MIT ChE Class 1966

MIT ChE Class 1966

The year 2016 makes the 50th anniversary of our class. From this inauspicious beginnings we rose as one group of individuals in our chosen profession in the mother country and our beloved USA. We became a part of a huge extended family, no matter the miles that separate us, yet find unity in a common experience and purpose.. Forever classmates...AMOR PATRIAE

Wednesday, August 01, 2018








Eerie empty streets, buildings taken over by vines, rusting underwater tanks inhabited by fish, these are the dramatic images of the places that time forgot.


The incredible story of the Yorkshireman who moved his family to an uninhabited volcanic island in the Pacific in the 19th century - and lived there for over 30 YEARS in isolation

  • Thomas Bell left Yorkshire at the age of 16 in 1854 and journeyed all the way to New Zealand
  • While there he met his wife and after having six children set up home on the remote Sunday Island
  • They were plagued by rats, endured cyclones and had to build their own homes from scratch
  • Their remarkable tale of survival has been used as the basis for a new novel, called Mr Peacock's Possessions
  • Here the author, who is related by marriage to Mr Bell, tells MailOnline about the castaways' life on the island 
Not much is known about Thomas Bell until he turned 16 in 1854.
Then his life became the stuff of page-turning adventure novels and Hollywood movies.
Because in that year he left his native Yorkshire for New Zealand and ended up living on an uninhabited volcanic island 680 miles off its coast in near total isolation with his family for 30 years, amid cyclones and earthquakes.
They survived by living off the meat of goats they killed on steep cliffs and cultivating a variety of food from bananas to regular vegetables. It’s a castaway tale so extreme that it’s almost difficult to believe.
Scroll down for video 
Mrs Frederica Bell and her children Freda, Roy and William 'King' Bell pictured on Sunday Island in 1908. Mr Thomas Bell had landed there with Frederica in 1878
Mrs Frederica Bell and her children Freda, Roy and William 'King' Bell pictured on Sunday Island in 1908. Mr Thomas Bell had landed there with Frederica in 1878
The Bells were dropped off on the island by a captain who left them with rotten supplies. Their tale of survival over several decades is remarkable. Pictured is Frederica Bell in her DIY house
The Bells were dropped off on the island by a captain who left them with rotten supplies. Their tale of survival over several decades is remarkable. Pictured is Frederica Bell in her DIY house
This image shows supplies for the Bells being brought ashore in Denham Bay in 1908. Picture credit: Alexander Turnbull Library
This image shows supplies for the Bells being brought ashore in Denham Bay in 1908. Picture credit: Alexander Turnbull Library
Thomas Bell pictured in 1908 on Sunday Island
Thomas Bell pictured in 1908 on Sunday Island
MailOnline Travel heard the jaw-dropping yarn via London-based author Lydia Syson.
She is related by marriage to one of the Bell children through her Auckland-born husband, Martin Finn, and has used the incredible story of the family as the basis for her new novel – Mr Peacock’s Possessions.
See, it’s the stuff of page-turning novels.
The 11-square-mile island the Bells existed Robinson Crusoe-style on is called Raoul Island (it was named after Joseph Raoul, the quartermaster of the Recherche, when it was sighted on March 16, 1793), though when they arrived on December 9, 1878, it was more commonly known as Sunday Island (so named in 1796 by a passing British captain, who saw it on a Sunday).
Thomas Bell hadn’t made a beeline for it straight-away from Yorkshire, though.
While in New Zealand he met Frederica, the daughter of a Lancashire farmer, and married her in Hawkes Bay, in around 1866, and then had six children with her – Hettie, the oldest, followed by Bessie, Mary, Tom, Harry and Jack.
Lydia said: ‘Thomas seems to have combined adventurousness, ambition and restlessness in equal measure. He moved his family around the North Island of New Zealand trying one not-quite-successful pursuit after another. He tried his hand at starting a flax mill, running hotels and a county store, and also farming.’
He ended up in Samoa in 1877, where he bought a hotel.
While there, he heard about Sunday Island, part of the Kermadec archipelago, from a neighbour who had lived there for seven years and became hooked on the idea of moving there himself.
Lydia said: ‘He must have been extraordinarily tempted by Johnson’s tales of an incredibly fertile subtropical island, where absolutely anything would grow, which was now empty of people and unclaimed by anyone. A schooner called the Norval was heading for Auckland, and its master, a Captain McKenzie, agreed to stop by Sunday Island so that the Bells could have a look, and stay if they decided it would suit them.’
This stunning image of Raoul Island (known as Sunday Island up until the early 20th century) was taken during a trip Lydia made there in April this year on HMNZS Canterbury. It was shot from the ship's helicopter
This stunning image of Raoul Island (known as Sunday Island up until the early 20th century) was taken during a trip Lydia made there in April this year on HMNZS Canterbury. It was shot from the ship's helicopter
This image was taken by an unknown photographer in 1908 that shows two buildings used as a camp by members of a scientific expedition to Raoul Island
This image was taken by an unknown photographer in 1908 that shows two buildings used as a camp by members of a scientific expedition to Raoul Island
Thomas Bell's son, William, pictured with a turtle on Raoul Island in 1908
Goats clustered on steep terrain on Raoul Island in 1908
William 'King' Hill is pictured left with a turtle in 1908. Pictured right are goats clustered on steep terrain on Raoul Island, a picture that was also taken in 1908
The island is remarkable, and in a remarkable marine environment.
It sits not a million miles away from the second-deepest ocean trench in the world – the Tonga Trench, which reaches a depth of 35,702 feet – and above the world’s longest chain of underwater volcanoes.
The Kermadec area is home to over 150 species of fish, 35 species of whales and dolphins and three species of sea turtles.
The Bells wouldn’t have known any of this, though.
All they knew when they came ashore on the island’s Denham Bay was that they’d entered hell on earth.
That’s because they were stitched up by Captain McKenzie, who had sold them rotten provisions.
Before the ship dropped anchor they had paid him £200 to return with more and pick them up if they didn’t take to life on the island.
But they never saw him again.
For the next few months they survived by eating oranges, fish, giant limpets and the roots of fern and cabbage trees. And they built houses from scratch.
One of the Bell's thatched huts. Pictured in 1908. The Bells had to build these from scratch
One of the Bell's thatched huts. Pictured in 1908. The Bells had to build these from scratch
They hunted, too. Thomas would take his two eldest daughters (the eldest being only 11) on goat-killing expeditions (the goats were introduced by early whalers) 200ft up on the Denham Bay cliffs.
