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         Park Mungo African Explorer:     more detail
  1. Memory and the history of geographical knowledge: the commemoration of Mungo Park, African explorer [An article from: Journal of Historical Geography] by C.W.J. Withers, 2004-04-01
  2. Mungo Park West African Explorer by Mark Duffill, 1999-01-01
  3. Mungo Park West African Explorer
  4. Mungo Park: Writher Surgeon and West African Explorer (Scots' Lives) by Mark Duffill, 1999-09
  5. Mungo Park the African Traveler by Kenneth Lupton, 1979-02-22
  6. Great African travellers: From Bruce and Mungo Park to Livingstone and Stanley, by William Henry Giles Kingston, 1890
  7. Great African travellers: From Mungo Park to Livingstone, Stanley, and Cameron by William Henry Giles Kingston, 1885

61. Compare Prices And Read Reviews On Mary Kingsley At Epinions.com
of the exploits of Scottish explorer mungo park, there will be in her rather severeWEST african STUDIES and to tell it all because as mungo park expressed it
http://www.epinions.com/content_75146694276
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62. Places (Travel, Geography, Etc.)
Travel Magazine; The Civilized explorer; Europetrip backpacking african Lives; africanNational Congress; Living Africa; mungo park; Alaska in Panorama; Journey Into
http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/serious/places.html
Places (Travel, Geography, etc.)
See also History and World Civilizations , and for more places to buy tickets, Consumer
Travel Information

63. The Significance Of Indigenous African Religions
Dr. Mongo park (sometimes spelled mungo) explored a a half century after Dr. park'sinformative report, a and explorer, wrote about the african peoples living
http://www.themarcusgarveybbs.com/board/msgs/10569.html
The Significance of Indigenous African Religions Posted by Adib Rashad The Significance of Indigenous African Religions
by Adib Rashad (RashadM@AOL.COM) Decades ago, Professor William Leo Hansberry raised some profound questions regarding Africa's theoretical and philosophical contributions to religion, God the afterlife and civilization.
Not only were these questions raised and probed, but they were also answered in explicable detail. Professor Hansberry was one of Black America's finest and most erudite scholars. He, through meticulous research, debunked the European mythusing European scholarsthat Africa was devoid of spiritual, moral and cosmological substance. These European scholars must be given respect for their intellectual integrity and their principled persuasion. Moreover, I believe that Professor Hansberry laid the foundation regarding this sensitive subject. His interest and scholarship contributed to the ascent of African theologians, historians, and philosophers such as John S. Mbiti, Tsenay Serequeberhan, D. A. Masolo, V. Y. Mudimbe, and others. Professor Hansberry cited some primary documents, letters, articles and essays from these Europeans that dated back to the sixteenth century. He exhausted every source at his disposal and to the fullest.

64. The Story Of Africa| BBC World Service
The Scots explorer mungo park died in 1805 trying to establish the truth, takingover 40 people with him. He relied on two african guides, Isaaco (described as
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features/storyofafrica/11chapter2.shtml
Contact Us Help Text Only HOME ... INDEX
White Explorers

European explorers shared some of the reasons for travelling round Africa with Muslim fellow travelers, but had others peculiar to the time. They went in search of:
fame and celebrity, and
people to convert to Christianity
POWER AND KNOWLEDGE
European travelers hugely increased a general understanding of geography, climate and resources. Some accounts of the people were objective (as far as an outsider can be objective), others were willfully misleading. All the information these travelers brought back - wrong and right - contributed to devising an imperial strategy for controlling Africa.
SOURCES OF RIVERS
For Europeans the golden age of travelling was the early 19th century. The first half of the century was dominated by a desire to establish the sources of two of African's great trading arteries, the Niger and the Nile respectively.
The sort of men who undertook journeys across regions which were unknown to Europe were in the main strong willed, eccentric, sometimes cruel and prejudiced.

