DRAINAGE OF BLACK AND BOGGY SWAMPS, S. C. 3 



rately established than has yet been done. It should be the limit of 

 high water from, the Savannah River. 



The general slope of the ground is southward toward the coast and 

 westward toward the Savannah River, which is the outlet for all of 



the drainage of the district. The northern or upper end of the district 

 is much more rolling and hilly than are the southern and western 

 ends. The topography north of Shirley, Scotia, and Furman (see 

 fig. 2) is very irregular, there being considerable stretches of high land 

 now under cultivation, broken by large areas of flat bays and swamps 



