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Search Results: All Fields similar to 'Tierra and Del and Fuego and Argentina and And and Chile'

1-16 of 16
[Tierra del Fuogo].
Le Maire, Jacques, 1585...
[Tierra del Fuogo].
1616
14476.024
Related
 
Author
Le Maire, Jacques, 1585-1616
Full Title
[Tierra del Fuogo].
List No
14476.024
Note
Map of Tierra del Fuego, an archipelago at South America’s southernmost tip, shared by current-day Chile and Argentina. Shows regions, bodies of water, drainage, coastlines and islands. Features voyages routes. Includes rhumb lines, latitudinal lines and a compass rose with north oriented toward top of sheet. With descriptive notes in cartouche. Black and white engraving. Map is 20 x 28 cm, on double sheet 29 x 36 cm. Appears in Spieghel der Australische navigatie, the third part of Nieuwe werelt anders ghenaempt West-Indien.
Freti Magellanici ac novi Freti vulgo Le Maire.
Blaeu, Willem Janszoon,...
Freti Magellanici ac no...
1630
12202.065
Related
 
Author
Blaeu, Willem Janszoon, 1571-1638
Full Title
Freti Magellanici ac novi Freti vulgo Le Maire.
List No
12202.065
Paskaarte van Het Zuydelijckste van America.
Goos, Pieter, 1616-1675
Paskaarte van Het Zuyde...
1667
12179.045
Related
 
Author
Goos, Pieter, 1616-1675
Full Title
Paskaarte van Het Zuydelijckste van America.
List No
12179.045
Tabula Magellanica
Visscher, Nicolaes, 164...
Tabula Magellanica
1690
11755.130
Related
 
Author
[Visscher, Nicolaes, 1649-1702., Jansson, Johannes, 1588-1664]
Full Title
Tabula Magellanica, qua Tierrae del Fuego, cum celeberrimis fretis a F. Magellano et I. Le Maire detectis novissima et accuratissima descriptio exhibetur. Amstelodami. Apud Joannes Janssonium. (to accompany) Atlas minor sive totius orbis terrarum contracta delinea ex conatibus Nico. Visscher. 1690. (half title page) Atlas Minor sive Geographia Compendiosa, qua Orbis Terrarum.
List No
11755.130
Note
Hand colored in outline engraved map with dedication text and explanation table. Shows cities, towns, waterways, canals and mountains. Includes decorative carouches, compass roses, and vignette of ships in the ocean and native settlements in land. Relief shown pictorially.
Chile.
Sanson, Nicolas (1600-1...
Chile.
1697
9741.143
Related
 
Author
[Sanson, Nicolas, 1600-1667, Sanson, Guillaume (1633-1703)]
Full Title
La Chili (Chile).
List No
9741.143
Cape Horn, Patagonia, Chile.
Sanson, Nicolas (1600-1...
Cape Horn, Patagonia, C...
1688
9741.146
Related
 
Author
[Sanson, Nicolas, 1600-1667, Sanson, Guillaume (1633-1703)]
Full Title
La Terre et les Isles Magellaniques (Magellan Isles).
List No
9741.146
Success Bay, Terra del Fuego.
Cook, James, 1728-1779;...
Success Bay, Terra del ...
1773
3403.020
Related
 
Author
[Cook, James, 1728-1779, Hawkesworth, John, 1715?-1773]
Full Title
A plan of Success Bay in Strait le Maire. A chart of the S.E. part of Terra del Fuego including Strait le Maire and part of Staten-land by Lieutenant J. Cook 1769. T. Bowen & J. Gibson sculp. (London: printed for W. Strahan; and T. Cadell in the Strand, MDCCLXXIII).
List No
3403.020
Note
Two engraved nautical charts. Relief shown by hachures and pictorially; depths by soundings. Scales [ca. 1:38,000] and [ca. 1:2,600,000]. Four coastal views at top of sheet: A view of part of the N.E. side of Terra del Fuego taken from the point A. in the chart -- A view of Strait Le Maire with part of Terra del Fuego and Staten Land taken from the point B. in the chart -- A view of part of the S.W. side of Terra del Fuego taken from the point C. in the chart -- A view of part of the coast of Terra del Fuego from Cape Horn to Isle Evouts, taken from the point D. in the chart.
(Indians, Terra del Fuego)
Cook, James, 1728-1779;...
(Indians, Terra del Fue...
1773
3403.021
Related
 
