(Plate I) 
NEW-BRUNSWICK TORNADO. 
a ea eee 
. % NEES? 
ae = i 
q R a} % & 
4 et 4g SES Ra: 
; Den ee 8 <a . 
7 \ rs ee: Lag 4 ‘ XK \, 2 
a bi k “; _ \ \e o 
im 23, Y 3 ONG Ne a 
> 8 ‘ _ " 9 7 —— ee 
= 8 Ua Na\s [5 ee 
— ~ == e E BW 
T Ase mn i|™ 
, i ‘ 
Sketch of the Prostrations found on a section of the Track of the Tornado of June 19, 1835, on the bank of the Raritan, opposite the City of New 
Brunswick, in the State of Netw-Jersey. 
ExpLanations.—The east bank of the river is here covered with a belt of wood; the latter having a very irregular outline on the east, 
where it is bounded by a clear field. The line ¢ ¢ represents the apparent course of the axis of the tornado: W. west, E. east. Tho 
large dots on the several figures show the root ends of the trees, which were chiefly a species of cedar. In all these cases of prostration, 
part of the roots were still fast in the ground. Course of the tornado east. The approximate positions of the several trees are in manv 
cases slightly changed in the sketch, for the purpose of a distinct exhibition of each. 
Note.—This bank of the river is intersected by small ravines with wooded margins, one of which is nearly opposite to chain 5, and 
another is near chain 13, and which cause most of the irregularity in the wooded outline. 
