermit and Fiala went after one on foot, full-speed,
for a mile and a half, with two hounds which then
bayed it literally bayed it, for the capybara
fought with the courage of a gigantic woodchuck.
If the pack overtook a capybara, they of course speedily
finished it; but a single dog of our not very valorous
outfit was not able to overmatch its shrill-squeaking
opponent.
Near the ranch-house, about forty
feet up in a big tree, was a jabiru’s nest containing
young jabirus. The young birds exercised
themselves by walking solemnly round the edge of the
nest and opening and shutting their wings. Their
heads and necks were down-covered, instead of being
naked like those of their parents. Fiala wished
to take a moving-picture of them while thus engaged,
and so, after arranging his machine, he asked Harper
to rouse the young birds by throwing a stick up to
the nest. He did so, whereupon one young jabiru
hastily opened its wings in the desired fashion, at
the same time seizing the stick in its bill!
It dropped it at once, with an air of comic disappointment,
when it found that the stick was not edible.
There were many strange birds round
about. Toucans were not uncommon. I
have never seen any other bird take such grotesque
and comic attitudes as the toucan. This day I
saw one standing in the top of a tree with the big
bill pointing straight into the air and the tail also
cocked perpendicularly. The toucan is a born comedian.
On the river and in the ponds we saw the finfoot,
a bird with feet like a grebe and bill and tail like
those of a darter, but, like so many South American
birds, with no close affiliations among other species.
The exceedingly rich bird fauna of South America contains
many species which seem to be survivals from a very
remote geologic past, whose kinsfolk have perished
under the changed conditions of recent ages; and in
the case of many, like the hoatzin and screamer, their
like is not known elsewhere. Herons of many species
swarmed in this neighborhood. The handsomest
was the richly colored tiger bittern. Two other
species were so unlike ordinary herons that I did not
recognize them as herons at all until Cherrie told
me what they were. One had a dark body, a white-speckled
or ocellated neck, and a bill almost like that of
an ibis. The other looked white, but was really
mauve-colored, with black on the head. When perched
on a tree it stood like an ibis; and instead of the
measured wing-beats characteristic of a heron’s
flight, it flew with a quick, vigorous flapping of
the wings. There were queer mammals, too, as
well as birds. In the fields Miller trapped mice
of a kind entirely new.
Next morning the sky was leaden, and
a drenching rain fell as we began our descent of the
river. The rainy season had fairly begun.
For our good fortune we were still where we had the
cabins aboard the boat, and the ranch-house, in which
to dry our clothes and soggy shoes; but in the intensely
humid atmosphere, hot and steaming, they stayed wet
a long time, and were still moist when we put them
on again. Before we left the house where we had
been treated with such courteous hospitality the
finest ranch-house in Matto Grosso, on a huge ranch
where there are some sixty thousand head of horned
cattle the son of our host, Dom Joao the
younger, the jaguar-hunter, presented me with two
magnificent volumes on the palms of Brazil, the work
of Doctor Barboso Rodriguez, one-time director
of the Botanical Gardens at Rio Janeiro. The
two folios were in a box of native cedar. No gift
more appropriate, none that I would in the future
value more as a reminder of my stay in Matto Grosso,
could have been given me.
All that afternoon the rain continued.
It was still pouring in torrents when we left the
Cuyaba for the Sao Lourenco and steamed up the latter
a few miles before anchoring; Dom Joao the younger
had accompanied us in his launch. The little
river steamer was of very open build, as is necessary
in such a hot climate; and to keep things dry necessitated
also keeping the atmosphere stifling. The German
taxidermist who was with Colonel Rondon’s party,
Reinisch, a very good fellow from Vienna, sat on a
stool, alternately drenched with rain and sweltering
with heat, and muttered to himself: “Ach,
Schweinerei!”
Two small caymans, of the common species,
with prominent eyes, were at the bank where we moored,
and betrayed an astonishing and stupid tameness.
Neither the size of the boat nor the commotion caused
by the paddles in any way affected them. They
lay inshore, not twenty feet from us, half out of
water; they paid not the slightest heed to our presence,
and only reluctantly left when repeatedly poked at,
and after having been repeatedly hit with clods of
mud and sticks; and even then one first crawled up
on shore, to find out if thereby he could not rid
himself of the annoyance we caused him.
