Niagara Falls 



1906 



Porter 



1906 



Wood 



1909 



Dunlap 



1909 



1909 



Perkins 



1911 



Johnson 



1911 



1911 



If this Legend was founded on fact, it certainly would have 

 made Niagara at that time one of the best known and most fre- 

 quented spots on the Continent; and at each visit for such burial, 

 trade would doubtless have been canied on. 



Indian legends connected with the Falls and the earliest references and 

 first white visitors to the Falls. 



Wood, Eugene. Niagara. (McClure, Sept., 1906. 27:475-490.) 

 A clever account reminiscent and descriptive, of the Falls past and pres- 

 ent, under private and public ownership; their effect on the beholder, and 

 their duration. 



1909 



DuNLAP, O. E. Dynamiting the Niagara ice jam. (Sci. Am., 

 May 8, 1909. 100:349-350.) 



An account of the jam of April 1 Oth. 



DuNLAP, Orrin E. The recent subsidence of Niagara Falls. (Sci. 

 Am., Mar. 6, 1909. 100:181, 187.) 



The subsidence in question occurred February 14—16, 1909. Two 

 views show Niagara dry and at normal. 



Extraordinary ice jams at Niagara Falls. (Eng. news, Apr. 29, 1909. 

 61:453.) 



A history of conditions through February and April, 1909. 



PERKINS, Frank C. The great ice jam at Niagara. (Sci. Am., 

 May 1, 1909. 100:339.) 



An account of the effects of the ice upon the scenery, the Falls, and 

 the power plants. 



1911 



JOHNSON, CLIFTON. Highways and by-ways of the Great Lakes. 

 N. Y.: Macmillan. 1911. Pp. 38-54. 



An interesting chapter on " tragic Niagara," dealing with the suicides 

 and notoriety-seekers of the place. 



Niagara and Victoria. (Sci. Am., Sept. 2, 1911. 105:203.) 

 A comparison of the height and volume of the two falls. 



Niagara Falls in winter; its scenery and ice bridge. (Buffalo, n. d.) 



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