[ganong] 



CARTOGRAPHY OF NEW BRUNSWICK 



367 



Blackmore almost exactly, l>ut with one important difference, namely, Moll 

 makes the St. John empty where Blackmore puts " Mouth of St. Croix 

 Elver," a curious error, which seems to be pure carelessness. The lower 

 part of the St. John shows the influence of Delisle in the double lake, but 

 above that it is evidently taken not from Delisle, but from the same 

 source as the New England map of 1()85, which it so closely reseml)les 



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Fig. 2«.-S0UTHACK, 1783. 

 From original ; x J. 



(these Trans., IX., ii., 70). Thus Moll is a composite from at least four 

 sources. There are several later maps by Moll, but none of them any im- 

 provement over this. 



In 1733 appeared Popple's map (Fig. 30), which, on the North Shore 

 is curiously different from any single map we know, but. in the main, 

 seems to follow Delisle. It is the latest lîiap I know of which retains 

 Cartier's old C. Savage ; the placing of I. Cocagne so far to the south is 

 easily understood by reference to the ambiguous way in which that name 

 stands on Delisle. The Bay of Fundy is from Blackmore, with a differ- 

 ence but hardly an improvement, in the Passamaquoddy region, while 

 the interior seems to represent an attempt to harmonize Delisle and Moll, 

 but with some new distortion introduced. 