Next morning it was still raining,
but we set off on a hunt, anyway, going afoot.
A couple of brown camaradas led the way, and
Colonel Rondon, Dom Joao, Kermit, and I followed.
The incessant downpour speedily wet us to the skin.
We made our way slowly through the forest, the machetes
playing right and left, up and down, at every step,
for the trees were tangled in a network of vines and
creepers. Some of the vines were as thick as
a man’s leg. Mosquitoes hummed about us,
the venomous fire-ants stung us, the sharp spines of
a small palm tore our hands afterward some
of the wounds festered. Hour after hour we thus
walked on through the Brazilian forest. We saw
monkeys, the common yellowish kind, a species of cebus;
a couple were shot for the museum and the others raced
off among the upper branches of the trees. Then
we came on a party of coatis, which look like
reddish, long-snouted, long-tailed, lanky raccoons.
They were in the top of a big tree. One, when
shot at and missed, bounced down to the ground, and
ran off through the bushes; Kermit ran after it and
secured it. He came back, to find us peering
hopelessly up into the tree top, trying to place where
the other coatis were. Kermit solved the
difficulty by going up along some huge twisted lianas
for forty or fifty feet and exploring the upper branches;
whereupon down came three other coatis through
the branches, one being caught by the dogs and the
other two escaping. Coatis fight savagely
with both teeth and claws. Miller told us that
he once saw one of them kill a dog. They feed
on all small mammals, birds, and reptiles, and even
on some large ones; they kill iguanas; Cherrie
saw a rattling chase through the trees, a coati following
an iguana at full speed. We heard the rush of
a couple of tapirs, as they broke away in the jungle
in front of the dogs and headed, according to their
custom, for the river; but we never saw them.
One of the party shot a bush deer a very
pretty, graceful creature, smaller than our whitetail
deer, but kin to it and doubtless the southernmost
representative of the whitetail group.
The whitetail deer using
the word to designate a group of deer which can neither
be called a subgenus with many species, nor a widely
spread species diverging into many varieties is
the only North American species which has spread down
into and has outlying representatives in South America.
It has been contended that the species has spread
from South America northward. I do not think so;
and the specimen thus obtained furnished a probable
refutation of the theory. It was a buck, and
had just shed its small antlers. The antlers
are, therefore, shed at the same time as in the north,
and it appears that they are grown at the same time
as in the north. Yet this variety now dwells
in the tropics south of the equator, where the spring,
and the breeding season for most birds, comes at the
time of the northern fall in September, October, and
November. That the deer is an intrusive immigrant,
and that it has not yet been in South America long
enough to change its mating season in accordance with
the climate, as the birds geologically
doubtless very old residents have changed
their breeding season, is rendered probable by the
fact that it conforms so exactly in the time of its
antler growth to the universal rule which obtains
in the great arctogeal realm, where deer of many species
abound and where the fossil forms show that they have
long existed. The marsh-deer, which has diverged
much further from the northern type than this bush
deer (its horns show a likeness to those of a blacktail),
often keeps its antlers until June or July, although
it begins to grow them again in August; however, too
much stress must not be laid on this fact, inasmuch
as the wapiti and the cow caribou both keep their
antlers until spring. The specialization of the
marsh-deer, by the way, is further shown in its hoofs,
which, thanks to its semi-aquatic mode of life, have
grown long, like those of such African swamp antelopes
as the lechwe and situtunga.
Miller, when we presented the monkeys
to him, told us that the females both of these monkeys
and of the howlers themselves took care of the young,
the males not assisting them, and moreover that when
the young one was a male he had always found the mother
keeping by herself, away from the old males.
On the other hand, among the marmosets he found the
fathers taking as much care of the young as the mothers;
if the mother had twins, the father would usually
carry one, and sometimes both, around with him.
After we had been out four hours our
camaradas got lost; three several times they
travelled round in a complete circle; and we had to
set them right with the compass. About noon the
rain, which had been falling almost without interruption
for forty-eight hours, let up, and in an hour or two
the sun came out. We went back to the river, and
found our rowboat. In it the hounds a
motley and rather worthless lot and the
rest of the party were ferried across to the opposite
bank, while Colonel Rondon and I stayed in the boat,
on the chance that a tapir might be roused and take
to the river. However, no tapir was found; Kermit
killed a collared peccary, and I shot a capybara representing
a color-phase the naturalists wished.
