Fawcett, Percy (1867–c. 1925)

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Fawcett, Percy (1867–c. 1925)

Born in Torquay, England, Percy Harrison Fawcett (August 31, 1867–1925?) served the British army and government in Asia and Africa. In 1906 he traveled to South America for the Royal Geographic Society to survey the border between Bolivia and Brazil. Between 1906 and 1921 Fawcett participated in seven expeditions to South America. His reports inspired Arthur Conan Doyle to write The Lost World (1912). In 1925 Fawcett entered the Brazilian Matto Grosso, accompanied by his son Jack Fawcett and Jack's friend, Raleigh Rimmell. He sought a lost city called "Z." The three never returned. A number of expeditions have sought to clarify Fawcett's disappearance but have failed.

See alsoExplorers and Exploration: Brazil .

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Fawcett, P. H. Exploration Fawcett. 1953. London: Phoenix Press, 2001.

Fleming, Peter. Brazilian Adventure. New York: Grossett & Dunlap, 1933.

                                        Robert Smale