IV South Cairo -
ter us, little interest by tern o for o tietury ting of eyes. Silence. teentury was an age of river seekers.
And t postscript ory on t of eartly by privately funded expeditions and follo lectures given at ty in London at Kensington Gore. tures are given by sunburned, exed men oo comfortable iquette of taxis, t of bus conductors.
ravel by local trains from toy meetings, ten lost, tickets misplaced, clinging only to ture notes— knapsacks ions travel at t early evening of tary. It is an anonymous time, most of ty is going home.
too early at Kensington Gore, eat at ter ty, airs to tes. At eigalks begin.
Every oture. Someone roduce talk and someone ests ture for inently critical but never impertinent. tay close to ts, and even obsessive assumptions are presented modestly.
My journey t from Sokum on terranean to El Obeid in tracks of t a number and variety of interesting geographical problems....
tion and researcioned in turer recorded ty people in ice in Antarctica. Similar losses in extreme or orm are announced s “interesting geograpilization in connection ion or drainage of ta? Are tesian er supplies of the oases gradually diminishing?
erious “Zerzura”? Are t” oases remaining to be discovered? ortoise marsolemy?
Joor of Desert Surveys in Egypt, asked tions in
By t. “/ so add a fes raised in teresting discussion on toric Geograp oasis of Zerzura was found by Ladislaus de Almasy and his companions.
In t