65. HallSciences.com :: Travels In The Interior Districts Of Africa
park, an inquisitive Scottish doctor and explorer, displayed a as claiming that thefirst african who sailed mungo park is one of the overlooked adventurers.
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Catalog: Book Manufacturer: Duke Univ Pr (Txt) Authors: Mungo Park, Kate Ferguson Marsters, James Rennell Release Date: October, 2000 Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours List Price: Our Price: Used Price: More Details from Amazon.com Amazon international Product Reviews: SAYING THAT MUNGO PARK DISCOVERED RIVER NIGER IS RIDICULOUS This book is not too bad, but it would have been better if its author and editor were frank with their "facts". Mungo Park, an inquisitive Scottish doctor and explorer, displayed a lot of courage in his adventures. He was steadfast and result-oriented. However, it is wrong for anybody to assume that he discovered the 'Nile of the Negroes', (as the River Niger was then called). The indigenous Africans who lived by the river banks knew its course long before Mungo Park's forefathers were born. They showed the Scot the way! Thus, claiming that Dr. Park discovered River Niger is absurd. It is as ridiculous as claiming that the first African who sailed across River Thames discovered the English river.

66. Timbuktu, Timbuctoo, Tombouctou
Furthermore, in 1354 the great Muslim explorer Ibn Batuta Thus, Timbuktu became renownas an african El Dorado mungo park was a Scottish doctor who attempted a
http://geography.about.com/library/weekly/aa101300a.htm
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Timbuktu The Legendary City of Africa Elsewhere on the Web Britannica.com
Gone To Timbuctoo

Leo Africanus: Description of Timbuktu

Timbuctoo the Mysterious
...
World Heritage Site
The word "Timbuktu" (or Timbuctoo or Tombouctou) is used in several languages to represent a far-away place but Timbuktu is an actual city in the African country of Mali Located near the edge the Niger River during the rainy season (but about 8 miles from the river during much of the year), Timbuktu was founded by nomads in the twelfth century and it rapidly became a major trading depot for the caravans of the Sahara Desert. During the fourteenth century, the legend of Timbuktu as a rich cultural center spread through the world. The beginning of the legend can be traced to 1324, when the Emperor of Mali made his pilgrimage to Mecca via Cairo. In Cairo, the merchants and traders were impressed by the amount of gold carried by the emperor, who claimed that the gold was from Timbuktu. Furthermore, in 1354 the great Muslim explorer

67. The Standards Site: What Part Did Explorers, Adventurers And Missionaries Play I
Cook, David Livingstone, Mary Kingsley, mungo park, Cecil Rhodes to decide who wasthe most significant explorer. to the presentations on african explorers, and
http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/schemes2/secondary_history/his14/14q3?version=1

68. Untitled
Map of Africa,. explorer Instructions,. Your adventure today is to travel in thefootsteps of other famous african explorers. The adventure of mungo park
http://geography.unk.edu/geon/News/94/nebraska.jones.lesson.html
Nebraska Jones and the Exploration of Africa Tom Koch Walnut Jr. High; Grand Island, NE Objectives: Students will demonstrate their ability to follow directions. (A form of orienteering.) Students will trace the approximate route of several African explorers. Students will learn about the historic goals of these African explorers. Students will learn about the location of several rivers and lakes in Africa. Students will learn the historic colonial names of several rivers and lakes in Africa. Students will know the location of the ³bulge² of Africa and the ³horn² of Africa. Students will identify the ³head² and the ³mouth² of rivers. Geography Themes Addressed: Location. Grade Level: Adaptable to most. Materials: Map of Africa, Explorer Instructions, Colored pencils or Markers. Procedures: This activity provides teachers the opportunity to mix geography with history and add a dash of fun. For this activity , use any physical map of Africa. Also provide the students with the following instructions: Welcome to Africa, Nebraska Jones! Your adventure today is to travel in the footsteps of other famous African explorers. Follow the clues given below to trace the exploration routes on your map. Use a different colored pencil or marker for each trip. Put a ³dot² and number at the spot given in the instructions, then connect each dot with the appropriate colored line. Good luck and watch out for lions hiding in the savannah!

