s 
1879.] 273 (Wright. 
remarkable bend to the westward above Bangor, corresponding to 
the present course of the Penobscot River. 
No. VIII is somewhat conjectural, but kames are reported at the 
south-east of Moosehead Lake in Greenville, in Abbot, Sangerville, 
Dover, Garland, Charleston, Cornish, Kenduskeag, to near Levant, 
then, with some interruption, through Carmel, to Herman Pond; 
thence through West Hampden, into Winterport, where it runs into 
the Penobscot River near Ball Hill cove. 80 miles. These are the 
kames described by Prof. Agassiz in the Atlantic Monthly. A short 
series which we will not number, runs from Dexter south through 
Corinna, East Newport, Plymouth, to Dixmont Centre. 
No. IX hypothetically begins with ridges reported in No. II, 3d 
Range and Blanchard, and others reported south, in Mayfield and 
Brighton, and others from the east end of Moose Pond, through 
Hartland, Palmyra, Pittsfield, Burnham and Unity, where there are 
- extensive sand plains. But the kame emerges from the south side of 
them, and runs along the Half Moon stream, into Knox, and proba- 
bly through Montville, and down the St. George River, a short series 
from the west end of Moon Pond. I omit a conjectural line along the 
Kennebec, through Carratunk, Bingham and Fairfield, as also another 
conjectural line through from Dead River, Mercer, Belgrade and 
Sidney, where a great sandy plain corresponds to that of Deblois, 
north-east of Mt. Desert. 
No. X may be called the Saddleback series, beginning in the lee 
of Saddleback mountain, as the Katahdin series does in the lee of 
Mt. Katahdin. This is mostly swept away in the upper portion of 
Sandy river, but the kames appear in Chesterville and as plains 
through Fayette, Wayne, and Leeds; and in the lower part of the 
course and a few miles west, and the other side of the Androscoggin, 
there is a parallel series from Wilton through Livermore, Turner, 
and to Auburn, just above Lewiston. 
No. XI, Rangeley Lake series, is reported by Rev. W. E. C. Wright 
as passing through Lake Welakennebacook, thence down Black 
brook and Ellis river through Rumford across the Androscoggin, 
then up Baker’s brook through a narrow pass in Woodstock to Bry- 
ant’s pond, thence, according to Professor Stone, down the Little 
Androscoggin through Paris and Oxford to the sandy plains in 
Poland, about 80 miles. 
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