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APPENDIX I. 
Between Teneg el haj and the town there are the following 
localities: — El A'riye, El Ghaba, El Merera, A'thelet el 
Megil, E'llib el A'ghebe, Tiyare el Jefal, Tiyaret el Wasa. 
Eoute from the hillet e' Sheikh el Mukhtar, generally 
called " el hilleh," (see the itinerary from Timbuktu to the 
hilleh, Vol. ly. p. 454) to Tosaye, in long days' marches; 
direction, as my informant supposes, exactly S. ; — 
1st day. Nur, a mountain without water. 
2nd. A locality on this side of a place called Dergel. 
3rd. Kazuft, a large pond of water in the rainy season. 
5th. Tosaye, or Tose, the great narrowing of the river, 
(see the journal). 
From the hilleh to Gogo is reckoned a distance of eight 
days. 
B. — Route from Tnzize to Gogo. 
4th day. Timmisau (hasi Musa? I think, it cannot be 
the well of that name on the direct road from Tawat 
to Mabruk, which would give this whole route a far 
more westerly direction). Near the well is a rocky 
eminence like a castle, and famous on account of the 
tale of the footprint of Moses' horse, a story also attach- 
ing to the other well which I mentioned. It appears, 
from this route, that the arid desert, the Tanezrufet, be- 
comes narrower and more contracted towards the east. 
7th. I'n-azal ; tKe last march but half a day. 
9th. Suk, or " e' Suk " (Essuk), the ancient dwelling-place 
of the Kel e' Suk, now without settled inhabitants, 
situated between two " kodia," or hilly eminences, one 
lying towards the E. and the other towards the W., 
just as the ancient city of Tademekka is described, 
with which it was evidently identical (see the journal). 
The town was destroyed by the Songhay conqueror, 
Sonni 'All, in the latter half of the fifteenth century. 
The vale is said to be rich in trees. 
11th. Gunhan, another site of an ancient dwelling-place, and 