Author
[Cook, James, 1728-1779, Hawkesworth, John, 1715?-1773]
Full Title
(A view of the Indians of Terra del Fuego in their hut). G.B. Cipriani del. F. Bartolozzi sculp. No. 1. (London: printed for W. Strahan; and T. Cadell in the Strand, MDCCLXXIII)
List No
3403.021
Note
Engraved illustration. Title from Mitchell.
Chart Of The Straits Of Magellan.
Jefferys, Thomas
Chart Of The Straits Of...
1776
0346.035
Related
 
Author
Jefferys, Thomas
Full Title
A Chart Of The Straits Of Magellan. Inlarged From The Chart Published At Madrid in 1769, by Don Juan de la Cruz Cano y Olmedilla of the Royal Academy of St. Fernando. and Improved from the Observations and Surveys of Captns. Byron, Wallis and Carteret compared with those of Monsr. De Bougainville. (with) A Chart of Magellania with Falkland's Islands. London. Printed for R. Sayer and J. Bennett ... 1st July 1775.
List No
0346.035
Note
In outline color with a great amount of detail about the topography and people of the region.
S. extremity of America.
Cook, James, 1728-1779
S. extremity of America...
1777
3404.062
Related
 
Author
Cook, James, 1728-1779
Full Title
A chart of the southern extremity of America 1775. (with) Part of Staten Land. No. II. Published Febry. 1st, 1777 by Wm. Strahan in New Street, Shoe Lane & Thos. Cadell in the Strand, London.
List No
3404.062
Note
Engraved nautical chart showing coastal outlines. Depths shown by soundings. Covers Patagonia, Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands. Scale of inset (ca. 1:162,000).
Amerique Meridionale 4.
Brue, Adrien Hubert, 17...
Amerique Meridionale 4.
1816
4614.042
Related
 
Full Title
Amerique Meridionale 4e. feuille. (Dediee et presentee a Monsieur. Par H. Brue, Ingenieur-Geographe de S.A. Royale. Dirige par H. Brue. A Paris, Chez Desray ... (et) Goujon ..., 1816)
List No
4614.042
Note
Engraved map. Outline hand col. SE sheet. Relief shown by hachures. Includes inset map of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands (continuation of map). Prime meridian: Paris. "Atlas universel no. (35)."
Terre de Feu. Amer. Merid. no. 42.
Vandermaelen, Philippe,...
Terre de Feu. Amer. Mer...
1827
2212.326
Related
 
Author
Vandermaelen, Philippe, 1795-1869
Full Title
Terre de Feu. Amer. Merid. no. 42. (Dresse par Ph. Vandermaelen, lithographie par H. Ode. Cinquieme partie. - Amer. merid. Bruxelles. 1827)
List No
2212.326
Note
Hand col. lithographed map. Includes text: Note sur l'Archipel de la Terre de Feu.
The Strait of Magalhaens commonly called Magellan
Great Britain. Hydrogra...
The Strait of Magalhaen...
1834
11940.000
Related
 
