80 The German explorer-scientist: Humboldt, Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America, pp. 112-16.
81 “One shock is sufficient”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 50.
81 “carry no hope”: Fawcett, “In the Heart of South America,” pt. 3, p. 498.
81 “It was one”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 84.
82 “We lived simply”: Costin to daughter Mary, Nov. 10, 1946, Costin Family Papers. 82 “Inactivity was what”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 94.
82 “Monkeys are looked”: Ibid., p. 47.
82 “is against man”: Ibid.
83 “[Mosquitoes] constitute”: Price, Amazing Amazon, p. 138.
83 “The piums settled”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 59.
83 “The Tabana came singly”: Ibid., p. 49.
83 “Attacked in hammocks”: Ernest Holt diary, Oct. 20, 1920, ADAH.
84 according to one estimate: Millard, River of Doubt, p. 250.
85 “a couple of crossed”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 89.
85 “When [the Kanichana]”: Métraux, Native Tribes of Eastern Bolivia and Western Matto Grosso, p. 80.
85 “The head and the intestines”: Clastres, “Guayaki Cannibalism,” pp. 313-15.
86 “court assassination”: C. Reginald Enock, letter to the editor, Geographical Journal, April 19, 1911, RGS.
87 “It was trying”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 73.
87 “Their bodies [were] painted”: Ibid., p. 87.
87 “One ripped through”: Ibid.
87 “I had observed”: Ibid., p. 83.
87 Still, two of the men: Fawcett, “Explorations in Bolivia,” p. 523.
87 “I was tempted”: Ibid., p. 43.
87 “Unless he had”: Keltie to Nina Fawcett, Dec. 1, 1913, RGS.
88 “the healthy person”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 55.
91 “professional burglar”: Malcolm, Silent Woman, p. 9.
92 Many of the diaries: Quotations from diaries and logbooks come from the private papers of the Fawcett family.
94 “Are you game?”: See Percy Harrison Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, pp. 116-22. For further information on the journey, see Fawcett's “Explorations in Bolivia” and his four-part series “In the Heart of South America.”
95 “When… the enterprising traveler”: Fawcett, “In the Heart of South America,” pt. 2, p. 491.
95 “Time and the foot”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 122.
95 Conan Doyle reportedly: Doyle, notes to Lost World, p. 195. The other place commonly said to have inspired the novel's setting is Mount Roraima in Venezuela.
95 “What'll we do”: For details of their conversation, see Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, pp. 120-21.
96 “Starvation sounds almost”: Fawcett, “In the Heart of South America,” pt. 3, p. 549.
97 “The rain forest”: Millard, River of Doubt, p. 148.
97 “the aquatic equivalents”: Forsyth and Miyata, Tropical Nature, p. 93.
97 Nearly a month after: Thirty-eight years later, it was revealed that Fawcett and his men had actually been several miles from the principal source. Brian Fawcett noted that “my father would have been bitterly disappointed.”
98 “How long could”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 122.
98 “The voices of”: Ibid., p. 121.
98 “Starvation blunts one's”: Fawcett, “In the Heart of South America,” pt. 4, p. 89.
98 “[An ambush], in spite”: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 110.
98 “For God's sake”: Ibid., p. 124.
101 “the most remarkable”: Percy Harrison Fawcett, “Case for an Expedition in the Amazon Basin” (proposal), April 13, 1924, RGS.
101 “This area represents”: Ibid.
101 “get the survivors”: Ibid.
102 “glorious prospect”: Percy Harrison Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 108.
102 “I wanted to forget”: Ibid., pp. 108-9.
103 “Deep down”: Ibid., p. 109.
103 “prison gate”: Ibid., p. 138.
103 “a very uncertain”: Nina Fawcett to Joan, Jan. 24, 1946, Fawcett Family Papers.
103 “subject my wife”: Fawcett to John Scott Keltie, Oct. 3, 1911, RGS.
103 He had once shown: Nina Fawcett to Joan, Sept. 6, 1946, Fawcett Family Papers.
103 “I felt relieved”: Williams, introduction to AmaZonia, p. 24.
104 “riotous democracy”: Brian Fawcett to Nina, Dec. 5, 1933, Fawcett Family Papers.
104 “They have had”: Nina Fawcett to Keltie, Nov. 30, 1913, RGS.
104 “I, personally, am”: Nina Fawcett to Harold Large, April 12, 1926, Fawcett Family Papers.
104 She learned how: Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 16.
104 “interesting to those”: Nina Fawcett, “The Transadine Railway,” n.d., RGS.
104 “equality… between man”: Nina Fawcett to Large, Dec. 6, 1923, Fawcett Family Papers.
“Some day perhaps”: Nina Fawcett to Keltie, Jan. 6, 1911, RGS.
“Daddy gave us”: Williams, introduction to AmaZonia, p. 30.
105 “By the look of it”: Percy Harrison Fawcett, “Gold Bricks at Badulla,” p. 234.
105 “the real apple”: Author's interview with Fawcett's granddaughter.
105 “Never forget us”: Percy Harrison Fawcett, “Jack Going to School,” 1910, Faw cett Family Papers.
106 “A leader of men”: Fawcett to Nina Fawcett, April 12, 1910, Fawcett Family Papers.
106 “He was probably”: Stanley Allen, New Haven Register, n.d., RGS.
106 “I have for years”: Barclay to David George Hogarth, Sept. 1, 1927, RGS.
106 60 percent of: Larson, Thunderstruck, p. 271.
106 “a disease bred”: Edward Douglas Fawcett, Hartmann the Anarchist, p. 27.
106 “Of the Houses”: Ibid., p. 147.
107 “ ‘The lure of ”: Quotations from newspaper articles found in Fawcett's scrap-book, Fawcett Family Papers.
107 “regions which have”: Suarez, Lembcke, and Fawcett, “Further Explorations in Bolivia,” p. 397.