For eight months they endured plagues of rats (also introduced by whalers) and storms that made hunting and fishing almost impossible. The fear of starvation constantly lurked.
Then an American whaler, the Canton, dropped anchor having seen smoke from one of their fires and gave them some desperately needed provisions, but it couldn’t rescue them, because it was sailing to remote whaling grounds and had no spare room.
‘Eventually,’ Lydia said, ‘after nearly two years on the island, during which time they moved to the other side, and escaped the rats and the high cliffs, they “smoked in” another passing schooner, called the Sissy.
‘Fortunately this ship was Auckland-bound, and Thomas Bell went off in it – leaving his wife and children alone on the island, and returned after a short trip to New Zealand for supplies – iron tanks, timber, grass seed, clothing for the family - in another ship, called the Orwell. And then the Orwell went on to Niue - then called Savage Island thanks to Captain Cook - and came back with five labourers, and all that island’s edible plant species – most significantly, bananas – which they showed him how to cultivate. Their arrival made all the difference to the family.’
This aerial image of Raoul Island was taken by Lydia from Canterbury's helicopter. The island lies 680 miles from New Zealand
This aerial image of Raoul Island was taken by Lydia from Canterbury's helicopter. The island lies 680 miles from New Zealand
Raoul island is remarkable, and in a remarkable marine environment. It sits not a million miles away from the second-deepest ocean trench in the world – the Tonga Trench, which reaches a depth of 35,702 feet – and above the world’s longest chain of underwater volcanoes
Raoul island is remarkable, and in a remarkable marine environment. It sits not a million miles away from the second-deepest ocean trench in the world – the Tonga Trench, which reaches a depth of 35,702 feet – and above the world’s longest chain of underwater volcanoes
In the following years Thomas and his wife had four more children - Raoul (known as Roy) in 1882, Freda in 1884, Ada in 1886 and William (known as ‘King’) in 1889 – and cultivated an impressive range of plants, including pawpaw, guava, custard apple, pomegranate, sugar cane and 14 varieties of banana. Even tea and coffee.
Word about the family got around the whaling community and ships would stop by to give the Bells provisions - and buy produce the family had grown.
They pretty much had the island to themselves – a few settlers arrived in 1889 but gave up after five months, fed up with earthquakes and cyclones – until they left in 1914, when war arrived.
Lydia said: ‘By then the Kermadecs had long been annexed by New Zealand. In fact there were a few other families settled on Raoul in 1913, and the older Bell children, had already left.
‘But in 1914 the Great War was not just on the horizon – it was potentially on the doorstep of the Kermadecs because of German activities in the Pacific. It didn’t seem safe to remain, and there was no guarantee Bell would be able to get his produce off the island anyway. They arrived back in Auckland on July 4, 1914, and on August 4, the Dominions declared war on Germany.’
Not long after arriving back on the mainland, the family went their separate ways.
Lydia said: ‘At first the family lived in Auckland, and Frederica stayed there for the rest of her life, but as ever, her husband failed to settle, and they parted. Thomas Bell kept wandering, a little Lear-like perhaps, ending his days living in Pahiatua on New Zealand’s North Island with his eldest daughter, Hettie, and dying in 1929.
One of Raoul's volcanic crater lakes, taken from the air during Lydia's trip. It took the author and her group two days to reach the island from New Zealand
One of Raoul's volcanic crater lakes, taken from the air during Lydia's trip. It took the author and her group two days to reach the island from New Zealand
Denham Bay on Raoul Island. This image was taken by Gareth Rapley who was formerly employed by New Zealand's Department of Conservation
Denham Bay on Raoul Island. This image was taken by Gareth Rapley who was formerly employed by New Zealand's Department of Conservation
The island has the appearance of an enchanted paradise, but it's also treacherous. It's often hit by vicious storms and lacks a safe harbour
The island has the appearance of an enchanted paradise, but it's also treacherous. It's often hit by vicious storms and lacks a safe harbourKing Bell met and married his wife in Waikaretu, on the west coast of the North Island, where she was working as a post mistress. He and his brother Roy both had reputations as wonderful nurserymen who could grow all sorts of then exotic species. And despite the fact that King’s mother’s ashes were kept in a wardrobe in the spare room, as she’d hoped to be scattered on Sunday Island, none of her children ever went back, and in the end they were buried with her son Roy when he died.’
This gripping tale came to life for Lydia earlier this year when she got the chance to actually visit Raoul Island, which is devoid of any permanent settlement.
She was invited by an environmental group called the Sir Peter Blake Trust to be the ‘expedition writer’ on a trip in April to the Kermadecs with young environmentalists and marine biologists.
Her job was to help the youngsters with their blog posts and to ‘provide something about the human history’ of Raoul Island (she'd done an awful lot of research about it for her novel), which they reached after two days’ sailing on the New Zealand Navy’s biggest ship, the HMNZS Canterbury.
This image of Lydia swimming close to Raoul Island was taken by a crew member
This image of Lydia swimming close to Raoul Island was taken by a crew member
Student environmentalists on Lydia's trip take a dip in the ocean, using the cavernous HMNZS Canterbury as their platform
Student environmentalists on Lydia's trip take a dip in the ocean, using the cavernous HMNZS Canterbury as their platform
HMNZS Canterbury pictured off the coast of Raoul during Lydia's April expedition
HMNZS Canterbury pictured off the coast of Raoul during Lydia's April expedition
The trip was organised by the environmental group the Sir Peter Blake Trust and Lydia was the ‘expedition writer’. This image shows the sheer size of their home, HMNZS Canterbury
The trip was organised by the environmental group the Sir Peter Blake Trust and Lydia was the ‘expedition writer’. This image shows the sheer size of their home, HMNZS Canterbury
Lydia said: '[Raoul Island is] one of the most isolated places in the Pacific. From snorkelling there and swimming there and looking out, it seems incredibly pristine, but the researchers found micro-plastics in collections of plankton taken there. They’re everywhere'. The author took this image of the island from the air, with HMNZS Canterbury anchored off-shore
Lydia said: '[Raoul Island is] one of the most isolated places in the Pacific. From snorkelling there and swimming there and looking out, it seems incredibly pristine, but the researchers found micro-plastics in collections of plankton taken there. They’re everywhere'. The author took this image of the island from the air, with HMNZS Canterbury anchored off-shore