Next morning, January 1, 1914, we
were up at five and had a good New Year’s Day
breakfast of hardtack, ham, sardines, and coffee before
setting out on an all day’s hunt on foot.
I much feared that the pack was almost or quite worthless
for jaguars, but there were two or three of the
great spotted cats in the neighborhood and it seemed
worth while to make a try for them anyhow. After
an hour or two we found the fresh tracks of two, and
after them we went. Our party consisted of Colonel
Rondon, Lieutenant Rogaciano an excellent
man, himself a native of Matto Grosso, of old Matto
Grosso stock two others of the party from
the Sao Joao ranch, Kermit, and myself, together with
four dark-skinned camaradas, cowhands from the
same ranch. We soon found that the dogs would
not by themselves follow the jaguar trail; nor would
the camaradas, although they carried spears.
Kermit was the one of our party who possessed the
requisite speed, endurance, and eyesight, and accordingly
he led. Two of the dogs would follow the track
half a dozen yards ahead of him, but no farther; and
two of the camaradas could just about keep up
with him. For an hour we went through thick jungle,
where the machetes were constantly at work. Then
the trail struck off straight across the marshes, for
jaguars swim and wade as freely as marsh-deer.
It was a hard walk. The sun was out. We
were drenched with sweat. We were torn by the
spines of the innumerable clusters of small palms
with thorns like needles. We were bitten by the
hosts of fire-ants, and by the mosquitoes, which we
scarcely noticed where the fire-ants were found, exactly
as all dread of the latter vanished when we were menaced
by the big red wasps, of which a dozen stings will
disable a man, and if he is weak or in bad health
will seriously menace his life. In the marsh we
were continually wading, now up to our knees, now
up to our hips. Twice we came to long bayous
so deep that we had to swim them, holding our rifles
above water in our right hands. The floating masses
of marsh grass, and the slimy stems of the water-plants,
doubled our work as we swam, cumbered by our clothing
and boots and holding our rifles aloft. One result
of the swim, by the way, was that my watch, a veteran
of Cuba and Africa, came to an indignant halt.
Then on we went, hampered by the weight of our drenched
clothes while our soggy boots squelched as we walked.
There was no breeze. In the undimmed sky the sun
stood almost overhead. The heat beat on us in
waves. By noon I could only go forward at a slow
walk, and two of the party were worse off than I was.
Kermit, with the dogs and two camaradas close
behind him, disappeared across the marshes at a trot.
At last, when he was out of sight, and it was obviously
useless to follow him, the rest of us turned back
toward the boat. The two exhausted members of
the party gave out, and we left them under a tree.
Colonel Rondon and Lieutenant Rogaciano were not much
tired; I was somewhat tired, but was perfectly able
to go for several hours more if I did not try to go
too fast; and we three walked on to the river, reaching
it about half past four, after eleven hours’
stiff walking with nothing to eat. We were soon
on the boat. A relief party went back for the
two men under the tree, and soon after it reached
them Kermit also turned up with his hounds and his
camaradas trailing wearily behind him. He
had followed the jaguar trail until the dogs were
so tired that even after he had bathed them, and then
held their noses in the fresh footprints, they would
pay no heed to the scent. A hunter of scientific
tastes, a hunter-naturalist, or even an outdoors naturalist,
or faunal naturalist interested in big mammals, with
a pack of hounds such as those with which Paul Rainey
hunted lion and leopard in Africa, or such a pack as
the packs of Johnny Goff and Jake Borah with which
I hunted cougar, lynx, and bear in the Rockies, or
such packs as those of the Mississippi and Louisiana
planters with whom I have hunted bear, wild-cat, and
deer in the cane-brakes of the lower Mississippi,
would not only enjoy fine hunting in these vast marshes
of the upper Paraguay, but would also do work of real
scientific value as regards all the big cats.
Only a limited number of the naturalists
who have worked in the tropics have had any experience
with the big beasts whose life-histories possess
such peculiar interest. Of all the biologists
who have seriously studied the South American fauna
on the ground, Bates probably rendered most service;
but he hardly seems even to have seen the animals
with which the hunter is fairly familiar. His
interests, and those of the other biologists of his
kind, lay in other directions. In consequence,
in treating of the life-histories of the very interesting
big game, we have been largely forced to rely either
on native report, in which acutely accurate observation
is invariably mixed with wild fable, or else on the
chance remarks of travellers or mere sportsmen, who
had not the training to make them understand even
what it was desirable to observe. Nowadays there
is a growing proportion of big-game hunters, of sportsmen,
who are of the Schilling, Selous, and Shiras type.
