252 



BULLETIN OF THE NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 



From no part of this lake can the summits of Sagamook or Carleton 

 be seen, nor, of course, can the lake be seen from their summits, but 

 they can be seen with great distinctness from near the summit of 

 Teneriffe (Figs. 14, 15). In addition to those already mentioned, one 

 sees a low rounded hill, which shows more distinctly from the lower 

 end of the lake, named for Jumeau, the lake's first cartographer. To 



1 \lieui o( the QoveTnors Tlateau westward from near summit af Tenenjfe 



Fiq. 14. 



the northward stands up a splendid very high rounded dome, falling 

 outside the limits of the map, but shown in Fig. 15, easily seen from 

 Sagamook and from other directions, which is named Mount Villebon 

 in honor of the most prominent of the French governors of what is 

 now New Brunswick when it was a part of Acadia. 



Below Aucler are three other shallow lakes, from the eastermost of 

 which an arm, forming another lake, runs to the southward. This is 



Gordon Rid9£/BeTnQTdm 

 °°f Ventage: 



l//ew norfluA/est from near summit of- ?foi/n.t Tenenj-fi, 



Fig. 15. 



remarkable for its great deposit of diatomaceous earth, described in 

 an earlier note (No. 17), whence it may be well called Diatom Lake* 

 South of these lakes and parallel with them runs a splendid ridge, 

 known appropriately to the lumbermen as the Green llange. It is, I 

 think, continuous with Mount Winslow, but I am not sure of this. 



