THE KHA1RPUR STATE; NARA REGION. jftg 



gravity of Moqamwari is 1-127, and the water contains 

 105-9 grams of Na 2 C03 per litre. 



(4) Ram Rahu dhand, west of Metahari, and close by is a 



small alkaline dhand, narrow and deep (about 4 feet) 

 from which no chaniho has as yet been obtained. Its 

 name is not shown on the map. 



(5) Saidinwaro is an oval dhand, \ mile in length, with 3 or 4 



feet of water, lying immediately south of Metahari. It 

 is named Lumrejee Sim on the map, the name being 

 written over this and another dhand to the east. 

 Lumrejee presumably implies merely " one of the Lambro 

 group," and this dhand might be called Saidinwaro 

 Lambreji. Its water has a specific gravity of 1-119, 

 and contains 47-4 per cent, of Na 2 C03 per litre. 



(6) Khabbarwaro Lambreji. — This is the easterly of the two 



dhands marked Lumrejee on the map. It is named 

 Khabbarwaro by the inhabitants, but should not be so 

 called without adding Lambre ji, in order to 

 distinguish it from the producing dhand Khabbarwaro, 

 which lies between Khara Okar and Kakaranwaro. This 

 dhand is narrow and is nearly £ mile long, but broadens 

 out slightly at its northern end. Its water has a 

 specific gravity of 1-089, and contains 53 grams of 

 Na 2 C03 per litre. 



(7 ) Lambro. — The northern two-thirds of this dhand never 



yields chaniho. The dhand has already been described. 



(8) Usar (marked Oosarwaree Sim on the map) is two miles 



west of Lambro. It is an oval-shaped dhand, § mile 

 long, and \ mile broad, with a small island in the 

 middle. It had about five feet of water. The specific 

 gravity was 1-031, and the water contained 20-1 grams 

 of Na 2 C03 per litre. 



(9) Kakaranwaro, main dhand. This is an oval medium- 



sized dhand, distinctly alkaline, but has never yielded 

 chaniho, which is obtained only from a small dhand to 

 the north. 

 (10) Motranwaro is a dhand, long and narrow, and of much the 

 same dimensions as Buxahu (500 by 30), but has never 

 yielded chaniho. It is nevertheless highly alkaline, 

 although not sufficiently flat-bottommed to evaporate 