RAOUL ISLAND AND THE KERMADECS - THE FACTS 

Raoul Island is in the Kermadec area, north-east of New Zealand. It is one of the most pristine and unique places on earth. The Kermadec Islands are a group of subtropical islands in the heart of the region.
It includes the world’s longest chain of underwater volcanoes.
It is home to the second-deepest ocean trench in the world - the Tonga Trench, which is 35,702 feet (10,882 m) deep at its deepest point.
The islands in the Kermadec area are uninhabited except for a New Zealand Department of Conservation field station on Raoul Island (pictured)
The islands in the Kermadec area are uninhabited except for a New Zealand Department of Conservation field station on Raoul Island (pictured)
Its waters are home to over six million seabirds of 39 different species, over 150 species of fish, 35 species of whales and dolphins, three species of sea turtles (all endangered) and many other marine species unique to the area such as corals, shellfish and crabs.
Raoul Island was settled by Polynesians between 600 and 1,000 years ago. When the New Zealand government established a weather and radio station on the island in 1939 it made Raoul the official name, probably, says teara.govt.nz, to avoid confusion with a number of Sunday islands in Australia.
Europeans discovered the islands in the area in the 1700s.
Today the islands are uninhabited except for a New Zealand Department of Conservation field station on Raoul Island.  

Her verdict? Stunning. Though environmental problems are beginning to affect it.
She said: ‘It’s one of the most isolated places in the Pacific. From snorkelling there and swimming there and looking out, it seems incredibly pristine, but the researchers found micro-plastics in collections of plankton taken there. They’re everywhere.
‘So few people have ever been to a place where there’s a complete eco system that’s as untouched as it’s possible to be. There are so few places like this left in the world. And that was impressive.
‘The book is all about what it would have been like to live on the island. The extreme isolation.’
It’s a novel for now – but it wouldn’t be a surprise if Hollywood came calling to put the Bell’s extraordinary tale on the big screen.
  • Mr Peacock's Possessions by Lydia Syson (Bonnier Zaffre, £12.99) is set on Raoul Island and loosely based on the story of the Bell family. It's available from all good bookshops and online here  
  • For information about how to visit the island go to www.heritage-expeditions.com/destination/kermadec-islands.
Lydia is related by marriage to one of the Bell children through her Auckland-born husband, Martin Finn, and has used the incredible story of the family as the basis for her new novel – Mr Peacock’s Possessions
Lydia is related by marriage to one of the Bell children through her Auckland-born husband, Martin Finn, and has used the incredible story of the family as the basis for her new novel – Mr Peacock’s Possessions


Vines climb old stone walls, weave through windows and doors and creep along crumpling paths. In an abandoned village which has been reclaimed by mother nature, there is no sign of life other than the animals, birds and insects which have taken over.
Time stands still in the village on Shengshan Island - one of almost 400 that make up the Shengsi Islands to the east of China's Zhejiang province. What was once a thriving fishing hub has been long deserted and naturally transformed into a green jungle of tangled plants and neglected buildings.
In Paris, you might be surprised to find a beautiful 19-mile belt of neglected green space in the centre of the city, which has lain abandoned since 1934. Now it is a treasure trove for graffiti artists and nature-lovers, and the people of Paris are passionate about saving it.
In another set of pictures, the shifting sands of the Namibian Desert have totally taken over a formerly opulent mining village built in the middle of the desert by wealthy Germans seeking their fortune. Now the only visitors are tourists and ghost hunters.
But the pictures all share one theme - that once nature finds a way, it soon takes over and transforms the space into something compellingly beautiful.
Scroll down for video 
In this abandoned fishing village on Shengshan Island, Zhejiang province, China, vines climb the old stone walls, weave through the windows and doors and creep along the crumpling paths. The fishing village has been 'reclaimed' by mother nature 
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In this abandoned fishing village on Shengshan Island, Zhejiang province, China, vines climb the old stone walls, weave through the windows and doors and creep along the crumpling paths. The fishing village has been 'reclaimed' by mother nature
Greenhouses everywhere: Clothed in vines and leaves, the former fishing village is a sight to behold. The pictures were taken by Shanghai-based amateur photographer Qing Jian  
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Greenhouses everywhere: Clothed in vines and leaves, the former fishing village is a sight to behold. The pictures were taken by Shanghai-based amateur photographer Qing Jian 
The Chemin de fer de Petite Ceinture (of 'little belt railway') was a Parisian railway that, from 1852, was a circular connection between Paris's main railway stations. Abandoned since 1934, the beautiful 19-mile belt of neglected green space in the centre of Paris is a treasure trove for graffiti artists and nature-lovers 
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The Chemin de fer de Petite Ceinture (of 'little belt railway') was a Parisian railway that, from 1852, was a circular connection between Paris's main railway stations. Abandoned since 1934, the beautiful 19-mile belt of neglected green space in the centre of Paris is a treasure trove for graffiti artists and nature-lovers


