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UNKNOWN AMERICA

PENETRATED BY WHITE MEN

LARD AND SUGAR TREES. FOUND IN AMAZON JUNGLE

Amazon jungles, said by Indian ! natives never before to have been pene- | trated by any white man, have been explored by Llewellyn Williams of the) botanical staff of Field Museum of Natural History. I

Accompanied by severnl Inca Indians Mr Williams made a trip by canoe and aifoot 325 miles into the interior of the Nanay region of the Amazon and its tributary the Rio Nanay. Coming back to Iquitos, Peru and by a roundabout route through even greater obstacles, his return journey was probably more than 400 miles.

Mr Williams and his party pushed up the Nanay River steadily for six days. Camps were made in abandoned Indian huts of palm leaves. Bush-knives frequently were used to cut a path through' tangles of tropical vegetation, and it was necessary to wad© for miles knee deep in mud and water. Frequently it was necessary to swim across streams.

Arriving finally at a good ground for botanical collecting, camp was pitched. Provision ran short. Monkey, tapirs squirrels and various birds were shot for food. “I was surprised to find monkey meat so appetising. The Indians regard it as a delicacy,” writes Mr Williams.

Outstanding among the trees from which specimens were obtained are the “palo de asucar” or “sugar tree,” so called because of the presence in the hark of a sweet edible resin with the consistency of real sugar, and the “palo deaoeite,” or “palo de manteoa,” which means “lard tree”. The latter, previously known only to the Indians, excretes an oily substance which in appearance, taste, consistency and other properties is a close affinity to lard rendered from animal fats, Mr Williams writes.

“ A remarkable number of medicinal plants grow in the forests, and the Indians possess a wealth of knowledge of their properties for curing various ailments, ranging from simple nervous diseases, to complications -of the internal organs,” says Mr Williams’ report. “They have developed fish poisons which, thrown on the water, kill all the fish in the vicinity and make the obtaining of a fish dinner easy. Poisoned fish do not harm the human consumer.”

Mr Williams and bis party suffered minor injuries when their canoe collided with a log while shooting some rapids in the Nanay River. On another occasion while sawing the trunk of a rare tree they) were attacked by a pwarm of ants whose sting caused a- severe fever for two days. At another camp they were attacked while asleep hv vampire hats.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19291128.2.18

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 28 November 1929, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
424

UNKNOWN AMERICA Hokitika Guardian, 28 November 1929, Page 3

UNKNOWN AMERICA Hokitika Guardian, 28 November 1929, Page 3

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