NATURAL HISTORY AND PHYSIOGRAPHY OF NEW BRUNSWICK. 257 



*Mount Teneriffe. By direct measurement, 1105 feet above Nepisiguit Lake, 

 and hence 2108 feet above the sea. Mr. Chalmers is in error in stating 

 that this is about as high as Sagamook. Even as seen from Sagamook 

 it is much lower. 



*Mount LaTour. By direct measurement, 1150 feet above the river. As this 

 falls 160 feet between the lake and Portage Brook, and the fall is con- 

 siderably greater below than above it, the river is here probably 940 feet 

 above the sea, and hence LaTour is 2090 feet above the sea. 



*Mouth of Portage Brook, river level. Mean of five observations, 843 feet. 



*River at camping place near the " bear house" at foot of Mount Cartier or 

 Bald Mountain. Mean of four observations, 715 feet. 

 Mount Denys, or Bald Mountain, above Indian Falls. By direct measure- 

 ment, above the river at the camping place, 1175 feet. In 1808 I made it 

 1170 feet ; mean, 1172. This agrees well with the height of 1183 feet on 

 the survey map of 1832 by Peters. Mean of these two, 1138, which, 

 added to the river level, gives 1893 feet above the sea. Chalmers, fol- 

 lowing Ells, gives 1922 ; mean, 1907. There are higher mountains in 

 the near neighborhood. 

 Mount Enaud, or Bald Face Mountain, is given on the Peters map as 998 feet 

 high, that is, of course, above the river, and hence about 1690 feet above 

 the sea. 



*Lower end Indian Falls. Mean of three measurements, 632 feet. 



*Mouth of Nine-mile Brook. Mean of two measurements, 429 feet. 