The temple sites of the Historic City of Ayutthaya, an UNESCO World Heritage Center since 13 December 1991 is the setting for this incredible shot of the head of Buddha nestled within a tree, a touristic highlight of Wat Maha That 
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The temple sites of the Historic City of Ayutthaya, an UNESCO World Heritage Center since 13 December 1991 is the setting for this incredible shot of the head of Buddha nestled within a tree, a touristic highlight of Wat Maha That
Amid the roots of the Kapok tree
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A Kapok tree covers the building
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A Kapok tree which grew in the ruins of Preah Khan Temple, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Angkor, Cambodia has totally taken over its surroundings, creating a beautiful natural entrance for travellers to explore
Ice ice baby: A Russian shipyard in a small bay south of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is the setting for this collection of rusting former glories surrounded by snow and ice 
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Ice ice baby: A Russian shipyard in a small bay south of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is the setting for this collection of rusting former glories surrounded by snow and ice
The French village Oradour-sur-Glane has been left in its ruined state, its buildings and car destroyed by fire after it was attacked by Nazi soldiers and all its inhabitants massacred in 1944. It remains a chilling time capsule as the burned out homes remain exactly as they were on the day they were torched, even the car of the mayor still lies rusting in the main street 
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The French village Oradour-sur-Glane has been left in its ruined state, its buildings and car destroyed by fire after it was attacked by Nazi soldiers and all its inhabitants massacred in 1944. It remains a chilling time capsule as the burned out homes remain exactly as they were on the day they were torched, even the car of the mayor still lies rusting in the main street
Once the home to hundreds of German miners seeking their fortune in the Namibian desert, almost 100 years after Kolmanskop peaked as a thriving and bustling oasis, it is now a dilapidated ghost town slowly being reclaimed by the sand 
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Once the home to hundreds of German miners seeking their fortune in the Namibian desert, almost 100 years after Kolmanskop peaked as a thriving and bustling oasis, it is now a dilapidated ghost town slowly being reclaimed by the sand
Photographer Enrique Lopez-Tapia took this photo of one of the surviving houses, venturing inside the document room knee deep in sand. The wooden houses, large and opulent, were built in the middle of the desert by wealthy German miners. Now sand dunes rule 
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Photographer Enrique Lopez-Tapia took this photo of one of the surviving houses, venturing inside the document room knee deep in sand. The wooden houses, large and opulent, were built in the middle of the desert by wealthy German miners. Now sand dunes rule
Ghost town: The pictures were taken by photographer Michiel Van Balen as he travelled through the Nambian desert taking shots of the deserted town left to decay in nature. The creepy remains of Kolmanskop have made it a magnet to ghost hunters and it has featured on a number of paranormal series 
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Ghost town: The pictures were taken by photographer Michiel Van Balen as he travelled through the Nambian desert taking shots of the deserted town left to decay in nature. The creepy remains of Kolmanskop have made it a magnet to ghost hunters and it has featured on a number of paranormal series
The Valley of the Mills is an old abandoned flour mill in Sorrento, Italy that was gradually abandoned over the years. The humid environment created a micro-climate that reportedly proved favourable to  ferns which covered the ruins in a layer of rich green flora. Tourists can visit the green wonder via stone ramps down into the valley, or gaze down upon the ruins from above 
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The Valley of the Mills is an old abandoned flour mill in Sorrento, Italy that was gradually abandoned over the years. The humid environment created a micro-climate that reportedly proved favourable to ferns which covered the ruins in a layer of rich green flora. Tourists can visit the green wonder via stone ramps down into the valley, or gaze down upon the ruins from above
Fish food: Truk Lagoon, once considered the most formidable of all Japanese strongholds in the Pacific, is now the site for an underwater military graveyard. A tank lies rusting on the main deck of a sunken ship in the Federated States of Micronesia 
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Fish food: Truk Lagoon, once considered the most formidable of all Japanese strongholds in the Pacific, is now the site for an underwater military graveyard. A tank lies rusting on the main deck of a sunken ship in the Federated States of Micronesia
Divers paradise: The Lagoon is a popular location for divers as well as the fish and other creatures who have taken over 
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Divers paradise: The Lagoon is a popular location for divers as well as the fish and other creatures who have taken over
These rusted classic cars from the Sixties were dumped in a forest scrapyard in Chatillon, Belgium, and have never been cleared away. They are now home to the forest insects and creatures who are the only regular visitors 
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These rusted classic cars from the Sixties were dumped in a forest scrapyard in Chatillon, Belgium, and have never been cleared away. They are now home to the forest insects and creatures who are the only regular visitors





































Stunning pictures of Amazon 'Lost World' the size of Wales - home to uncontacted tribes and undiscovered animals - that will finally be protected from loggers after nine year battle

  • The 5.9 million acre Sierra del Divisor stretches for 600 miles along Peru's border with Brazil in the Amazon
  • It is home to hundreds of species of plant and wildlife, as well as at least one ancient South American tribe
  • But it was under threat from loggers and miners desperate to tap the natural resources it hides within
  • Peruvian government about to  make it a national park, which will protect the Sierra del Divisor for years to come


