CATALOGUE. 



2. Mat 



3. Sangameshwab 



4. Rajwaei 



5. Aeatjli 



Lat. 16° 57' ; Long. 73° 33' ; Elev. ; Temp. 157°. 



This is on slightly elevated ground, about 1 mile to the 

 north of the river Kanjlee, which passes down from near 

 the Ambaghat to Rutnagerriah : is about half-way between 

 the Ghats and the sea in Hatkumbi mehal. " People are 

 said to be afraid to use the water of this spring on account 

 of the increased consumption of grain and ghee it occa- 

 sions by creating a voracious appetite." — Duncan, Trans. 

 Med. Phys. Soc, Bombay, Vol. I, 

 Lat. 17° 11' ; Long. 73° 39' ; Elev. ; Temp. 105°. 



Spring in bed of river about 1 mile to east of the town of 

 Sangameshwar, south of the Shastri river which passes 

 that place.— Duncan, Trans, Med. Phys. Soc, Bombay, I 

 (1838). Hazlewood says the springs are ' in the middle 

 of the river.' It is very probable that such slight differ- 

 ences as to exact locality are due entirely to the fact of the 

 place having been visited by observers at different seasons 

 of the year. Trans. Bomb. Geol. Soc, Vol. X, p. xlii, 

 Buist gives Sangameshwab and Sangamnaib, distant 14 

 and 16 miles from the Ghats, 26 and 24 from the sea, 

 respectively. Either these two are the same, or the latter is 

 Arauli (No. 5) ; the distances do not agree with those laid 

 down on the Atlas of India map. 

 Lat. 17° 15' ; Long. 73° 37' ; Elev. ; Temp. 110°. 



Said to be so hot that the hand cannot be put in without 

 being scalded. — Hazlewood, loo. cit. At Rajwari there 

 are two thermal springs, removed from each other by the 

 distance of a few feet. There is a great difference in their 

 temperatures. The villages Tural orToorul and Rajwari 

 ar8 at opposite (west and east) sides of feeder of the 

 Shastri or Sangameshwar stream, and about half a mile 

 from it. The principal hot spring lies between the two, 

 close to the little stream; but there are several others. 

 "Water said to be "very hot— almost boiling." Both 

 are in taluq Rutnagerriah. —Duncan, loc. cit. The tem- 

 perature is that given by Giraud, who gives the flow of 

 the spring as one and a half gallons per minute. — Giraud, 

 loc. cit. These two springs are grouped together under 

 the name of Rajwaeeee Tooeil by Buist. 

 . Lat. 17° 19' ; Long. 73° 36' ; Elev. ; Temp. 105°. 



Spring is close to the bank of the Garui, an affluent of the 



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