The Highest Andes: A Record of the First Ascent of Aconcagua and Tupungato in Argentina, and the Exploration of the Surrounding Valleys |
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Page 10
... gave the name of Sierra del Penitente . The name , like that which he gave to the valley itself , was suggested by the fields of nieve penitente which he saw around . Rising almost sheer to a height of 3000 feet above the floor of the ...
... gave the name of Sierra del Penitente . The name , like that which he gave to the valley itself , was suggested by the fields of nieve penitente which he saw around . Rising almost sheer to a height of 3000 feet above the floor of the ...
Page 11
... gave the name of Portezuelo del Penitente , or " Büsserthor . " From this gateway on the ridge a magnificent spectacle , never before seen by human eyes , presented itself . Aconcagua had been reached at last . Right in front , its base ...
... gave the name of Portezuelo del Penitente , or " Büsserthor . " From this gateway on the ridge a magnificent spectacle , never before seen by human eyes , presented itself . Aconcagua had been reached at last . Right in front , its base ...
Page 20
... gave us much useful information concerning the country and its people , and promised to come with us to Vacas and show us the best camping - ground . He was then engineer in charge of the permanent way of the Transandine Railway , a ...
... gave us much useful information concerning the country and its people , and promised to come with us to Vacas and show us the best camping - ground . He was then engineer in charge of the permanent way of the Transandine Railway , a ...
Page 26
... gave Vines his first experience of what driving in the Andes is like . Between the shafts was a fine mule , and on each side of the mule two small ungainly horses were tethered to the cart , while two mules with a postillion went in ...
... gave Vines his first experience of what driving in the Andes is like . Between the shafts was a fine mule , and on each side of the mule two small ungainly horses were tethered to the cart , while two mules with a postillion went in ...
Page 31
... gave handsome presents to the Indians , and extracted from them the most solemn vows of secrecy . The result of this manœuvre was that the Spanish general , Marco , was speedily possessed of confidential information which led him to ...
... gave handsome presents to the Indians , and extracted from them the most solemn vows of secrecy . The result of this manœuvre was that the Spanish general , Marco , was speedily possessed of confidential information which led him to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aconcagua altitude andesite animals arête Argentine arriero ascent attempt base camp birds BLUMENBACHIA casucha Chile Chilian cliff climb clouds cold colour Cordillera couloir crossed Cuevas descend difficulty dome felspar FitzGerald foot camp ford Fortunato galloped glacier Gosse Güssfeldt half height heliograph highest Horcones Valley hornblende horses hour inches José Juncal Lanti legs Lightbody Lochmatter looked luggage Lujan Mendoza microliths miles mineral minutes morning mountain mules nearly night o'clock once Paramillo peak Penitente peons photographs plagioclase plant Pollinger porters Puente del Inca pyroxene reached the summit rest returned ridge river rock round route saddle seemed seen side slope snow soon specimen spot spur started steep stones storm Sub-Fam suffered tent thousand feet took Transandine Railway Tupungato Tupungato Valley turned Vacas Valley Valle Hermoso Valparaiso volcanic weather wind winter yareta Zurbriggen
Popular passages
Page 123 - Where Andes, giant of the western star, With meteor standard to the winds unfurled, Looks from his throne of clouds o'er half the world.
Page iii - The highest Andes, a record of the first ascent of Aconcagua and Tupungato in Argentina, and the exploration of the surrounding valleys; with chapters by Stuart Vines and contributions by Professor Bonney, R.
Page 378 - ARTICLE I The boundary between Chile and the Argentine Republic is from north to south, as far as the 52nd parallel of latitude, the Cordillera de los Andes. The boundary-line shall run in that extent over the highest summits of the said Cordilleras which divide the waters, and shall pass between the sources (of streams) flowing down to either side. The difficulties that might arise owing...
Page viii - 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...
Page 105 - The easiest way of obtaining the impression is to follow in my steps ; for in watching a sunset from Mont Blanc one feels that one is passing one of those rare moments of life at which all the surrounding scenery is instantaneously and indelibly photographed on the mental retina by a process which no secondhand operation can even dimly transfer to others.
Page 55 - ... We were very eager to have our tent comfortably pitched, as the recollection of the last night spent in the open was far from pleasant, so we set to work at once to make an encampment on a flat bit of ground, fairly sheltered by a large boulder. Pitching the tent was something of an undertaking, as it had fourteen guy-ropes, all of which had to be fixed to large loose stones, the ground being too hard to admit of anything like a peg being driven into it. I had suffered acutely...
Page 62 - ... alarmed, and were even beginning to fear that the case might be hopeless, and might even necessitate amputation. At last we observed that his face was becoming pallid, and slowly and gradually he began to feel a little pain. We hailed this sign with joy, for it meant of course that vitality was returning to the injured parts, and we renewed our efforts ; the pain now came on more and more severely ; he writhed and shrieked and begged us to stop, as he was well-nigh maddened by suffering. Knowing,...
Page 82 - I crawled in this miserable plight, steering for a big patch of snow that lay in a sheltered spot, but I should imagine that it was about an hour and a half. On reaching the snow I lay down, and finally rolled down a great portion of the mountain side. As I got lower my strength revived, and the nausea that I had been suffering from so acutely disappeared, leaving me with a splitting headache. Soon after five o'clock I reached our tent. My headache was now so bad that it was with great difficulty...
Page 105 - ... admired, and he escaped frost-bites. I -wish that I could substitute his canvas, though, to say the truth, I fear it would exhibit a slight confusion of the points of the compass, for my words ; but, as that is impossible, I must endeavour briefly to indicate the most impressive features of the scenery. My readers must kindly set their imaginations to work in aid of feeble language ; for even the most eloquent language is but a poor substitute for a painter's brush, and a painter's brush lags...
Page 208 - ... 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; from one peak my Arriero said he had once seen smoke proceeding; I thought I could distinguish the form of a large crater. In the maps Tupungato flourishes as a single mountain ; this Chileno method of giving one name to a tract of mountains is a fruitful source of error. In this region of snow there was a blue patch ; no doubt a glacier. A phenomenon which is...