A stunning rainforest paradise the size of Wales which hides uncontacted tribes and undiscovered animals amongst its soaring green canopies is expected to be saved from almost certain ruin this week, as environmentalists win a nine-year battle to protect this jewel of the Amazon from logger and miners.
The 5.9million acre Sierra del Divisor, which climbs out from an immense plain of unbroken rainforest, is expected to be turned into the Amazon's newest national park, stretching for 600 miles along the Peruvian border with Brazil.
It comes after years of fighting between environmentalists and those who want to exploit its vast natural resources - including the trees, oil and significant mineral deposits.
Scroll down for video 
Beautiful: The soaring conical volcanoes - the only ones in the Amazon - which peak out above the canopy are one of the unique features about the Sierra del Divisor, an area the size of Wales which stretches along the Peruvian border
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Beautiful: The soaring conical volcanoes - the only ones in the Amazon - which peak out above the canopy are one of the unique features about the Sierra del Divisor, an area the size of Wales which stretches along the Peruvian border
Hidden: The rainforest here is home to 500 plant and 760 animal species - as well as tribes which have never come into contact with outsiders
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Hidden: The rainforest here is home to 500 plant and 760 animal species - as well as tribes which have never come into contact with outsiders
Destruction: But it was all under threat from loggers and miners, who to get rich off its natural resources
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Destruction: But it was all under threat from loggers and miners, who to get rich off its natural resources
Those fighting for the protection of the Sierra del Divisor have warned greed risks destroying the earthly paradise, which, like something from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's the Lost World, is largely unexplored and people with tribes believed to have never come into contact with other people.
The vast wilderness, 20 hours by boat from the nearest town, is also home to 3,500 plant species and 760 animal species, including Jaguar and South American Tapir.
Its lush forests contain plunging waterfalls, hidden lakes and soaring conical dormant volcanoes - the only ones in the Amazonian rainforest - and is known locally as 'sina jonibaon manan,' or 'Land of the fierce people,' a nod to the indigenous Iskanawa tribe who retreated into the area when European settlers landed in Peru in the 16th century.
The Iskonowa, a tribe with just 300 to 400 men, women and children, live in voluntary isolation but have moved deeper and deeper in to the rainforest in recent years to escape illegal miners and loggers who began to encroach on the rainforest in recent years.
But they aren't the only human's living amongst the trees: expeditions to the interior have seen footprints and charred fires which are believed to belong to further, uncontacted, tribes eking out a near primitive existence in the forest.


 
Protection: But the Peruvian government looks set to turn it into a national park by the end of the week after campaigns by enivornmentalists
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Protection: But the Peruvian government looks set to turn it into a national park by the end of the week after campaigns by enivornmentalists
Desperate need: Without this, experts had warned the encroaching loggers and miners meant the area could have been destroyed within years
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Desperate need: Without this, experts had warned the encroaching loggers and miners meant the area could have been destroyed within years
Hidden: The forest is home to the the Iskonowa tribe, which has just three to four hundred people in it
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Hidden: The forest is home to the the Iskonowa tribe, which has just three to four hundred people in it
Concealed: The tribe has retreated further into the forest - on the border of two countries, above, as the loggers encroached on their space
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Concealed: The tribe has retreated further into the forest - on the border of two countries, above, as the loggers encroached on their space
But all this was at serious risk. 
Until now, the Sierra del Divisor was a reserved zone and enjoyed little legal protection, and over the last few years, there has been in increase in mining, logging and oil exploration, with bands of informal loggers and gold miners threatening the forests' unique nature.
Unchecked, experts fear such activity would destroy the area within years.
But this week, after previous governments procrastinated for years over offering the protection the area needs, President Ollanta Humala is expected to rubber stamp the local environment ministry's categorisation of the area as a national park. 
Get rich quick: The forest not only offers wood from its trees, but also oil and minerals under its fertile soil
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Get rich quick: The forest not only offers wood from its trees, but also oil and minerals under its fertile soil
International: Huge pressure was put on the Peruvian government from all over the world to give the area the protection it deserves
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International: Huge pressure was put on the Peruvian government from all over the world to give the area the protection it deserves
Not alone: The Iskonowa is just one of the human groups living in the forest - other, uncontacted tribes are also thought to live here
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Not alone: The Iskonowa is just one of the human groups living in the forest - other, uncontacted tribes are also thought to live here
The move will bring hope for the creation of two other National Parks in Peru, including a national marine park at Caba Blanco, where author Ernest Hemmingway once fished for Marlin and was partly the settling for the 1958 film version of his novel 'The Old Man and the Sea', starring Spencer Tracy.
A spokesman for Peruvian environmental organisation CEDIA said: 'We are confident that the creation of the Sierra del Divisor National Park - awaited by local people - is an important step in the effort to remove threats that endanger not only this area but also the surrounding communities.'
Dr Paul Salaman, chief executive  of the Rainforest Trust, which has been campaigning to protect the region, said: 'Protecting the Sierra del Divisor is crucial for global wildlife, for indigenous people and the world.'
Confident: Local authorities in Peru are positive this is the right step to make to protect the area for years to come
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Confident: Local authorities in Peru are positive this is the right step to make to protect the area for years to come
Victory: Dr Paul Salaman, chief executive of the Rainforest Trust, which has been campaigning for protection, said defending the forest was 'crucial' for global wildlife, its indigenous people and the world
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Victory: Dr Paul Salaman, chief executive of the Rainforest Trust, which has been campaigning for protection, said defending the forest was 'crucial' for global wildlife, its indigenous people and the world











































 

 

Fantasy island!

  • The Island of Dominica is a natural wonder, with two thirds of its 289 square miles covered in lush rainforest
  • The 2015 Dominica Film Challenge enlisted six teams of filmmakers to capture the beauty of the island
  • Each team of two was given an all-expenses paid week on the island to explore its natural wonders
  • While some entrants focussed on action and adventure, others highlights local people and their food


