CATALOGUE. H 



Besides the above, the Collector of Tanna gives another spring, whose 

 position I am unable to trace. 



22. Peeiplas ... Lat. ; Long. ; Elev. ; Temp. 



In the Wada taluqa, about one and a half miles from the 



village, two hot springs exist in the bed of the river, at 



the point of junction of the two rivers Pinali and Vuy- 



burna. The water is as hot as can be borne by the hand. 



JV. B.— Although I am unable to state accurately the true elevation of any of the 



foregoing springs, it may be asserted that they are all low, none exceeding, say, 200 



feet above the sea- level. 



23. Anaval ... Lat." 20° 52'; Long. 73° 22'; Elev. ; Temp. 115°-120°. 



About 2 miles from the village of Anaval, which is at foot 

 of hills south-east of Surat city, about 50 miles distant. 

 The springs are commonly called Unei ( heat ), cr at full 

 Devaki Unei (the divine heat) ; in the Puranas, in Sans- 

 krit, called ushna udaki (warm water). Said to have 

 been produced by an arrow .shot by Eama, in order to 

 supply 18,000 priests who had been miraculously trans- 

 ported there by Huniman, and had no water. A great 

 fair is held here at the full moon of the month Chaitro, 

 when the temperature of the water is said to be miracu- 

 lously lowered, so as to allow of people bathing in it. — 

 White, Trans. Roy. Asiat. Soc, III, pt. 2, 372, 1833. 

 Col. Sykes refers to White's paper, but the name is, by a 

 typographical error, converted into Devakle Unei. Dr. 

 Drummond gives the name as Dweekee Oonaee. Illust. 

 of grammatical parts of Gujerattee, Mahratta, and English 

 languages quoted, Trans. Eoy. Asiat. Soc, III, pt. 2, 378. 

 In Giraud's paper it appears as Dewkee Oomajee 

 and Oonye ; the latter is spelt Oonai by the Resident at 

 Baroda, and is probably identical with the former. In 

 Schlagintweit's list it appears under two distinct numbers 

 and names, Anayal and Yeval : Yeval is, according to 

 White, a village 2 coss (4 miles) from the springs ; it is 

 Wegwul on Colonel Phayre's map of Gujerat and Wewul 

 on Stanford's map of India. 

 This completes this group. There are one or two more isolated hot 



springs between these and the Indus, which may be noticed here. 



24. Tulsi-sham ... Lat. 21° 04' ; Long. 71° 06' ; Elev. abt. 8C0 ; Temp. 124°. 



In the Gheer, Kattiwar, water received in> chain of 



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