69. Wonders Of The African World - Episodes - Road To Timbuktu
In 1620, a British explorer of the West african coast once more to focus on the Westafrican interior explorers such as the Scotsman mungo park and the Frenchman
http://www.pbs.org/wonders/Episodes/Epi5/roadto_2.htm

ROAD TO TIMBUKTU EPISODE
It is perhaps surprising that a place as comparatively close to Europe as West Africa should remain more or less unknown long after the colonization of the Americas. Indeed, it was not until 1828 that the first European saw Timbuktu and lived to tell the tale. This long isolation was due to many factors: the trackless wastes of the Sahara, the long distances from the coast to the Niger River fraught with danger and disease, and the desert and coastal peoples who preferred to maintain their exclusive position as trade middlemen between the Niger and the outer world. But this is no excuse for continuing near-ignorance in America and Europe of the fabulous history of the Middle Niger Valley in the modern Republic of Mali. As early as 872 A.D. the Arab geographer al-Ya'kubi would write of the ancient state of Ghana (situated in part in the Middle Niger Valley) stating that it possessed a powerful king, with many lesser kings and kingdoms owing their allegiance to him, and that this king of kings controlled his country's mines of gold. Arab and Berber traders were already taking advantage of a profitable trade with the Empire of Ghana by the 9th century A.D., and were to continue to do so for centuries to come (see the Tuareg ). However, to the western world, this land remained a mystery.

70. Unit 2: Sub-Saharan Africa: Resources For Students
Online Retrace the 200year-old trail of Scottish explorer mungo park's journeyto including a virtual tour of Timbuktu) and information on african griots in
http://tlc.ousd.k12.ca.us/library/africa/africa_kids.html
GEOGRAPHY AFRICA ISLAM JAPAN / CHINA ... HOME

    Core Values Internet Resource Library
    Sub-Saharan Africa
    Curriculum Unit 2 Sub-Saharan Africa Sites for Kids
    This is the menu page for web-based curriculum resources which can be used to supplement and extend the grade 7 unit on history of Sub-Saharan Africa. Topics include: General Resources African History African Art Storytelling and African Clipart General
      Africa Focus: The Sights and Sounds of a Continent University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries This image library contains digitized visual images and sounds of Africa contributed over the years to the African Studies Program of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. These digital files are stored in an accessible database and provided for personal use or educational presentations. Africa
      Explore Africa in this PBS documentary series that tours 43 countries in Africa to learn about the people, animals and lands. The web site itself is a wonderful resource for students and teachers alike with interactive learning experiences and teaching tools. Wonders of the African World Henry Louis Gates, Jr, PBS Online

71. Publications
HANCOCK, EG and WHEELER, AC An addition to the archival record of mungo park(1771–1806), african explorer. Anh 15 (3) 311–315 (October 1988).
http://www.shnh.org/PUB_ANH_cumindex_vol15.html

Archives of natural history: cumulative index, Volume 15
Publications Archives (main page) Newsletter Other publications
BERRY, R. J. Natural history in the twenty-first century. Anh (1): 1–14 (February 1988). PRESTON, C. D. Alfred Fryer and the study of the genus Potamogeton in the British Isles. Anh (1): 15–33 (February 1988). EDYVEAN, R. G. J. Henry Clifton Sorby (1826–1908): studies in marine biology — the algal lantern slides, Anh (1): 35–44 (February 1988). CRONK, Q. C. B. W. J. Burchell and the botany of St. Helena. Anh (1): 45–60 (February 1988). WHITEHEAD, P. J. P. Darwin in Chinese: some additions. Anh (1): 61–62 (February 1988). PIETSCH, T. W. and RUBIANO, D. M. On the date of publication of the first edition of Louis Renard’s Poissons, Ecrevisses et Crabes: Histoire Naturelle des plus Rare Curiositez de la Mer des Indes. Anh (1): 63–71 (February 1988). McKINLEY, D. Peter Collinson’s curious amphibious quadruped (1753). Anh (1): 73–76 (February 1988).

