228 September 1749. 



whofe breadth is not very confiderable, and 

 falls over the fteep fide of a hill, confiftrng 

 entirely of black lime-flate. The fall is 

 now at the bottom of a little creek of the 

 river. Both fides of the creek confift mere- 

 ly of black lime-flate, which is very much 

 cracked and tumbled down. The hill of 

 lime-flate under the water-fall is quite per- 

 pendicular, and one cannot look at it with- 

 out aftonifhment. The rain of the prece- 

 ding days had encreafed the water in the 

 river, which gave the fall a grander appear- 

 ance. The breadth of the fall is not above 

 ten or twelve yards. Its perpendicular height 

 Mr. Gaulthier and I guefled to be between 

 a hundred and ten and a hundred and twen- 

 ty feet ; and on our return to Quebec, we 

 found our guefs confirmed by feveral gen- 

 tlemen, who had actually meafured the fall, 

 and found it to be nearly as we had conjec- 

 tured. The people who live in the neigh- 

 bourhood exaggerate in their accounts ol it, 

 ablblutely declaring that it is three hundred 

 feet high. Father Charle<uoix-\ is too fparing 

 in giving it only forty feet in height. At 

 the bottom of the fall, there is always a 

 thick fog of vapours, fpreading about the 

 water, being refolved into them by its vio- 



' < v fyVfs) * 

 fr See his Hifloire de la. NOUV. France, torn. v. p. m. ico. 



lent 



