Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Descriptive Outline of the Pampas &c. &c.
- The Town of Buenos Aires
- Mode of Travelling
- Town of San Luis
- Journey to the Gold Mines and Lavaderos of La Carolina
- Mendoza
- The Pampas
- The Pampas Indians
- Passage Across the Great Cordillera
- Convent at Santiago
- Journey to the Gold Mine of El Bronce de Petorca
- Gold Mine of Caren
- Journey to the Silver Mine of San Pedro Nolasco
- Departure from Santiago
- Return to Mendoza
- The Pampas
- A Few General Observations Respecting the Working of Mines in South America
- Conclusion
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Descriptive Outline of the Pampas &c. &c.
- The Town of Buenos Aires
- Mode of Travelling
- Town of San Luis
- Journey to the Gold Mines and Lavaderos of La Carolina
- Mendoza
- The Pampas
- The Pampas Indians
- Passage Across the Great Cordillera
- Convent at Santiago
- Journey to the Gold Mine of El Bronce de Petorca
- Gold Mine of Caren
- Journey to the Silver Mine of San Pedro Nolasco
- Departure from Santiago
- Return to Mendoza
- The Pampas
- A Few General Observations Respecting the Working of Mines in South America
- Conclusion
Summary
After inspecting the old holes which had been worked on the lode, and gazing with great interest at the Pacific, which was apparently hanging in the air beneath us, we descended the side of the rock, sometimes upon hands and knees, for about three hundred and fifty feet, until we came to the hut where we had slept. The situation of this hut was singularly perilous. The path which ascended to it from the plain was so steep, that in riding up we constantly expected to tumble backwards over the tails of our mules; and when we got near the hut, the muleteers declared that it was altogether impossible to proceed, and this was so evident, that we dismounted and scrambled over the loose stones until we got to the hut.
The mine had not been worked for a hundred years, but it was now for sale. The hut had been just built, and a couple of miners ordered to live in it. A small space had been scarped out for the foundation of the hut, which was so close to the precipice that there was not room to walk round it. Above it, on the mountain, were loose rocks, which by the first earthquake would probably be precipitated. Beneath was the valley, but at such a depth that objects in it were imperfectly distinguished.
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- Information
- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1826