
audiobook
by Aimé Bonpland, Alexander von Humboldt
The narrative follows a determined explorer as he pushes deeper into the equatorial heart of South America, tracing the winding Carony River to the historic settlement of Angostura. He paints a vivid picture of the region’s rugged terrain, the remnants of earlier colonial towns, and the bustling trade that has kept the area on European maps for centuries.
Along the way he encounters palm‑dwelling indigenous groups and the Capuchin missionaries who have established modest outposts among them. Detailed observations of local agriculture, especially the prolific sugar‑houses and the prized bark of the Bonplanda trifoliata, are recorded with the precise measurements that define his scientific approach.
Beyond the natural world, the traveler offers a keen survey of the political landscape of the Venezuelan provinces, their economies, and the connections to the Caribbean islands. His account balances ethnographic curiosity with rigorous data, inviting listeners to experience the frontier through both the eyes of a scholar and the pulse of a living, contested frontier.
Language
en
Duration
~17 hours (1024K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1773–1858
A French botanist and explorer, he is best remembered for the groundbreaking expedition he made with Alexander von Humboldt through Latin America at the turn of the 19th century. His plant collecting and scientific work helped expand Europe’s understanding of the natural world.
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1769–1859
An explorer, naturalist, and brilliant connector of ideas, he helped people see nature as one living system rather than a collection of separate facts. His travels through Latin America and his sweeping books inspired generations of scientists, writers, and environmental thinkers.
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