We love eBooks
    Download The Mystery of Easter Island: The Story of an Expedition pdf, epub, ebook

    This site is safe

    You are at a security, SSL-enabled, site. All our eBooks sources are constantly verified.

    The Mystery of Easter Island: The Story of an Expedition

    By Mrs. Scoresby Routledge

    What do you think about this eBook?

    About

    The Mystery of Easter Island: The Story of an Expedition By Mrs. Scoresby Routledge (1866-1935) . Written in 1919 and published in London. Remarkably detailed book about her expeeriences enroute to and on Easter Island, leading an anthropological and archeological expedition with her husband, William Scoresby Routledge, to investigate the origins of the island's mysterious giant statues and their return via Pitcairn and Tahiti. There are over 140 illustrations, photos, and maps throughout the book. These illustrations and photos are also available for viewing and download at www.digitaltextpublishing.com (404 pages)

    The Publisher has copy-edited this book to improve the formatting, style and accuracy of the text to make it readable. This did not involve changing the substance of the text. Some books, due to age and other factors may contain imperfections. Since there are many books such as this one that are important and beneficial to literary interests, we have made it digitally available and have brought it back into print for the preservation of printed works of the past.

    Dedicated to her Mother who died while she was away.

    Preface (excerpts)
    ...No attempt has been made to write any sort of a guide book to the varied places touched at by the yacht, neither space nor knowledge permitted; all that has been done either by pen or pencil is to try to give the main impression left on the mind of a passing dweller in their harbours and anchorages. It has, however, been found by experience that, in accounts of travel, the general reader loses much of the pleasure which has been experienced by the writer, through knowledge being assumed of the history of the places visited; a knowledge which the traveller himself has absorbed almost unconsciously. Without some acquaintance with past events the present cannot be understood; at the risk, therefore, of interrupting the narrative, a few notes of such history have been included.
    ...In dealing with the main topic of the work, an endeavour has been made to give some idea of the problem of Easter Island as the Expedition found it, and also of its work there. With regard to this part, some appeal is necessary to the understanding kindness of the reader, for it has not been an easy tale to tell, nor one which could be straightforwardly recounted. The story of Easter is as yet a tangled skein. The dim past, to which the megalithic works bear witness — the island as the early voyagers found it — its more recent history and present state, all of these are intermingled threads, none of which can be followed without reference to the remaining clues.
    ...It is fairly obvious why the writing of this story has fallen to the share of the sole feminine member of the Expedition. I had also, what was, in spite of all things, the good fortune to be fourteen weeks longer on the island than my husband. They were fat weeks too, when the first lean ones, with their inevitable difficulties, were past; and the unsettlement towards the end had not arrived. He has, I need hardly say, given me every assistance with this work. Generally speaking, all things which it is possible to touch and handle, buildings, weapons, and ornaments, were in his department; while things of a less tangible description, such as religion, history, and folk-lore fell to my lot. Those who know him will recognise his touches throughout, and the account of the last part of the voyage, after my return to England, has been written by him. The photographs, when not otherwise stated, are by members of the Expedition. The drawings are from sketches made by the Author; those of the burial-places are from notebook outlines made in the course of work. The diagrams of the houses and burial-places are by my husband.

    Contains 4 Parts, 24 Chapters, Eplilogue, and 140 Photos/Illustrations/Maps
    Download eBook Link updated in 2017
    Maybe you will be redirected to source's website
    Thank you and welcome to our newsletter list! Ops, you're already in our list.

    Related to this eBook

    Browse collections

    Keep connected to us

    Follow us on Social Media or subscribe to our newsletter to keep updated about eBooks world.

    Explore eBooks

    Browse all eBook collections

    Collections is the easy way to explore our eBook directory.