15.
257 In 1949: Cummins,
257 “ Pain-stop pain”: Ibid., p. 58.
257 “The voices and sounds”: Ibid., p. 111.
257 “I really don’t”: Brian Fawcett to Joan, Sept. 3, 1945, Fawcett Family Papers.
257 “Have you really”: Nina Fawcett to Joan, April 22, 1942, Fawcett Family Papers.
257 “In a way”: Brian Fawcett to Joan, Sept. 3, 1945, Fawcett Family Papers.
258 “The time has come”: Brian Fawcett,
258 “wild, despairing”: Brian Fawcett to Joan, Sept. 3, 1945, Fawcett Family Papers.
258 “the pathetic relics”: Percy Harrison Fawcett, introduction to
258 “I feel that”: Brian Fawcett to Joan, Sept. 3, 1945, Fawcett Family Papers.
258 “on his expeditions”: Fawcett, introduction to
258 “Daddy seems very”: Brian Fawcett to Nina, April 1, 1951, Fawcett Family Papers.
258 “It really is”: Brian Fawcett to Nina, May 15, 1952, Fawcett Family Papers.
258 “I simply couldn’t”: Nina Fawcett to Joan, Dec. 14, 1952, Fawcett Family Papers.
259 Brian and Joan: Williams, introduction to
259 “sacrificed”: Ibid.
259 “without satisfying”: Brian Fawcett to Sir Geoffrey Thompson, May 20, 1955, FO 371/114106, TNA.
259 “just as mad”: Thompson to I. F. S. Vincent, May 19, 1955, FO 371/114106, TNA.
259 “But… but”: Fawcett,
260 “Fate must surely”: Ibid., p. 284.
260 “That looks like”: Ibid., p. 245.
260 “The whole romantic”: Ibid., p. 301.
260 “I do not assume”: Percy Harrison Fawcett, “Memorandum Regarding the Region of South America Which It Is Intended to Explore” (proposal), 1919, RGS.
260 “the cradle of”: Fawcett,
260 “the time”: “The Occult Interests of Col. P. H. Fawcett,” n.d., n.p., PHFP.
260 “Was Daddy’s whole”: Williams, introduction to
260 “an objective that”: Fawcett,
260 “Those whom the Gods”: Fawcett to Windust, March 5, 1923, PHFP.
261 One sect, called: Details about the sect come from Leal,
263 “I was all she had”: Brian Fawcett,
264 “My story is lost”: Cummins,
265 “throwing away”: Fawcett,
271 “very little scratching”: Percy Harrison Fawcett, “Memorandum Regarding the Region of South America Which It Is Intended to Explore” (proposal), 1919, RGS.
273 Heckenberger has helped: For further information on Heckenberger’s discoveries, see
273 Other scientists: My descriptions of the revolution in archaeology in the Amazon come from my interviews with many of the anthropologists and other scientists who are or were working in the field, including William Denevan, Clark Erickson, Susanna Hecht, Michael Heckenberger, Eduardo Neves, James Petersen, Anna Roosevelt, and Neil Whitehead. My information is also derived from many of these and other scholars’ published research. See, for instance, “Secrets of the Forest” and
274 Some archaeologists now: A team of archaeologists claims that at a site in Monte Verde, Chile, there are indications of human presence from more than thirty-two thousand years ago, which, if true, would further shatter the traditional theory of how and when the Americas were first settled.
275 “no mirage”: Roosevelt, “Secrets of the Forest,” p. 26.
275 “With some caveats”: Interview with author.
Selected Bibliography
Adamson, Jack H., and H. F. Folland.
American Geographical Society. “Correspondence.”
Babcock, William H. “Early Observations in American Physical Anthropology.”
Baker, Samuel White.
Balee, William, and Clark L. Erickson, eds.
Basso, Ellen B.
Bates, Henry Walter.
Bergreen, Laurence.
Berton, Pierre.
Bingham, Hiram.
Bodard, Lucien.
Bowman, Isaiah. “Remarkable Discoveries in Bolivia.”