84 KEPORT OF THE No. 3 



Not many fish were caught in the lakes or strefims, pickerel, pike, bass and 

 trout being the varieties seen. 



Accompanying this report I submit plan, field notes, affidavits and accounts. 



I have the honour to be. 



Sir, 

 Your obedient servant, 



(Signed) L. V. Eoeke, 



Ontario Land Surveyor. 



The Honourable, The Minister of Lands, Forests and Mines, 



Toronto, Ont. 



Appendix No. 28. 

 Township Outlines, District of Sudbury. 



Peterborough, December 27th, 1909. 



Sir, — I have the honour to submit the following report on the survey of Town- 

 ship outlines in the Temagami Forest Reserve, District of Sudbury, performed by 

 ine under instructions from your Department, dated July 26th, 1909. 



I commenced the survey at the sixty-sixth mile post on the boundary line 

 between the Districts of Mpiesing and Sudbury. From this point I ran the north 

 boundary of the Township of McMurchy due west astronomically six miles. From 

 the end of the sixth mile I ran the west boundaries of the Townships of McMurchy, 

 Fawcett, Ogilvie and Browning due south astronomically, a distance altogether 

 of twenty-four miles and nineteen links, where I intersected the north boundary 

 of the Township of TJnwin run by O.L.S. Hutcheon during the past season. I pro- 

 duced the north boundary of the Township of Unwin due west astronomically six 

 miles from the north-west angle thereof. 



From the ends of the sixth, twelfth and eighteenth miles coming south, I ran 

 the north boundaries of the Townships of Fawcett, Ogilvie and Browning due east, 

 astronomically, to the District boundary line, which I intersected, sixty-five links 

 north, fifty-one links south and nineteen links north of the sixtieth, fifty- 

 fourth and forty-eighth mile posts respectively. Going west from the Dis- 

 trict line along the north boundary of the Township of McMurchy the first 

 mile and a quarter, which is of a swampy character, was burnt over during 

 May of the present year. From this point to the end of the sixth mile the country 

 is rough, rocky and hilly, timbered with Banksian pine, spruce, white birch, 

 balsam and some cedar, with alder and willow underbrush and heavy windfalls. 

 The average size of the timber along this line is about ten inches. The Montreal 

 River, a small, swift stream at this point, is crossed on the second mile. Going 

 south along the west boundaries of the Townships of McMurchy and Fawcett, no 

 mtterial change in the character of the country is noticeable, with the exception 

 that some scattered red and white pine of fair quality and up to thirty inches in 

 diameter are met with. 



Going west from the District line along the north boundary of the Township 

 of Fawcett to the Montreal River, a distance of four and one-half miles, the 



