Maps and Pictures 



An inset shows the Saut de Niagara with "Menage et industrie des 1705-20 

 Castors " in the foreground. The view is a modified Hennepin picture, Chatelaln 

 the third fall quite low, and the American and Horseshoe Fall straight 

 across as they so often appear in these old views. 



CHATELAIN, H. A. Saut ou chute d'eau de Niagara. 4J/2 x 5. (In 

 his Atlas historique. [anon.] fol. Amsterdam: 1705-20. Vol. VI. 

 No. 24, P. 94.) 



The Hennepin view with a brief description. It shows the third fall 

 but says — " Elle est compose de deux grandes nappes d'eau et de deux 

 avec une ile entalus au milieu." 



1710 



SeneX, John. A new map of the English empire in America ; . . . 1710 

 revised by John Senex. 1710. (In A new general atlas. Lond. : Senex 

 Daniel Brown. 1721. P. 237.) 



" The great Fall." 



Senex, John. North America. Corrected from the observations com- 

 municated to the Royal Society at London, and the Royal Academy at 

 Paris, by John Senex. 1710. 



" Niagara Cataract, its fall 600 feet." 



Senex, John. North America, corrected from the observations com- 

 municated to the Royal Society at London and the Royal Academy at 

 Paris, by John Senex. 1710. (Maps of Am. Vol. III. No. 14.) 



1710-1720 



Moll, HERMAN. A catalogue of a new and compleat atlas or set of 1710-20 

 twenty-six two-sheet maps. All composed and done according to the 

 newest and most exact observations, by Herman Moll, geographer. 

 (Buff. hist. soc. Buffalo, N. Y.) 



Moll, Herman. A new and exact map of the dominions of the king 

 King of Great Britain on ye continent of North America. . . . accord- 

 ing to the newest and most exact observations. (In his The world 

 described, fol. Lond.: 1710-1720. No. 8.) 



" The Great Fall of Niagara." 



The inset of the Falls gives the picture of the industrious beavers with 

 the legend which accompanies it. 



859 