With two thirds of its 289 square miles covered by tropical rainforest, adventure isn't hard to come by on the island of Dominica - unspoiled beauty and natural wonder are its obvious and indisputable calling cards.
The 70,000 locals know this though. To get the word out to the world, the Discover Dominica Authority invited emerging filmmakers from all around the world to enjoy the island for themselves and give their own unique perspective as part of the 2015 Dominica Film Challenge.
Six pairs of adventurous storytellers were chosen after a worldwide search to take an all-expenses paid expedition around the West Indian island. They would explore for a week, interact with the locals and report back with their unique view in the form of a short film.
Alison Teal goes swimming on horseback, filmed and photographed by Sarah Lee, for their entry in the 2015 Dominica Film Challenge
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Alison Teal goes swimming on horseback, filmed and photographed by Sarah Lee, for their entry in the 2015 Dominica Film Challenge
A waterfall flows into the surf as it crashes into the rocks - a dramatic scene made joyous by the man and woman leaping in the air
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A waterfall flows into the surf as it crashes into the rocks - a dramatic scene made joyous by the man and woman leaping in the air
While it looks like a unique experience, swimming underwater while horses run alongside is commonplace in Dominica
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While it looks like a unique experience, swimming underwater while horses run alongside is commonplace in Dominica
The best of them will be filtered by a public vote via Dominicachallenge.com, which closes on June 30. 
Some filmmakers chose to go swimming with horses in the ocean and take in the classic natural tourism sites and attractions, such as the American duo of presenter Alison Teal and photographer Sarah Lee.
Teal, who describes the island as a 'real-life Disneyland' and a 'true fantasy island', takes in beaches, waterfalls and goes horse-riding - while always wearing a bikini.
Others chose to take inspiration from a local writer and the island's wild expanse, such as Vancouver-based creative company Union Production.
Beautiful landscapes from boats and the banks of streams inspire some of the artists while action sports and the smiling faces of locals inspire others.
Divers and hikers alike adore Dominica, which is home to 1,200 plant species along with secluded beaches, hot geothermal springs and waterfalls - there's good reason it's known as 'The Nature Island'.
Not to be confused with the Spanish-speaking Dominican Republic, which neighbours Haiti, the tiny island of Dominica sits between Guadeloupe and Martinique on the Eastern Caribbean archipelago.
Pure peace and tranquility as a rainbow curves over a large boat in the distanceA local horse is happy to say hello in the wilds of Dominica
Pure peace and tranquillity as a rainbow curves over a large boat in the distance (left) while a local horse is happy to say hello in the wild
Liz Devine and Lisa Weatherbee's project focuses on the real life aspects of Dominica as they try local delicacies
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Liz Devine and Lisa Weatherbee's project focuses on the real life aspects of Dominica as they try local delicacies
A coconut, having been freshly cut down from its tree, is opened up for the visitors to enjoy
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A coconut, having been freshly cut down from its tree, is opened up for the visitors to enjoy
Alison enjoys a secluded volcanic sand beach in Dominica as she competes in the 2015 Dominica Film Challenge  
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Alison enjoys a secluded volcanic sand beach in Dominica as she competes in the 2015 Dominica Film Challenge 
Alison and Sarah's entry is compiled in a classic travelogue style with the presenter's enthusiasm for all activities evident
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Alison and Sarah's entry is compiled in a classic travelogue style with the presenter's enthusiasm for all activities evident
Two thirds of Dominica's 289 square miles is covered by tropical rainforest with streams and rivers to explore throughout
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Two thirds of Dominica's 289 square miles is covered by tropical rainforest with streams and rivers to explore throughout
A rainbow forms in the distance in this idyllic scene from the deck of a yacht from challenge finalists Kristen and Katie
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A rainbow forms in the distance in this idyllic scene from the deck of a yacht from challenge finalists Kristen and Katie
Alison finds yet another stunning spot to catch some sun, this time in the extensive rainforest alongside a waterfall
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Alison finds yet another stunning spot to catch some sun, this time in the extensive rainforest alongside a waterfall
The sun's rays beam through from this cave tucked behind a waterfall - one of countless hidden gems in Dominica 
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The sun's rays beam through from this cave tucked behind a waterfall - one of countless hidden gems in Dominica
Sarah catches the reflection of ferns in this clear, still waterAlison enjoys a spot of snorkelling, one of the favourite activities for those who visit Dominica
Sarah catches the reflection of ferns in the clear water (left) while Alison enjoys a spot of snorkelling, a popular Dominican pastime
Alison describes Dominica as a 'real-life Disneyland' for landmarks such as this hut, which was used in the film Pirates of the Caribbean
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Alison describes Dominica as a 'real-life Disneyland' for landmarks such as this hut, which was used in the film Pirates of the Caribbean
Night falls with dramatic clouds overhead in this scenic little cabin among the palm trees on the beautiful Caribbean island
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Night falls with dramatic clouds overhead in this scenic little cabin among the palm trees on the beautiful Caribbean island
Alison is captured splashing in the surfA rainbow lords over the mountain on the tropical island
Alison is captured splashing in the surf (left) while a rainbow lords over the mountain on the tropical island
Dominica is a 'true fantasy island', says Alison in her bid to win the Dominica Challenge that will be decided by public vote
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Dominica is a 'true fantasy island', says Alison in her bid to win the Dominica Challenge that will be decided by public vote
Dominica lies amongst the islands of Guadaloupe, Martinique and Montserrat and has been described as a 'secret Caribbean paradise'
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Dominica lies amongst the islands of Guadaloupe, Martinique and Montserrat and has been described as a 'secret Caribbean paradise'
'Dominica is the secret Caribbean paradise we have all dreamed of,' said Michael Kraabel, executive producer of the challenge.
'It's the perfect location for an eclectic mix of filmmakers and storytellers to experience something extraordinary – and then to document the experience for the world to see.'
The nation's director of tourism Colin Piper said: 'We welcome an opportunity to showcase a truly authentic Nature Island experience through the lenses and written words of the expedition teams.'
Katie Kaizer's dramatic image of a woman cantering on horseback while a dog chases along while yachts sit peacefully in the harbour
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Katie Kaizer's dramatic image of a woman cantering on horseback while a dog chases along while yachts sit peacefully in the harbour
A classic scene of Dominica, a mountainous island in the Caribbean, with the sea waters lapping up and a glimpse of the rainforest interior
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A classic scene of Dominica, a mountainous island in the Caribbean, with the sea waters lapping up and a glimpse of the rainforest interior
Kristen captures the expressive faces of two generations of Dominicans in her competition entry
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Kristen captures the expressive faces of two generations of Dominicans in her competition entry
Adventure abounds in Dominica where ropes are laid alongside vines to create a passageway for those who dare
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Adventure abounds in Dominica where ropes are laid alongside vines to create a passageway for those who dare
This atmospheric picture captures a colourful church on the sea front, with dark clouds gathering above
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This atmospheric picture captures a colourful church on the sea front, with dark clouds gathering above
A paper lantern is lit before being sent into the night sky in this moody image of the usually sunny, blue-skied Dominica
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A paper lantern is lit before being sent into the night sky in this moody image of the usually sunny, blue-skied Dominica
A happy boy steps effortlessly from the jetty and onto a boat in an everyday scene from the island
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A happy boy steps effortlessly from the jetty and onto a boat in an everyday scene from the island
A dreadlocked man emerges from the water after snorkelling in this impressive real-life portrait 
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A dreadlocked man emerges from the water after snorkelling in this impressive real-life portrait
A local Dominican artist sculpts an intricate representation of the surrounding natural attractions
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A local Dominican artist sculpts an intricate representation of the surrounding natural attractions
Fun swinging on ropes isn't just reserved for the kids on Dominica, as this barefoot man proves
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Fun swinging on ropes isn't just reserved for the kids on Dominica, as this barefoot man proves
A common sight only in the most tropical area, a wild-growing pineappleThe crystal clear water awaits its next fan to jump from a sheer-faced rock
Natural wonders: Wild-growing pineapples are common sights only in the most tropical areas (left), while on the right a woman musters the courage to jump
A mature coconut tree has the best view on the islandA local man with dreadlocked hair and beard smiles for the camera
A mature coconut tree has the best view on the island (left) while this local man with dreadlocked hair and beard has some stories to tell