These men do work of capital value for science.
The mere big-game butcher is tending to disappear as
a type. On the other hand, the big-game hunter
who is a good observer, a good field naturalist, occupies
at present a more important position than ever before,
and it is now recognized that he can do work which
the closest naturalist cannot do. The big-game
hunter of this type and the outdoors, faunal naturalist,
the student of the life-histories of big mammals,
have open to them in South America a wonderful field
in which to work.
The fire-ants, of which I have above
spoken, are generally found on a species of small
tree or sapling, with a greenish trunk. They bend
the whole body as they bite, the tail and head being
thrust downward. A few seconds after the bite
the poison causes considerable pain; later it may
make a tiny festering sore. There is certainly
the most extraordinary diversity in the traits by
which nature achieves the perpetuation of species.
Among the warrior and predaceous insects the prowess
is in some cases of such type as to render the possessor
practically immune from danger. In other cases
the condition of its exercise may normally be the
sacrifice of the life of the possessor. There
are wasps that prey on formidable fighting spiders,
which yet instinctively so handle themselves that
the prey practically never succeeds in either defending
itself or retaliating, being captured and paralyzed
with unerring efficiency and with entire security to
the wasp. The wasp’s safety is absolute.
On the other hand, these fighting ants, including
the soldiers even among the termites, are frantically
eager for a success which generally means their annihilation;
the condition of their efficiency is absolute indifference
to their own security. Probably the majority
of the ants that actually lay hold on a foe suffer
death in consequence; certainly they not merely run
the risk of but eagerly invite death.
The following day we descended the
Sao Lourenco to its junction with the Paraguay, and
once more began the ascent of the latter. At one
cattle-ranch where we stopped, the troupials, or big
black and yellow orioles, had built a large colony
of their nests on a dead tree near the primitive little
ranch-house. The birds were breeding; the old
ones were feeding the young. In this neighborhood
the naturalists found many birds that were new to
them, including a tiny woodpecker no bigger than a
ruby-crowned kinglet. They had collected two night
monkeys nocturnal monkeys, not as agile
as the ordinary monkey; these two were found at dawn,
having stayed out too late.
The early morning was always lovely
on these rivers, and at that hour many birds and beasts
were to be seen. One morning we saw a fine marsh
buck, holding his head aloft as he stared at us, his
red coat vivid against the green marsh. Another
of these marsh-deer swam the river ahead of us; I
shot at it as it landed, and ought to have got it,
but did not. As always with these marsh-deer and
as with so many other deer I was struck
by the revealing or advertising quality of its red
coloration; there was nothing in its normal surroundings
with which this coloration harmonized; so far as it
had any effect whatever it was always a revealing
and not a concealing effect. When the animal
fled the black of the erect tail was an additional
revealing mark, although not of such startlingly advertising
quality as the flag of the whitetail. The whitetail,
in one of its forms, and with the ordinary whitetail
custom of displaying the white flag as it runs, is
found in the immediate neighborhood of the swamp-deer.
It has the same foes. Evidently it is of no survival
consequence whether the running deer displays a white
or a black flag. Any competent observer of big
game must be struck by the fact that in the great majority
of the species the coloration is not concealing, and
that in many it has a highly revealing quality.
Moreover, if the spotted or striped young represent
the ancestral coloration, and if, as seems probable,
the spots and stripes have, on the whole, some slight
concealing value, it is evident that in the life history
of most of these large mammals, both among those that
prey and those that are preyed on, concealing coloration
has not been a survival factor; throughout the ages
during which they have survived they have gradually
lost whatever of concealing coloration they may once
have had if any and have developed
a coloration which under present conditions has no
concealing and perhaps even has a revealing quality,
and which in all probability never would have had
a concealing value in any “environmental complex”
in which the species as a whole lived during its ancestral
development. Indeed, it seems astonishing, when
one observes these big beasts and big waders
and other water-birds in their native surroundings,
to find how utterly non-harmful their often strikingly
revealing coloration is. Evidently the various
other survival factors, such as habit, and in many
cases cover, etc., are of such overmastering
importance that the coloration is generally of no
consequence whatever, one way or the other, and is
only very rarely a factor of any serious weight.