72. Search Results
park mungo park was a Scottish explorer who led His readings of mungo park also stimulatedhis fascination neighbors including other West african States), the
http://www.opppapers.com/cgi-bin/subjects.cgi?s=11&start=135

73. National Geographic Adventure Mag.: Excerpts--Dec. 2002/Jan. 2003
looked much the same to Scottish explorer mungo park, who left tree, under which Iimagine park once took Travel Planner Create your own african adventure with
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/0301/story.html
Home Site Index MAGAZINES: National Traveler Adventure NG Kids NG Explorer TV AND FILM: Channel (U.S.) Channel (Intl) Explorer More TV SUBJECTS: About National Adventure Animals Education History and Kids Maps and News Photography Science and Travel Shop Customer Service Complete Site Site Index Subscribe Shop Adventure ... Subscribe December 2002/January 2003 Excerpts
From the Print Edition, December 2002/January 2003
Mungo Made Me Do It
Writer KIRA SALAK's aim was audacious: To paddle nearly 600 miles [966 kilometers] down the Niger River, a hazardous journey, inspired by legendary Scottish explorer Mungo Park, that no person had ever completed solo. She was slightly crazy, people thought; highly determined, she knew; and completely alone: in a little red boat, en route to Timbuktu.

And now, at the very hour I have decided to leave, a thunderstorm bursts open the skies, sending down apocalyptic rain, washing away the ground beneath my feet. It is the rainy season in Mali, for which there can be no comparison in the world.
Lightning pierces trees, slices across houses. Thunder wracks the skies and pounds the Earth like mortar fire, and every living thing huddles in its tenuous shelter, expecting the world to end. Which it doesn't. At least not this time.

74. Bucks Ancestor, March 2000
I'll Buy Votes at Elections Eve McLaughlin, 16 Exploring my Ancestors - Dr StephenTurner, 22 mungo park, The african explorer, 24 A 'Cense'/us of Fun
http://met.open.ac.uk/group/kaq/032000.htm
Bucks Ancestor, Contents
March 2000, Volume 9 No. 1 SOCIETY AFFAIRS: From the Editor: Classes, 2
Programme, 3
Naphill Exhibition, 9
New Members and Interests, centre Pages
The 1891 Census project, centre Pages MEETING REPORTS: The Wycombe Windsor Chair - Stuart King, 4
Army Service Records of World War One - Stuart Tamblin, 10
Bibliography and Internet addresses, 14 GENERAL INTEREST: I'll Buy Votes at Elections - Eve McLaughlin, 16
Exploring my Ancestors - Dr Stephen Turner, 22
Mungo Park, The African Explorer, 24
A 'Cense'/us of Fun - Peter Quick, 25 Whiter than White - Eve McLaughlin, 26 Exhibition at Wingrave, 27 And Did You Once see Shelly Plain? - Joan Bell, 28 Bridging The Gap, 29 Daniel, Come to Judgement - Eve McLaughlin, 30 Basic Hints: Getting Certificates - Eve McLaughlin, 34 BOOK REVIEWS Twentieth Century Research (Eve McLaughlin) Aylesbury Past and Present (K. Vaughan)

75. African Timelines Part III
Timeline of african history, 15th through early 19th centuries, from Central Oregon Community College.Category Society History By Region Africa Slavery...... source of the Blue Nile in 1770; Scottish explorer mungo park explored (1795 africanORAL TRADITIONS EARLY EUROPEANS Most early European missionaries and
http://www.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/timelines/htimeline3.htm
Humanities 211
Prof. Cora Agatucci
6 October 1998
Part III: African Slave Trade
AD / CE 15th - early 19th centuries
With Brief Discussions: Height of Atlantic Slave Trade Black Holocaust "Middle Passage"
Resistance
Diaspora
Olaudah Equiano

