Brazil: a member of the Von Wied expedition is digging into a turtle's nest to get at the eggs, another man wearing a long cape and a hat (Maximilian Prinz von Wied?) stands nearby, watching. Etching by W. Read.
- Wied, Maximilian, Prinz von, 1782-1867.
- Date:
- [1825]
- Reference:
- 34697i
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Publication/Creation
[London] : [Siir Richard Phillips, and Company], [1825]
Physical description
1 print : etching ; image 11.6 x 18 cm
Lettering
Robbing the nest of a turtle. W. Read sc.
Creator/production credits
A simplified outline engraving by W. Read after the more finished engraving in the German edition of the same work, Maximilian Prinz von Wied, Reise nach Brasilien in den Jahren 1815 bis 1817, vol. 1, Frankfurt 1820, facing p. 216
References note
Maximilian Prinz von Wied, Travels in Brazil, in 1815, 1816, and 1817, London: Sir Richard Phillips, and Company, 1825, pp. 102-103 ("While collecting drift-wood on the strand, we perceived at a small distance a huge turtle, the Testudo Mydas of Linnaeus, which seemed anxious to lay her eggs. Our presence did not interrupt it; the animal evinced no other signs of fear at our presence than by a hiss similar to that of a goose. We could even take it up, but its weight required four men to lift it up. It then began to work with its hindmost fins, and soon formed a round hole in the bed of sand, and immediately began to deposit its eggs. One of our soldiers laid down at his whole length on the ground, and with his hand pulled out the eggs continually; by this means we collected in about ten minutes 100 eggs. As the great weight of the turtle alone would be as much as a good stout pack-horse could carry, besides the difficulty of placing the cumbrous mass in a way to be conveyed thence, we resolved to spare his life and to be satisfied with its ample tribute of eggs. …")
Reference
Wellcome Collection 34697i
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Location Status Access Closed stores