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Back in Lima, he embarked on a vain campaign to challenge the lack of strategic vision that resulted in wasteful expenditure on small-scale projects. The only result of his efforts to gain official support for his way of seeing things was that
Government employees took to referring to him as "el loco
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Finding a route through the Andes to link the forested interior of Peru with the
Pacific Ocean was a longstanding challenge. By the end of the 19th century many detailed technical and economic studies had been undertaken but Mesones Muro was the first to embark on the task of exploring all the
344:, he travelled immediately to Lima to offer his services to his country. Ten years after his previous expedition, with his high-minded enthusiasm once again enabling him to overcome the indifference and parsimony of Government authorities and employees, he sailed down the Marañón River to
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Mesones Muro immediately set about organising an exploratory expedition, funded with his own savings. His aim was to find the solution that best served the national interest. He set out on May 18, 1902, on an expedition that was to take him on an extraordinary adventure through the
325:, historical accounts and anything else that might be useful to him in work that very few other people understood. He was a man ahead of his time. His imagination conjured up visions of regional projects that integrated railroads with ports, rivers, navigation systems,
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At the age of six his parents sent him to be educated in
Germany, where he studied at the prestigious universities of Bremen and Hamburg before returning home to Peru aged 26, to begin a distinguished career as an explorer. Mesones Muro is also cousin for
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However, because of opposition from vested interests this heralded the start of a period of physical hardship and personal distress for
Mesones Muro. Either through bad faith or a lack of interest, all discussion of the route through to the
266:. Powerful political and economic interests were already planning the construction of the proposed railroad when on April 10, 1902, Mesones Muro, at the time completely unknown, published a documented letter in
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Having overcome countless obstacles, the members of the expedition returned home and
Mesones himself set off for Lima, where he described the expedition's findings to the
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Determined to prove that he was right he spent every cent he had preparing the "First commercial expedition from the
Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean".
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he saw one of his most costly visions - the diversion of the
Huancabamba River towards the Pacific Ocean - come close to realisation and then collapse.
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in record time to show how it was possible to defend the region. As if that was not enough, he set off to make the return journey upriver through the
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of a mountain pass only slightly higher than 2,000 m. and announced that the Pongo de
Manseriche gorge was in fact navigable.
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Through his explorations
Mesones Muro's name became permanently associated with that of one of the major tributaries of the
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to irrigate vast areas of land in the basin of the
Pacific Ocean came to him in one such moment of inspiration.
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Genealogy and biography of El Hombre del Marañón, Gerardo Saavedra Mesones, El Peruano, 1 November 2003
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Genealogy and biography of El Hombre del Marañón, Gerardo Saavedra Mesones, El Peruano, 1 November 2003
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in which he suggested that the starting point for the shortest route to the Marañon should be
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ceased. With even greater determination Mesones Muro returned to his study of maps,
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dates back to 1843. One proposal envisaged a journey of 650 km, starting from
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http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~herediasittig/pp/I9505.html
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The idea of opening up an outlet to the Pacific Ocean for Peru's
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in order to identify a route for the much anticipated railroad.
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Finally in his last years he was appointed director of the
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106:Learn how and when to remove this message
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226:Exploration of the Andes
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342:Guillermo Billinghurst
311:Cordillera del Norte
307:Geographical Society
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350:Pongo de Manseriche
288:Pongo de Manseriche
220:Alfredo Solf y Muro
459:Peruvian explorers
368:Augusto B. Leguía
331:Huancabamba River
300:Eduardo de Habich
298:and the engineer
239:"The Marañón Man"
203:Lambayeque Region
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38:Please help
33:verification
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469:1862 births
464:1930 deaths
352:gorge in a
272:Puerto Etėn
448:Categories
433:2016-06-02
385:References
379:Lambayeque
327:telegraphs
213:Early life
185:Occupation
147:1862-06-16
66:newspapers
354:motorboat
284:Rupa-Rupa
276:Ferreñafe
199:Ferreñafe
155:Ferreñafe
188:Explorer
177:Chiclayo
346:Iquitos
338:Ecuador
249:Marañón
201:in the
80:scholar
323:planes
179:, Peru
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264:Andes
260:Piura
87:JSTOR
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268:Lima
207:Peru
166:Died
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