OG gs 
When he turnedioff from the Rio Grande, 
mines and the heads of the Gila river, I kept 
| miles to the south, and making a southern bend 
de, 
BbRoring the river became sensibly flatter and less 
Olnt*marked o 
'S 
comparatively level, 
nded to the table land 
my wagons through, following a stream all the way, and descend- 
g in the 15 miles possibly a thousand feet. This was the head of 
Huaqui river, which empties into the California gulf. I was 
i aloupe. 
{| I then passed an unbroken country, about 80 miles, when I fell 
| Upon the José Pedro river, which empties into the Gj a1 
