FACTOID # 180: Mali and Niger have 7 children born per woman, yet their populations grow at less than 3% per year.
 
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Encyclopedia > Boyd Alexander

Boyd Alexander (January 16, 1873 _ April 2, 1910) was an English Army officer, explorer and ornithologist.


Alexander was a member of an expedition which travelled across Africa from the Niger to the Nile and exploring the Lake Chad area. Alexander was accompanied by his brother Claud, Captain G. B. Gosling and José Lopes. In February 1904 they set off from the mouth of the Niger, travelling upriver to Lokoja. Claud died in October of enteric fever after making a survey of the Murchison Range. Boyd and Gosling explored the area around Lake Chad. Gosling died in June 1906 at Niangara of blackwater fever. Boyd then followed the River Kibali, reaching the Nile late in the year and returning to England in February 1907.


Alexander and Lopes sailed back to Africa in 1909. They visited Claud's grave at Maifoni in Bornu and then continued to Ouadai. Boyd was killed by in a dispute with locals near Nyeri. His body was recovered by French soldiers and buried next to his brother in Maifoni.


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Significant Scots - Mark Boyd (1033 words)
BOYD, MARK, an extraordinary genius, who assumed the additional name of ALEXANDER, from a desire of assimilating himself to the illustrious hero of Macedon, was a younger son of Robert Boyd of Pinkell in Ayrshire, who was great-grandson to Robert Boyd, great Chamberlain of Scotland.
It affords a dreadful picture of the character of Boyd, that, even in a scene ruled by such a spirit as Stuart, Earl of Arran, he was found too violent: one duel and numberless broils, in which he became engaged, rendered it necessary that he should try his fortune elsewhere.
Boyd, though a protestant, or afterwards professing to be so, joined with the Catholic party, in company with his pupil, and for some time led the life of a soldier of fortune.
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