Forgotten for centuries, it's a saga, told in a new book, of shipwreck, mutiny and murder that scandalised Britain...

  • HMS Wager set out from England in September 1740 to harass the Spanish
  • Also tasked with capturing enemy warships off coast of South America
  • Crew shipwrecked in storm off the coast of South America in May 1741
  • New book reveals how the sailors turned into mutineers and cannibals


Ragged and emaciated, some blind with malnutrition, others wild-eyed with drink, they roamed the island — cutlasses and pistols at the ready.
Since their ship had foundered on rocks off this desolate spot, the men’s exasperated captain had been unable to control them.
Some had formed their own camp away from the main party, returning only to try to pilfer from the paltry food supplies that the captain kept under armed guard.
Once, the hoodlums even attempted to blow him up, laying a trail of gunpowder to his tent, which was discovered just in time.
Doomed: HMS Wager got caught in heavy seas after setting sail from England in 1740 
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Doomed: HMS Wager got caught in heavy seas after setting sail from England in 1740
Such mayhem might have been expected from pirates, but these were sailors in His Majesty’s Royal Navy, shipwrecked off the coast of South America.
Yet in a matter of weeks they had turned into mutineers and cannibals, eating chunks of human flesh from corpses washed ashore from the wreck or from those lying unburied on the island.
Shockingly, a cabin boy was found trying to eat the liver of a dead shipmate.
Captain David Cheap, who had been in command of the ship, HMS Wager, was woefully ill-equipped to prevent the descent into chaos. Inexperienced, insecure and hot-tempered, he strove to assert his authority by brutally punishing transgressions, whipping those caught stealing, then leaving them in the open to die of their wounds.
Not surprisingly, such harshness simply alienated more men.
Three weeks after the shipwreck, he intervened in a row between a drunken young midshipman, Henry Cozens, and the ship’s purser, who had fired a pistol at Cozens — though he missed.
Rather than waiting to discover the details, Captain Cheap shot Cozens — whom he disliked — through the cheek.
Then he cruelly refused to let a surgeon tend the injured man, insisting he be left out in the cold to die an agonising death . . . another corpse to add to those littering the island. Worse was to follow.
The disaster of HMS Wager in 1741 is little known today, overshadowed by the more famous mutiny on the Bounty half a century later.
But the horrifying saga of shipwreck, murder and betrayal reveals human nature at its best and worst.
The survivors’ stories became best-selling books in Georgian Britain, with rival and contradictory accounts lapped up by a grimly fascinated public.
Now naval historian Rear Admiral C. H. Layman has used these accounts, together with a never before published letter by Captain Cheap, to reveal what happened when bureaucratic penny-pinching, poor leadership and an abundance of alcohol combined to create a terrifying cocktail on the high seas.
HMS Wager’s voyage had been dogged by ill luck from the start. She was one of six ships that had set out from England in September 1740 to harass the Spanish, with whom Britain was at war, and capture enemy warships off the west coast of South America.
The men lying below decks were drowned 
A rickety former store ship, she had been hastily converted to a fighting role with 28 guns and a crew of 160 men. She was carrying supplies — including, fatefully, large amounts of liquor — for the rest of the ships.
Wager was totally unsuited for the world’s most hostile seas, and so was her crew.
Recruitment difficulties meant that many were old men or invalids with missing limbs, dragged unwillingly from Chelsea Hospital. Some were so crippled they had to be hoisted aboard. A few weeks out to sea, HMS Wager’s first captain fell ill and died. David Cheap, the lieutenant of another vessel, was hastily promoted to the role.
Due to a muddle at the naval dockyards, the ships had not been ready to sail on time and therefore reached Cape Horn, at the tip of South America, when the seas were at their roughest.
One of HMS Wager’s masts snapped off and she became separated from the rest of the ships.
Not long afterwards, Captain Cheap fell down a hatchway and broke his collarbone. The surgeon gave him opiates — though Cheap complained later that he had been drugged without his knowledge. He was still heavily sedated when the boat was hit by a storm.
When she struck the rocks at 4.30am on May 14, 1741, a few men who had been lying below decks sick with scurvy were drowned.
This is believed to be part of the wreckage of the 18th Century warship which sank off the coast of Chile 
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This is believed to be part of the wreckage of the 18th Century warship which sank off the coast of Chile
Some of the crew did their utmost to right the ship, but others panicked wildly.
Sixteen-year-old midshipman John Byron, grandfather of the poet Lord Byron, saw one man run amok with a cutlass. Others lay in terror on the deck, ‘bereaved of all sense, like inanimate logs, and were bandied to and fro by the jerks and rolls of the ship’, Byron later wrote.
Another contingent at first refused to leave the ship, which was stuck on the rocks, but hadn’t broken up.
While the others rowed ashore, the remaining sailors smashed open the casks of brandy and wine, dressed themselves in clothes stolen from the officers’ cabins and spent the next few days drinking and brawling.
Eventually, a boat rowed out to the wreck and brought the mutineers ashore, where a furious Captain Cheap knocked the boatswain unconscious.
Now, most of the men had made it to land — only to find they were on an uninhabited island off the coast of what is now Chile, with no shelter and little to eat but wild celery.
Fear and lethargy prevailed. Captain Cheap seemed incapable of formulating a feasible plan for escape from an island that was rapidly becoming a mass grave as starvation and hypothermia took their toll.
