Lauro Muller
The first report on the expedition, made by me immediately after my
arrival at Manaos, and published in Rio Janeiro upon its receipt, is
as follows:
MAY 1st, 1914.
TO HIS EXCELLENCY THE MINISTER OF
FOREIGN AFFAIRS,
RIO-DE-JANEIRO.
MY DEAR GENERAL LAURO MULLER:
I wish first to express my profound acknowledgments to you personally
and to the other members of the Brazilian Government whose generous
courtesy alone rendered possible the Expedicao Scientifica Roosevelt-
Rondon. I wish also to express my high admiration and regard for
Colonel Rondon and his associates who have been my colleagues in this
work of exploration. In the third place I wish to point out that what
we have just done was rendered possible only by the hard and perilous
labor of the Brazilian Telegraphic Commission in the unexplored
western wilderness of Matto Grosso during the last seven years. We
have had a hard and somewhat dangerous but very successful trip. No
less than six weeks were spent in slowly and with peril and exhausting
labor forcing our way down through what seemed a literally endless
succession of rapids and cataracts. For forty-eight days we saw no
human being. In passing these rapids we lost five of the seven canoes
with which we started and had to build others. One of our best men
lost his life in the rapids. Under the strain one of the men went
completely bad, shirked all his work, stole his comrades' food and
when punished by the sergeant he with cold-blooded deliberation
murdered the sergeant and fled into the wilderness. Colonel Rondon's
dog running ahead of him while hunting, was shot by two Indians; by
his death he in all probability saved the life of his master. We have
put on the map a river about 1500 kilometres in length running from
just south of the 13th degree to north of the 5th degree and the
biggest affluent of the Madeira. Until now its upper course has been
utterly unknown to every one, and its lower course although known for
years to the rubbermen utterly unknown to all cartographers. Its
source is between the 12th and 13th parallels of latitude south, and
between longitude 59 degrees and longitude 60 degrees west from
Greenwich. We embarked on it about at latitude 12 degrees 1 minute
south and longitude 60 degrees 18 west. After that its entire course
was between the 60th and
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