Me 
: Hough’ 
through the Farmington valley to New Haven Bay. 443 
route where the Veen registered were made, with their 
distances from this cape.* 
L Section Jrom Northampton along the Farmington, Quinnipiac, 
and Mili Rivers to New Haven and Long Island Sound. 
Distance from|U pper terrace} Low river sg 4 2 terrace 
Sound in above mean level above above low 
miles. tide. an tide. river level. 
Northa sles aac ies. TT 290 108 182 
Hanger Po 68 286 
Hampton Pra “waindery 64 [249-256] 231 
MIBBIROIG oon ke oe 62 122°4 
am. S. of Tariffville-...)  45°5 275 143°5 1315 
PMN oh i Each oe RE 274 130 
Farmington 33 264 151 110 
Beas Ties gh wattage es 29 250 17 76 
eee GION. ic 24°50 225 138 87 
2m. N. of Cheshire $ 20 200 159 41 to WE 
i fe) eshire St... 104 to E 
14 m. S. of sina oe St. 16°50 181 142 39 
N. line of Hamden_...- 15 169 129 40 
Mt. Carmel g: tee Beal hd EY 12 164 94°5 to 69°5 
Mt. Carmel Station_...-| 11°50 L185 o26 36 
of Centerville___ 10 60 43 
Centerville Station ____- 8-75 38 47 
Hamde . KE. Church... 16 50? 
m. N. of N. H. Bay -.- 55 61 tide level 
Im . BAY o 2. 4°5 48 
W. of N. end of Bay (N.) 3°5 38 
W. Haven, Im. S. of 
end of Bays in ooo. 2°5 28 
we res hic S. of N. 
of Bay Ral ep ee es 15 25 
w. Bases, 24m. 8. of N 
end of Bay 1:0 23 
Lighthouse Point E 
Usne of Bay ooo 0 
* The height of the terrace at Hampden Pond is from a valuable paper by Mr. 
J. S. Diller, published in this Journal in 1877, giving careful measurements of the 
terraces about Westfield and the “ divides” north and south. Ls states that on 
Westfield River, sixteen miles west of the village, the highest river terrace is 289 
feet Set sea-level; and that, allowing for the most probable slope in the stream, 
ight over Westville village is probably not less than 280 feet. (This Jour- 
nal, TH xiti (1877), 
heights o er s south are from my measurements, for which I used 
as a base the levels of the New Haven and Northampton railroad, iv om 
the engineer o These levels above tide are as follows: at Mt 
Ca = Station and Gap, 132 feet; at N. line of Hamden, 135 Cheshire Station 
5; 2m. N. of ibid., 163; Hitchcock's, 1645; Sout 45°76; Plainville, 
185: rmingto 24 ; Allen’s Station, 277; Avon, 201; Simsbury, 164-25 
+ “To W.” signifies above the a of low water on the Cheshire or western 
side, and “to E.” above the same on the Quinnipiac or eastern side, just below 
8 mills. 
