
LA TERRE DE FEU
CHARLES RABOT - LA TERRE DE FEU - D'APRÈS - LE Dr OTTO NORDENSKJÖLD - OUVRAGE CONTENANT 55 GRAVURES ET UNE CARTE TIRÉE HORS TEXTE
LIBRAIRIE HACHETTE ET Cie PARIS, 79, BOULEVARD SAINT-GERMAIN - 1902 - Tous droits réservés.
INTRODUCTION
LA TERRE DE FEU
CHAPITRE I
CHAPITRE II
CHAPITRE III
CHAPITRE IV
CHAPITRE V
A remote corner of the world, once a blank spot on every map, comes alive through the eyes of a determined Swedish naturalist and his small crew. The book opens by explaining how tangled Argentine‑Chilean border claims forced governments to sponsor careful surveys, and why the stark, almost polar landscape of Tierra del Fuego—its sweeping plains, jagged fjords and unexpected bursts of tropical flora—offered a rare laboratory for comparing northern and southern ecosystems. Readers are introduced to the scientific climate of the era, the modest support from European patrons, and the promise of fresh botanical and zoological discoveries.
The narrative follows Dr. Otto Nordenskjöld as he departs Buenos Aires in late 1895, joined by seasoned guide Backhausen and two expert naturalists, a botanist and a zoologist. Their voyage aboard a cannon‑filled ship heads south toward the rugged coast, where they will begin charting unknown terrain and unearthing the region’s hidden histories. Early encounters with the harsh climate, indigenous remains, and the striking contrast between icy waters and vibrant forests set the stage for a compelling exploration of a land at the edge of the world.
Language
fr
Duration
~2 hours (158K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
France: Hachette, 1902.
Credits
Laurent Vogel, Pierre Lacaze and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica))
Release date
2022-12-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1856–1944
A restless explorer of the Far North, this French geographer turned Arctic travel into vivid writing for a wide public. His books and lectures helped readers imagine glaciers, remote coasts, and expedition life long before modern polar media existed.
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