The junction of the Sao Lourenco and
the Paraguay is a day’s journey above Corumba.
From Corumba there is a regular service by shallow
steamers to Cuyaba, at the head of one fork, and to
Sao Luis de Caceres, at the head of the other.
The steamers are not powerful and the voyage to each
little city takes a week. There are other forks
that are navigable. Above Cuyaba and Caceres launches
go up-stream for several days’ journey, except
during the dryest parts of the season. North
of this marshy plain lies the highland, the Plan Alto,
where the nights are cool and the climate healthy.
But I wish emphatically to record my view that these
marshy plains, although hot, are also healthy; and,
moreover, the mosquitoes, in most places, are not in
sufficient numbers to be a serious pest, although of
course there must be nets for protection against them
at night. The country is excellently suited for
settlement, and offers a remarkable field for cattle-growing.
Moreover, it is a paradise for water-birds and for
many other kinds of birds, and for many mammals.
It is literally an ideal place in which a field naturalist
could spend six months or a year. It is readily
accessible, it offers an almost virgin field for work,
and the life would be healthy as well as delightfully
attractive. The man should have a steam-launch.
In it he could with comfort cover all parts of the
country from south of Corumbra to north of Cuyaba
and Caceres. There would have to be a good deal
of collecting (although nothing in the nature of butchery
should be tolerated), for the region has only been
superficially worked, especially as regards mammals.
But if the man were only a collector he would leave
undone the part of the work best worth doing.
The region offers extraordinary opportunities for
the study of the life-histories of birds which, because
of their size, their beauty, or their habits, are
of exceptional interest. All kinds of problems
would be worked out. For example, on the morning
of the 3rd, as we were ascending the Paraguay, we
again and again saw in the trees on the bank big nests
of sticks, into and out of which parakeets were flying
by the dozen. Some of them had straws or twigs
in their bills. In some of the big globular nests
we could make out several holes of exit or entrance.
Apparently these parakeets were building or remodelling
communal nests; but whether they had themselves built
these nests, or had taken old nests and added to or
modified them, we could not tell. There was so
much of interest all along the banks that we were continually
longing to stop and spend days where we were.
Mixed flocks of scores of cormorants and darters covered
certain trees, both at sunset and after sunrise.
Although there was no deep forest, merely belts or
fringes of trees along the river, or in patches back
of it, we frequently saw monkeys in this riverine
tree-fringe active common monkeys and black
howlers of more leisurely gait. We saw caymans
and capybaras sitting socially near one another on
the sandbanks. At night we heard the calling
of large flights of tree-ducks. These were now
the most common of all the ducks, although there were
many muscovy ducks also. The evenings were pleasant
and not hot, as we sat on the forward deck; there
was a waxing moon. The screamers were among the
most noticeable birds. They were noisy; they perched
on the very tops of the trees, not down among the
branches; and they were not shy. They should
be carefully protected by law, for they readily become
tame, and then come familiarly round the houses.
From the steamer we now and then saw beautiful orchids
in the trees on the river bank.
One afternoon we stopped at the home
buildings or headquarters of one of the great outlying
ranches of the Brazil Land and Cattle Company, the
Farquahar syndicate, under the management of Murdo
Mackenzie than whom we have in the United
States no better citizen or more competent cattleman.
On this ranch there are some seventy thousand head
of stock. We were warmly greeted by McLean, the
head of the ranch, and his assistant Ramsey, an old
Texan friend. Among the other assistants, all
equally cordial, were several Belgians and Frenchmen.
The hands were Paraguayans and Brazilians, and a few
Indians a hard-bit set, each of whom always
goes armed and knows how to use his arms, for there
are constant collisions with cattle thieves from across
the Bolivian border, and the ranch has to protect
itself. These cowhands, vaqueiros, were
of the type with which we were now familiar: dark-skinned,
lean, hard-faced men, in slouch-hats, worn shirts and
trousers, and fringed leather aprons, with heavy spurs
on their bare feet. They are wonderful riders
and ropers, and fear neither man nor beast. I
noticed one Indian vaqueiro standing in exactly
the attitude of a Shilluk of the White Nile, with
the sole of one foot against the other leg, above
the knee. This is a region with extraordinary
possibilities of cattle-raising.
