576 
APPENDIX. 
the native king of Kororofa. From this place, which is often 
mentioned in the proceedings of the Benuwe expedition, my 
informant goes to Tunga, which he calls " Gari-n-gisheri," 
stating the memorable fact, not mentioned in those proceed- 
ings, that salt is obtained there. Close to Tunga is a kogi 
or rivulet joining the Benuwe, or rather, I think, a creek of 
the river. My informant then crosses the river and reaches 
Chinkay, which lies at a little distance — as he states, in a 
southerly direction — from a large place called Owi. From 
Chinkay he proceeds to A'kkona, which is evidently identi- 
cal with the Akkwana of Crowther, who, however, does 
not mention the interesting fact that " kohol " or antimony 
is obtained there ; from A'kkona to Jiddu (a place not 
mentioned by Crowther), in a locality with small rocky 
mounts starting up from the plain ; thence to A'rfu, and 
thence again to Wukari. 
The other shorter route (if, indeed, it be complete) goes 
from Doma to Minchi, which is called " Birni kasa-n-Kiya- 
na," a walled town of the territory of the Kiyana ; thence to 
Agaya (evidently different from the place of the same name 
between Toto and E'gga, and therefore by one of my in- 
formants called " Minchi-n- Agaya); from this directly to 
A'rfu, crossing the Benuwe somew T here below Anyishi ; 
thence by Fiya to Wukari. 
I now give an itinerary from Darroro to Wukari, unfor- 
tunately of the same abridged and incomplete character. Pro- 
ceeding at a slow rate with short stations, my informant goes 
first to a large place called Zungur ; thence crossing a small 
rivulet, which he calls by the very unscientific name of 
" kogi-n-Mamudu" (the river of Makhmud), to Dull, a large 
but dilapidated place dependent on Yakoba ; thence to Gar, 
a small place in a mountainous district : thence to Burrum, 
the country continuing mountainous; thence to Gembat; 
thence to Waze, a very large town, said (probably with some 
exaggeration) to be as large as Kano, and the residence of a 
governor or chief named Hamma ben 'Abdu. It stands upon 