By the end of June, 40 men had died of the 140 who had survived the wreck. John Byron, the teenage midshipman, tamed a wild dog and was devastated when his hungry shipmates killed and ate it.
They were like skeletons, mad with hunger 
But a few weeks later he found its rotting paws and, desperate with hunger, ate them raw.
At one point, a party of Indians, as the indigenous people were known, arrived on the island in canoes and shared their shellfish and meat with the crew.
But when some of the sailors made advances on their wives, they left.
A cabal of men, led by the chief gunner John Bulkeley, wanted to sail south and seek help on the Argentine coast. But Captain Cheap insisted on heading north by boat to rejoin the rest of the squadron and capture Spanish ships, despite the men lacking a vessel of their own.
His plan never got off the ground. In October 1741, five months after the wreck, John Bulkeley and his men used Cozens’s murder as an excuse to arrest Captain Cheap, seizing him in his tent and tying him up.
Taking possession of the ship’s longboat — the biggest vessel to survive the wreck — and two other small boats, they set out to sea.
Captain Cheap, the surgeon and one lieutenant were left behind on Wager Island, as it was now known.
Soon they were joined by midshipman John Byron and seven other men who had changed their minds and rowed back in one of the small boats.
Out on the waves, gunner John Bulkeley and his 72 men had only 12 days’ worth of rations between them, no chart and — after their smaller vessel sank — just one overcrowded, open boat.
Surviving on a small handful of flour a day, they grew sick and weak. Eleven men asked to be put ashore on the wild, jungle-fringed coast — and were never seen again.
The remaining mariners became living skeletons, delirious with hunger. A teenage sailor died. Then Thomas Capel, aged just 12, who was accompanied by a man appointed as his guardian, began to fade.
The poor boy tearfully begged his guardian for the 20 guineas that he held for him, so he could buy food from the other sailors to save his life, but the man refused.
Thomas died slowly, whimpering in misery. ‘Hunger is destitute of compassion,’ one of his companions later wrote. After six weeks at sea, most of them were more dead than alive.
In 2006 a team of Chilean and Royal Navy explorers discovered the wreck of the HMS Wager 
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In 2006 a team of Chilean and Royal Navy explorers discovered the wreck of the HMS Wager
Then, a little way up the Atlantic coast of South America, a few men managed to swim ashore at a desolate beach and kill some game. But, in a brutal act of self-preservation — fewer mouths would improve the chances of survival for those on board — once the meat was hoisted on board, the boat sailed off, abandoning eight men on shore.
Their betrayers made it to Rio Grande in southern Brazil and were taken in by the Spanish.
Only 30 men, including their leader John Bulkeley, had survived the 2,500-mile odyssey. In January 1743, John Bulkeley arrived back in England, where he wrote his version of events, a best-selling tale of heroic endurance.
He downplayed suggestions of mutiny or marooning, claiming that he had reluctantly taken on the role of leader.
Bulkeley must have reckoned the only people who could challenge his story were probably dead.
In fact, back on Wager Island, Captain Cheap and his companions were still alive, albeit reduced to eating seaweed and their sealskin shoes.
After many months of procrastination by the Captain and more deaths, they began a long and torturous journey north by sea.
Again, disaster and betrayal beset the party. One of their two small boats, salvaged from the wreck, soon sank, and the men put ashore.  
As his men died from hunger, Captain Cheap hoarded food, cruelly eating meat in front of the others.
Some muttered that they should maroon him — then six men made off with the group’s only remaining boat. No more was heard of them.
The five left onshore, Captain Cheap and the young John Byron among them, seemed doomed — until some Indians took them inland in their canoes, forcing them to row though they were weak.
Aged just 12, the boy sailor died whimpering 
The ship’s surgeon died of exhaustion, but after months of canoeing, they reached the island of Chiloe off what is now Chile.
Here, Captain Cheap and his few remaining men recuperated, John Byron even flirting with Spanish ladies, until they were sent to Santiago by the Spanish and eventually put on a ship for England.
Byron’s family had given him up for dead. When he arrived at their London home in 1746, more than five years after he had left, the porter at first tried to shut the door in his face — before a joyous family reunion.
Their homecoming was not the only surprise for John Bulkeley’s crew. Against the odds, some of the game-hunters they had abandoned on the Brazilian coast also made it back. The surviving sailors had been taken prisoner by other Indians and sold on to the Spanish.
They were enslaved for several years on the Spanish warships, before their eventual release and journey home.
The returning men’s saga of betrayals and maroonings flatly contradicted John Bulkeley’s account and gripped the public.
Who was telling the truth? Who were the villains? Who, if any, were the heroes?
A court martial ensued, presided over by the Admiralty Board. After hearing of Captain Cheap’s callous and incendiary behaviour, the Board decided not to press charges of mutiny, preferring to portray the story as one of epic survival.
However, Captain Cheap was excused the loss of his ship and promoted, and the teenage midshipman John Byron eventually became an admiral and returned to the stormy waters off South America, claiming the Falkland Islands for Britain.
In 2006, a team of Chilean and Royal Navy explorers discovered the wreck of HMS Wager.
Lying in shallow waters, the ill-fated ship remains a monument to one of the most barbarous episodes in maritime history, in which the urge for self-preservation prevailed all too often over decency and compassion.


















































































































































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