At this ranch there was a tannery;
a slaughter-house; a cannery; a church; buildings
of various kinds and all degrees of comfort for the
thirty or forty families who made the place their headquarters;
and the handsome, white, two-story big house, standing
among lemon-trees and flamboyants on the river-brink.
There were all kinds of pets around the house.
The most fascinating was a wee, spotted fawn which
loved being petted. Half a dozen curassows of
different species strolled through the rooms; there
were also parrots of several different species, and
immediately outside the house four or five herons,
with unclipped wings, which would let us come within
a few feet and then fly gracefully off, shortly afterward
returning to the same spot. They included big
and little white egrets and also the mauve and pearl-colored
heron, with a partially black head and many-colored
bill, which flies with quick, repeated wing-flappings,
instead of the usual slow heron wing-beats.
In the warehouse were scores of skins
of jaguar, puma, ocelot, and jaguarundi, and one skin
of the big, small-toothed red wolf. These were
all brought in by the cowhands and by friendly Indians,
a price being put on each, as they destroyed the stock.
The jaguars occasionally killed horses and full-grown
cows, but not bulls. The pumas killed the
calves. The others killed an occasional very young
calf, but ordinarily only sheep, little pigs, and chickens.
There was one black jaguar-skin; melanism is much
more common among jaguars than pumas, although
once Miller saw a black puma that had been killed by
Indians. The patterns of the jaguar-skins, and
even more of the ocelot-skins, showed wide variation,
no two being alike. The pumas were for the
most part bright red, but some were reddish gray, there
being much the same dichromatism that I found among
their Colorado kinsfolk. The jaguarundis were
dark brownish gray. All these animals, the spotted
jaguars and ocelots, the monochrome
black jaguars, red pumas, and
dark-gray jaguarundis, were killed in the same locality,
with the same environment. A glance at the skins
and a moment’s serious thought would have been
enough to show any sincere thinker that in these cats
the coloration pattern, whether concealing or revealing,
is of no consequence one way or the other as a survival
factor. The spotted patterns conferred no benefit
as compared with the nearly or quite monochrome blacks,
reds, and dark grays. The bodily condition of
the various beasts was equally good, showing that their
success in life, that is, their ability to catch their
prey, was unaffected by their several color schemes.
Except white, there is no color so conspicuously advertising
as black; yet the black jaguar had been a fine, well-fed,
powerful beast. The spotted patterns in the forests,
and perhaps even in the marshes which the jaguars
so frequently traversed, are probably a shade less
conspicuous than the monochrome red and gray, but
the puma and jaguarundi are just as hard to see, and
evidently find it just as easy to catch prey, as the
jaguar and ocelot. The little fawn which we saw
was spotted; the grown deer had lost the spots; if
the spots do really help to conceal the wearer, it
is evident that the deer has found the original concealing
coloration of so little value that it has actually
been lost in the course of the development of the
species. When these big cats and the deer are
considered, together with the dogs, tapirs, peccaries,
capybaras, and big ant-eaters which live in the same
environment, and when we also consider the difference
between the young and the adult deer and tapirs (both
of which when adult have substituted a complete or
partial monochrome for the ancestral spots and streaks),
it is evident that in the present life and in the
ancestral development of the big mammals of South
America coloration is not and has not been a survival
factor; any pattern and any color may accompany the
persistence and development of the qualities and attributes
which are survival factors. Indeed, it seems
hard to believe that in their ordinary environments
such color schemes as the bright red of the marsh-deer,
the black of the black jaguar, and the black with white
stripes of the great tamandua, are not positive detriments
to the wearers. Yet such is evidently not the
case. Evidently the other factors in species-survival
are of such overwhelming importance that the coloration
becomes negligible from this standpoint, whether it
be concealing or revealing. The cats mould themselves
to the ground as they crouch or crawl. They take
advantage of the tiniest scrap of cover. They
move with extraordinary stealth and patience.
The other animals which try to sneak off in such manner
as to escape observation approach more or less closely
to the ideal which the cats most nearly realize.
Wariness, sharp senses, the habit of being rigidly
motionless when there is the least suspicion of danger,
and ability to take advantage of cover, all count.
