786 SEC. 15. GEOGRAPHY 



SURVEY OF PALESTINE, EXECUTED FOR THE 

 PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. 



Country from the Mediterranean to the Jordan Valley, including 

 the greater part of the Plain of Esdraelon. Area, 907 square 

 miles. Scale, I inch to the mile, by Lieut. C. R. Conder, R.E. 



Part of the Wilderness of Judea 011 the west of the Dead Sea, 

 and the hill country west of Jericho (Kurn Sartabeh), by Lieut. 

 C. R. Conder, R.E. 



Special plans, comprising the Roman Amphitheatre at Beisan 

 (Bethshati), Kasr el Hajlah a crusading ruin south of Jericho, 

 Joshua's Tomb at Tibneh, the ruins of Ctesarea, and details of 

 a Temple at Abu Amr, by Lieut. C. R. Conder, R.E. 



Reconnaissance survey of the Sea of Galilee and vicinity, by 

 Captain Anderson, R.E. 



Details of temples, &c., in the neighbourhood of Mount Her- 

 mon, by Captain Warren, R.E. 



Reconnaissance survey of the Jordan Valley and neighbour- 

 hood, by Captain Warren, R.E. 



MAPS EXHIBITED BY THE ORDNANCE SURVEY DEPARTMENT OF 

 THE ROYAL PRUSSIAN GENERAL STAFF, BERLIN. 



3152. Map A. Copy of an Original Survey taken by 

 means of Surveyor's Table. (Plane table sheet.) 



Map B. 1. Nine surveyor's table sheets, north-west from Berlin, 

 original survey on the scale of ^3iro~o (2*534 inches to 1 mile), 

 lithographed, with mountain features, marked in lines. 



Map B. 2. The same district, scale 3-0 JQU (2*534 inches to 1 

 mile). 



Map B. 3. The same district, copper plate, scale -nnrfroir (0'634 

 inch to 1 mile). 



Map C. 1. Eastern Prussia composed of the sections of the 

 Ordnance Map of the General Staff, copper plate print, in -nj-oWo^ 

 northern part. 



Map C. 2. The same province, southern part. 



Map D. The western part of the province Hesse-Nassau, copper 

 plate, scale -nnrWrr (0'634 inch to 1 mile). 



Map E. Environs of Berlin, copper plate print, scale T ^gVoT7 

 with watercourses, meadows, and villages, indicated by special 

 colourin. 



. 



The maps A, Bl, B2, B3, represent the process from the field work to the 

 publication of the maps on three different scales, namely, . g3 ? 00 (original 

 survey) ; -go^o, and I6o 1 o6o . The last is specially intended for military 

 purposes. 



The maps Cl, C2, and D, show larger surfaces, the two former in hilly, the 

 latter in mountainous country. On copper on the scale of 1 6 1 o o a 



