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1967 first edition hardcover with 214 pages in good condition. The dust jacket has wear around edges.
The American showman Gilarmi A. Farini (whose real name was William Leonard Hunt) sparked off a controversial mystery of the Lost City of the Kalahari. In his account of the expedition, which he made to the Kalahari Desert in 1885, has tantalized many people for well over a hundred years. His book, Through the Kalahari Desert, published in 1886, and the lecture which he gave to members of the Royal Geographic Society described, among other things, his discovery of the ruins of a city built of stone, almost covered by the sands of the Kalahari. The story was forgotten until the early 1920s, and from that time onwards over twenty fully equipped expeditions (which have added considerably to our knowledge of the western Kalahari) and innumerable private individuals have sought Farini\'s ruins without success. Some authorities felt that Farini\'s discovery of the Lost City was fraudulent, but claims accumulated from different people who said that they had found the ruins -- in places many hundreds of miles apart. Formal expeditions and private parties continued the hunt, using camels, jeeps and light aircraft, but the riddle was not solved. It remained for Dr. Clement and his party to provide the solution to the mystery which had intrigued popular imagination for so many years. The author has done an immense amount of research into the many documents relating to Farini\'s journey (including such things as consulting newspapers, the passenger lists of ships and railway timetables), the probable daily journeys of ox-wagons going through sand, and consideration of directions and bearings given by Farini. As a result of his meticulous research Dr. Clement was able to pinpoint the probable location of the ruins, and his calculations proved to be correct. This book is not only an exciting account of Farini\'s original trip, but provides fascinating details of Kalahari\'s exploration from the early part of the nineteenth century. The author is a founder-member, with Professor P. V. Tobias, of the Kalahari Research Committee of the University of the Witwatersrand. He is also a member of the Institute of Man and the South African Archaeological Society.