On the bare, open, treeless plain, whether marsh,
meadow, or upland, anything above the level of the
grass is seen at once. A marsh-deer out in the
open makes no effort to avoid observation; its concern
is purely to see its foes in time to leave a dangerous
neighborhood. The deer of the neighboring forest
skulk and hide and lie still in dense cover to avoid
being seen. The white-lipped peccaries make
no effort to escape observation by being either noiseless
or motionless; they trust for defence to their gregariousness
and truculence. The collared peccary also trusts
to its truculence, but seeks refuge in a hole where
it can face any opponent with its formidable biting
apparatus. As for the giant tamandua, in spite
of its fighting prowess I am wholly unable to understand
how such a slow and clumsy beast has been able through
the ages to exist and thrive surrounded by jaguars
and pumas. Speaking generally, the animals
that seek to escape observation trust primarily to
smell to discover their foes or their prey, and see
whatever moves and do not see whatever is motionless.
By the morning of January 5 we had
left the marsh region. There were low hills here
and there, and the land was covered with dense forest.
From time to time we passed little clearings with palm-thatched
houses. We were approaching Caceres, where the
easiest part of our trip would end. We had lived
in much comfort on the little steamer. The food
was plentiful and the cooking good. At night we
slept on deck in cots or hammocks. The mosquitoes
were rarely troublesome, although in the daytime we
were sometimes bothered by numbers of biting horse-flies.
The bird life was wonderful. One of the characteristic
sights we were always seeing was that of a number
of heads and necks of cormorants and snake-birds,
without any bodies, projecting above water, and disappearing
as the steamer approached. Skimmers and thick-billed
tern were plentiful here right in the heart of the
continent. In addition to the spurred lapwing,
characteristic and most interesting resident of most
of South America, we found tiny red-legged plover
which also breed and are at home in the tropics.
The contrasts in habits between closely allied species
are wonderful. Among the plovers and bay snipe
there are species that live all the year round in
almost the same places, in tropical and subtropical
lands; and other related forms which wander over the
whole earth, and spend nearly all their time, now
in the arctic and cold temperate regions of the far
north, now in the cold temperate regions of the south.
These latter wide-wandering birds of the seashore and
the river bank pass most of their lives in regions
of almost perpetual sunlight. They spend the
breeding season, the northern summer, in the land of
the midnight sun, during the long arctic day.
They then fly for endless distances down across the
north temperate zone, across the equator, through
the lands where the days and nights are always of
equal length, into another hemisphere, and spend another
summer of long days and long twilights in the far
south, where the Antarctic winds cool them, while
their nesting home, at the other end of the world,
is shrouded beneath the iron desolation of the polar
night.
In the late afternoon of the 5th we
reached the quaint old-fashioned little town of Sao
Luis de Caceres, on the outermost fringe of the settled
region of the state of Matto Grosso, the last town
we should see before reaching the villages of the
Amazon. As we approached we passed half-clad
black washerwomen on the river’s edge. The
men, with the local band, were gathered at the steeply
sloping foot of the main street, where the steamer
came to her moorings. Groups of women and girls,
white and brown, watched us from the low bluff; their
skirts and bodices were red, blue, green, of all colors.
Sigg had gone ahead with much of the baggage; he met
us in an improvised motor-boat, consisting of a dugout
to the side of which he had clamped our Evinrude motor;
he was giving several of the local citizens of prominence
a ride, to their huge enjoyment. The streets of
the little town were unpaved, with narrow brick sidewalks.
The one-story houses were white or blue, with roofs
of red tiles and window-shutters of latticed woodwork,
come down from colonial days and tracing back through
Christian and Moorish Portugal to a remote Arab ancestry.
Pretty faces, some dark, some light, looked out from
these windows; their mothers’ mothers, for generations
past, must thus have looked out of similar windows
in the vanished colonial days. But now even here
in Caceres the spirit of the new Brazil is moving;
a fine new government school has been started, and
we met its principal, an earnest man doing excellent
work, one of the many teachers who, during the last
few years, have been brought to Matto Grosso from Sao
Paulo, a centre of the new educational movement which
will do so much for Brazil.
Father Zahm went to spend the night
with some French Franciscan friars, capital fellows.