Author
[Great Britain. Hydrographic Office, J. & C. Walker (Firm)]
Full Title
The Strait of Magalhaens commonly called Magellan : Surveyed by the Officers of His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle Under the Direction of Captains Phillip Parker King F.R.S. Pringle Stokes & Robert Fitz Roy 1826-30, 1832-34. J.&C. Walker. Sculpt. Published according to Act of Parliment at the Hydrographical Office of Admiralty May 2nd. 1832.
List No
11940.000
Note
Engraved chart of Straights of Magellan, on sheet 64x98.5. backed with linen, dissected into 15 sections folded to 21.5x19.5. Showing boundaries, major cities, coastal towns, villages, rivers, soundings. Shows for the first time on a map, Mount Darwin. Darwin was on this voyage and the mountain was named for him. The date is estimated, but this issue of the chart is very likely the first - earlier that the issue of 1837 which has a price of three shillings below the Admiralty seal in the lower right corner of the chart. This issue has only a price of 6/. Ruderman: "Extremely rare example of one of the most historically important sea charts of the 19th Century, being the official chart showing the first detailed and scientific survey of the Strait of Magellan, undertaken in two separate expeditions by Captain Philip Parker King and Captain Robert FitzRoy between 1826 and 1834. An important artifact of 'Darwiniana', the chart is also the only original cartographic record of what was Charles Darwin's first overseas voyage. The chart records the first and the most important efforts to scientifically map the Straits of Magellan, during which survey (on the first voyage), the Beagle Channel was discovered by Captain Robert FitzRoy. Of further note, the present edition is dated May 1st, 1832, despite the fact that it shows the results of 2 expeditions, the latter of which ended in 1834. As discussed below, this may be an unrecorded precursor to the 1837 edition. Finding a safe passage around the southern tip of South America was one of the great imperatives of global shipping. Rounding Cape Horn itself was always fearsome, and while the Strait of Magellan held out the promise of a more sheltered route, its labyrinthine passages were not sufficiently understood. While the Strait itself had been surveyed in a cursory fashion by Captain James Cook, a far more exacting survey, employing the latest equipment was in order. In 1826, the Royal Navy dispatched the HMS Adventure and its smaller companion, the HMS Beagle, to survey the coasts of southern Patagonia, and the Strait of Magellan in particular. The Beagle was commanded initially by Captain Pringle Stokes, while the overall command of the voyage fell under Captain Phillip Parker King, aboard the Adventure. The relatively nimble Beagle was charged with the far more treacherous aspects of the survey, essentially circumnavigating Tierra del Fuego. Highly advanced trigonometric surveys of the shorelines were conducted with theodolites, while copious soundings of the seafloor were taken, and navigational hazards noted. During this survey the Beagle Channel, the interoceanic passage which ran between Tierra del Fuego and Navarino Island, was discovered. The voyage was not without mishap, however, as Captain Stokes committed suicide, only to be replaced by the energetic Lieutenant Robert FitzRoy. While only 23 years old, he proved to be a highly competent surveyor and leader. Towards the end of the voyage, a group of native Fuegians stole one of the Beagle's tenders. In response, FitzRoy took some Fuegians hostage, and while the situation was eventually diffused, it made for an unusually melodramatic surveying expedition. Upon the Beagle and Adventure's return to England a chart was apparently published depicting the survey's findings. However, the only record we can find of the chart is in The Nautical Magazine, June 1832 (London, Fischer & Son, Jackson), where the following note appears at page 203, describing important charts published in 1832: The Strait Of Magalhaens, commonly called Magellan. Surveyed in His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle. By Captain Phillip Parker King, R.N. F.R. S. 1826-1830. Price 6s. Size, Double Elephant. Admiralty. This is the first chart published of the South American coast, surveyed by Captain King. It contains the whole navigation of this extraordinary, and, we may add, dangerous Strait. Hitherto no chart has appeared, on which a ship could depend, nor a set of directions to consult; and thus have the dangers of this Strait remained as formidable as they were to the first navigators. Numerous channels and inlets have been discovered by Captain King, that are now distinctly defined, among which are the Otway and Skyring waters, places abounding in seals and sea elephants. To vessels employed in hunting these animals, the present chart will be most valuable, as well as the directions by which it is accompanied, and geographers will at length obtain a correct delineation of the southern parts of the South American continent, as well as the heights of the principal mountains. The southern limits of this chart extend to Lat. 55° 9' S. While the Admiralty was highly impressed with the surveys thus far, the project was far from complete. At FitzRoy's behest, the Beagle was dramatically retrofitted and kitted out with the most advanced scientific and navigational equipment. It also occurred to FitzRoy that while he and his men performed hydrographic surveys, someone should conduct a scientific appraisal of the land itself. Through an unlikely chain of inquiries they selected Charles Darwin, a brilliant but obscure amateur naturalist, who was otherwise on track to becoming a rural clergyman. The second surveying voyage of the Beagle departed England in December 1831. Over a two-year period FitzRoy and his crew painstaking completed their surveying mandate, while Darwin combed the barren landscape "geologizing". Prefiguring the ingenious insights that would later make him famous, Darwin made highly important observations with respect to the geology, biology and anthropology of this mysterious land and its inhabitants. Once the surveying mandate was complete, the Beagle headed across the vast expanse of the Pacific, giving Darwin his first exposure to the unique flora and fauna of New Zealand and Australia. The expedition returned to England in October 1836. The present map is nothing short of a masterpiece of scientific surveying, and one of the most technically impressive mapping achievements of the first half of the nineteenth-century. While the present chart is an extreme rarity, its influence was profound, as it became the basis for all subsequent charts of what was one of the world's most important shipping lanes. Darwin published his intellectually brilliant and highly entertaining account of the voyage as his 'Journal & Remarks', the third volume of FitzRoy & Darwin's Narrative of the surveying voyages of his Majesty's ships Adventure and Beagles between the years 1826 and 1836 (1839), which was subsequently popularized as the Voyage of the Beagle. His account became a best seller, and established his celebrity as a naturalist. Charles Darwin (1809-1882) was history's greatest and most celebrated naturalist. He is most famous for his work On the Origins of Species (1859), in which he articulated the theory of evolution. While this revolutionary concept was highly controversial at the time, it has since acquired definitive scientific authority. While his participation on the Second Tierra del Fuego expedition of the Beagle set him on a course to fame, he developed his groundbreaking theories while study the exotic wildlife on the Galapagos Islands. His engaging style of prose and his extraordinary subject matter was instrumental in popularizing the genre of scientific writing for a broader audience. Robert FitzRoy (1805-1865) was a navigator, meteorologist and Colonial Governor of New Zealand. He began his command of the Beagle in 1828, at the commencement of its surveying work in Patagonia, Tierra del Fuego and the Straits of Magellan. The first survey concluded in 1830, with a second survey commenced in December 1831 and completed in 1836. The voyage's interest was increased by the presence of Charles Darwin as naturalist, with whom FitzRoy collaborated in the Narrative of the Surveying Voyages of HM Ships Adventure and Beagle, FitzRoy being responsible for the first two volumes and Darwin for the third. In 1837, FitzRoy was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society for his achievements. Philip Parker King (1791-1856) was a noted early explorer of the Coasts of Australia and Patagonia. Between 1817 and 1822, King surveyed parts of the Australian coast not already examined by Matthew Flinders. In this work, he was at various times joined by John Septimus Roe and John Oxley. In his next major assignment, he was given command of the survey vessel HMS Adventure, and in company with HMS Beagle, spent five years surveying the complex coasts around the Strait of Magellan. The result was presented at a meeting of the Royal Geographical Society in 1831, which brought King great acclaim for his accomplishments in the scientific effort to chart the Strait. As noted above, an 1832 edition of this chart, pre-dating the discoveries made in 1832-1834, was advertised for sale in June 1832. An 1837 edition of the chart, heavily updated from the 1832 edition, was published in the early months of 1837. However, this chart, which is dated May 2nd 1832, would seem to be an unrecorded intermediate state of the map, coming after the return of the second voyage in 1834, but before the 1837 edition: /gallery/detail/34568 The most obvious difference between this chart and the later 1837 chart is the addition on the 1837 chart of several lines of text to the bottom of the title, which is not present on this May 2nd 1832 imprint. The chart is exceptionally rare. No copies have been offered in reported auctions or dealer catalogs in more than 30 years, with the exception of the example noted above, which we offered for sale in 2015. OCLC locates an 1865 edition of the chart and a reduced size copy of the chart which was bound into volume 1 of Robert FitzRroy and Charles Darwin's Narrative of the surveying voyages of his Majesty's ships Adventure and Beagles between the years 1826 and 1836, Describing Their Examination of the Southern Shores of South America and the Beagle's Circumnavigation of the Globe, published in London in 1839. Mapoteca Columbiana also notes an edition which it dates 1832 (1840?)."
Native, Terra del Fuego.
Drayton, Joseph; United...
Native, Terra del Fuego...
1845
4442.010
Related
 