Dynamics of Changing Cultures
... Amistad Revolt
Contribute to African Timelines! New Submission Form
Add a Link or Comment: Under Construction
See also Chronology on the History of Slavery and Racism [in the U.S.A.] , Eddie Becker, 1999:
http://innercity.org/holt/slavechron.html
http://innercity.org/holt/chron_1790_1829.html 1830-the end: http://innercity.org/holt/chron_1830_end.html late 15 th c. Kingdom of Kongo flourished on the Congo River (modern Zaire, now Republic of Congo), a confederation of provinces under the manikongo (the king; "mani" means blacksmith, denoting the early importance and spiritual power of iron working) From Symbols of Royal Power: Stool (Detroit Institute of Arts' African, Oceanic, and New World Cultures: African Art) http://www.dia.org/collections/aonwc/aonwcindex.html

76. Backpacker.com - The World Awaits
He is currently editorin-chief of Microsoft's online adventure travel magazine,mungo park, named for the eighteenth-century african explorer.
http://www.backpacker.com/article/0,2646,577__2_8,00.html
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The World Awaits page 2 Africa by Richard Bangs Mgoun Valley, Morocco Steadily we wind our way up a pass nicknamed "The Ambusher." Once a great caravan route for transporting dates, henna, gold, and salt between the Sahara and northern ports, this path is now used by only a handful of local traders. We hike past biblical-looking villages where men with wrapped heads and flowing robes mill about in an ancient way. Up we toil through groves of juniper and into the snow, following in the footsteps of our nameless mule. The winter light is slanted and diffuse. After six hours of continuous walking, we crest another pass, the Tizi-n-Ait Pass, also known as "The Pass of the Sheep with Black Eyes," and come face to face with the stunning white comb of the 12,000-foot Mgoun Mountains, part of the Atlas chain. I snug my wool hat against the howling wind as our local guide Rachid wraps his head in a Berber scarf. A few hours later we stumble into the Hopi-like village of Talat Righane, where low ochre-colored houses seem to have sprung from the ground itself. All the men wear dun-colored burnooses. The women are intricately tattooed with indigo designs on their foreheads, and they have henna-stained palms and fingers. Pendulum earrings of silver, turquoise, and amber swing as they walk.

77. New Page 4
1795 Travels into the Interior of Africa mungo park. Committee of the africanInstitution - West african produce. writings of the 19c explorer Henry Morton
http://www.historyteacher.net/GlobalStudies/Africa_Colonialism.htm

78. NHBS Science Bookstore: Regional Natural History: Africa
Elaine Hurford; South Africa AA explorer Travel Guide and Challenge of Tourism inKenya african Studies Centre into the Interior of Africa view mungo park;
http://www.nhbs.co.uk/we-sell-books-worldwide/z67rz.html
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79. Superdoc's Nonmedical Web Sites
It's free (for now.) Also, I really enjoy mungo park which is a fascinating seriesof african adventures in that is free from the Internet explorer web site
http://www.harbornet.com/folks/superdoc/nonmed.html
This classic boat is for sale.. superdoc@wa.net
Superdoc's Eclectic List of Web Sites
Microsoft is putting up some great new content. Be sure to check out Slate Michael Kinsley's magazine. It's free (for now.) Also, I really enjoy Mungo Park which is a fascinating series of African adventures in near real-time. WOW! There are some incredible new programs available! Cool Talk Microsoft offers a similar program called NetMeeting that is free from the Internet Explorer web site. The PointCast Network and if you decide you don't like it, it has a good uninstall utility. An extensive list and reviews of internet software, tools and utilities at TUCOWS For some real fun and nostalgia, go to the RealAudio Site and download RealAudio 2.0. (it's free) Then go to Warner Brothers Site where you can hear old Superman radio programs. This new technology allows you to listen to sound files "on the fly" without downloading them first! The Web Gallery An excellent virtual art gallery. A place to relax and contemplate good things. Seattle Traffic Flow Map Continuously updated.

80. AIM25: School Of Oriental And African Studies: Bovill, Edward William
included Caravans of the Old Sahara, 1930; East african Agriculture, 1950 Officerelating to the explorations of Friedrich Hornemann, mungo park, Dixon Denham
http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=90&inst_id=19

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