I spent the night at the comfortable house of Lieutenant
Lyra; a hot-weather house with thick walls, big doors,
and an open patio bordered by a gallery. Lieutenant
Lyra was to accompany us; he was an old companion
of Colonel Rondon’s explorations. We visited
one or two of the stores to make some final purchases,
and in the evening strolled through the dusky streets
and under the trees of the plaza; the women and girls
sat in groups in the doorways or at the windows, and
here and there a stringed instrument tinkled in the
darkness.
From Caceres onward we were entering
the scene of Colonel Rondon’s explorations.
For some eighteen years he was occupied in exploring
and in opening telegraph lines through the eastern
or north middle part of the great forest state, the
wilderness state of the “Matto Grosso”
the “great wilderness,” or, as Australians
would call it, “the bush.” Then,
in 1907, he began to penetrate the unknown region lying
to the north and west. He was the head of the
exploring expeditions sent out by the Brazilian Government
to traverse for the first time this unknown land;
to map for the first time the courses of the rivers
which from the same divide run into the upper portions
of the Tapajos and the Madeira, two of the mighty
affluents of the Amazon, and to build telegraph-lines
across to the Madeira, where a line of Brazilian settlements,
connected by steamboat lines and a railroad, again
occurs. Three times he penetrated into this absolutely
unknown, Indian-haunted wilderness, being absent for
a year or two at a time and suffering every imaginable
hardship, before he made his way through to the Madeira
and completed the telegraph-line across. The
officers and men of the Brazilian Army and the civilian
scientists who followed him shared the toil and the
credit of the task. Some of his men died of beriberi;
some were killed or wounded by the Indians; he himself
almost died of fever; again and again his whole party
was reduced almost to the last extremity by starvation,
disease, hardship, and the over-exhaustion due to
wearing fatigues. In dealing with the wild, naked
savages he showed a combination of fearlessness, wariness,
good judgment, and resolute patience and kindliness.
The result was that they ultimately became his firm
friends, guarded the telegraph-lines, and helped
the few soldiers left at the isolated, widely separated
little posts. He and his assistants explored,
and mapped for the first time, the Juruena and the
Gy-Parana, two important affluents of the Tapajos
and the Madeira respectively. The Tapajos and
the Madeira, like the Orinoco and Rio Negro, have
been highways of travel for a couple of centuries.
The Madeira (as later the Tapajos) was the chief means
of ingress, a century and a half ago, to the little
Portuguese settlements of this far interior region
of Brazil; one of these little towns, named Matto
Grosso, being the original capital of the province.
It has long been abandoned by the government, and
practically so by its inhabitants, the ruins of palace,
fortress, and church now rising amid the rank tropical
luxuriance of the wild forest. The mouths of
the main affluents of these highway rivers were as
a rule well known. But in many cases nothing but
the mouth was known. The river itself was not
known, and it was placed on the map by guesswork.
Colonel Rondon found, for example, that the course
of the Gy-Parana was put down on the map two degrees
out of its proper place. He, with his party,
was the first to find out its sources, the first to
traverse its upper course, the first to map its length.
He and his assistants performed a similar service
for the Juruena, discovering the sources, discovering
and descending some of the branches, and for the first
time making a trustworthy map of the main river itself,
until its junction with the Tapajos. Near the
watershed between the Juruena and the Gy-Parana he
established his farthest station to the westward,
named Jose Bonofacio, after one of the chief republican
patriots of Brazil. A couple of days’ march
northwestward from this station, he in 1909 came across
a part of the stream of a river running northward
between the Gy-Parana and the Juruena; he could only
guess where it debouched, believing it to be into the
Madeira, although it was possible that it entered
the Gy-Parana or Tapajos. The region through
which it flows was unknown, no civilized man having
ever penetrated it; and as all conjecture as to what
the river was, as to its length, and as to its place
of entering into some highway river, was mere guess-work,
he had entered it on his sketch maps as the Rio
da Duvida, the River of Doubt. Among the
officers of the Brazilian Army and the scientific
civilians who have accompanied him there have been
not only expert cartographers, photographers, and
telegraphists, but astronomers, geologists, botanists,
and zoologists. Their reports, published in excellent
shape by the Brazilian Government, make an invaluable
series of volumes, reflecting the highest credit on
the explorers, and on the government itself. Colonel
Rondon’s own accounts of his explorations, of
the Indian tribes he has visited, and of the beautiful
and wonderful things he has seen, possess a peculiar
interest.