Author
Drayton, Joseph
Full Title
Native of Terra del Fuego. Engd. by Jordan & Halpin, from a sketch by J. Drayton. (Philadelphia: Lea & Blanchard. 1845)
List No
4442.010
Note
Engraved drawing of man.
Orange Harbour, Tierra del Fuego, Surveyed by the U.S.Ex.Ex.1839.
Wilkes, Charles; United...
Orange Harbour, Tierra ...
1841
6977.000
Related
 
Author
[Wilkes, Charles, United States Exploring Expedition]
Full Title
Orange Harbour, Tierra del Fuego, Surveyed by the U.S.Ex.Ex.1839.
List No
6977.000
Note
This sheet is a part of a loose set - See Pub Note below. Has a 2 x 4 inch hole in the water area.
223. Buenos Aires, Galapagos, Falklands, Tierra del Fuego, Straits of Magellan. The World Atlas.
USSR (Union of Soviet S...
223. Buenos Aires, Gala...
1967
1603.234
Related
 
Author
USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics).
Full Title
223. Buenos Aires, Galapagos Islands (Archipielago de Colon), Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas), Tierra del Fuego and Straits of Magellan. The World Atlas.
List No
1603.234
Note
City vicinity map at scale 1:250,000; Galapagos and Falkland maps at 1:2,500,000; Terra del Fuego at 1:3,750,000.
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