Mountains, in about 53° north latitude, 118° 40' west longitude. Thence this branch flows for 290 miles to Fort George, a post of the Hudson's Bay Company. The north branch rises in an opposite direction. It receives its supply from a series of lakes... The Mining and Smelting Magazine - Seite 3831862Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| William Carew Hazlitt - 1862 - 202 Seiten
...118° 40' west longitude. Thence this branch flows for 290 miles to Fort George, a post of the Hudson's Bay Company. The north branch rises in an opposite...north latitude. Here the union of the two branches forms the Frazer River proper. Adding the north branch, which is also a gold-bearing stream, and which... | |
| William Carew Hazlitt - 1862 - 206 Seiten
...118° 40' west longitude. Thence this branch flows for 290 miles to Fort George, a post of the Hudson's Bay Company. The north branch rises in an opposite...longitude about 124° 50' west, and runs a course of O * 260 miles to its junction with the south branch, some miles below the 54th parallel of north latitude.... | |
| Thomas Rawlings - 1865 - 278 Seiten
...118° 40'west longitude. Thence this branch flows for 290 miles to Fort George, a post of the Hudson's Bay Company. The north branch rises in an opposite...north latitude. Here the union of the two branches forms the Fraser River proper. Adding the north branch, which is also a gold-bearing stream, and which... | |
| John Arthur Phillips - 1867 - 576 Seiten
...distance, taking in the windings, of some 800 miles. The south branch of the Fraser has its sources near Mount Brown, in the Rocky Mountains, in about...north latitude. Here the union of the two branches forms the Fraser river proper. Adding the north branch, which is also a gold-bearing stream, the two... | |
| John Arthur Phillips - 1867 - 588 Seiten
...118° 40' west longitude. Thence this branch flows for 290 miles to Fort George, a post of the Hudson's Bay Company. The north branch rises in an opposite...north latitude. Here the union of the two branches forms the Fraser river proper. Adding the north branch, which is also a gold-bearing stream, the two... | |
| John Arthur Phillips - 1867 - 580 Seiten
...branch rises in an opposite direction. It receives its supply from a series of lakes lying between 54g and 55° of north latitude, longitude about 124°...north latitude. Here the union of the two branches forms the Fraser river proper. Adding the north branch, which is also a gold-bearing stream, the two... | |
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