448 Report on the Geological Structure of the Salt Bange. [No. 5. 



Keurah Deputy Collector's House, 



Chooa Leydun Shah, . 



Kuringuli Mount, 



Kutass, 



Dhur Range 



Noorpoor, , 



Mount Sikesur, 



Oochalee in Souc Valley. 



Kutha Moosoul, 



Nullee, 



Kheree Hill above Nullee, 



Chideroo, 



Zamanee Hill above ditto, 



Mooza Khail, 



Maree on the Indus, 



Maree 2nd Observation, 



Top of Maree Salt Hill, 



Summit of Dinghote, 



Bahadur Dok village, 



Kaffir Kote Range, 



Mount Drengun, 



Besharut village, 



Mount Diljubba, 



Jhelum Station, 



Summit of Korana, 



1,183 



1,871 



3,234 



2,155 



3,130 



2,288 



4,990 



2,404 



627 



683 



3,090 



660 



2,602 



777 



633 



636 



1,196 



2,746 



4,493 



1,602 



3,710 



2,884 



2,872 



671 



1,565 



Built on Salt Marl. 

 Fakir's Bagh. 



Field W. of village. 



High Point, 2 miles W. of Dehriala. 



Beside village. 



Old Temple on Summit. 



A. little above Salt Lake. 



A little below village. 



Below village. 



Plain between Town and Salt Range. 



An Old Temple. 



Right bank of Indus above Kaffir Kote. 



High Point N. of Old Fort. 



Trigl. Survey Station. 



Below Tank. 



Trigl. Survey Station. 



Near Monastery. 



The thermometers used in obtaining the above results are made 

 by Newman, and furnished from the magazine of Fort William. 



It is to be regretted that they were dispatched without their zero 

 error being accurately ascertained, by comparison with an authentic 

 standard thermometer or barometer. They are divided into %° divi- 

 sions, which can be read off to \° with tolerable accuracy. 



Having fixed the height of Pind Dadun Khan as six hundred and 

 eight feet by the barometer, we were enabled thus approximatively 

 to determine the amount of error in the thermometers, and to apply 

 it to correct our results. 



In this way they come wonderfully near to the heights obtained 

 by barometric observations. 



The small liability to accidents and the portable character of the 

 mountain thermometer as well as the ease with which, in almost 

 every situation, an observation can be taken, render it a most invalu- 

 able instrument to an Indian traveller. 



The tables we have used are, we believe, those of Prinsep as given 

 in Colonel Jackson's useful book entitled " "What to Observe." 



