APPENDIX. 
forced marches through the Jallonka wilderness are also calculated at 19 
each, direct: and which may produce 25 road miles: I should conceive 
those through the Tenda and Simbani wildernesses to be equal to 26, at a 
medium ; and some of them more than 30.* 
Thus I have brought the grand outline of Mr. Park's Geography to a 
conclusion ; and cannot do otherwise than sympathize with him in his feel- 
ings, when he arrived at "the hospitable door of Dr. Laid ley," at Pisania, 
after an absence of eighteen months, unheard of, during the whole time ; 
whether enjoying the triumphs of exploring new paths; whether pining in 
hopeless captivity, amongst the barbarous Moors of Jarra; or fostered by 
the kind hands of Mandinga Negroes. 
It remains that something should be said regarding the connection of 
Mr. Park's Geography with that of Labat, between the rivers Senegal and 
Faleme ; as well as concerning the positions of the falls of the Senegal 
river. 
Labat's scale has already been adjusted to Mr. Park's, in p. xlv, where 
2,16 G. miles were found equivalent to one of Labat's leagues, in direct 
distance. 
Kayee, the pass on the Senegal river, where Mr. Park crossed it, is given 
at i6-§- leagues above Fort St. Joseph, in Labat's Map, (Vol. iv. p. 92.) 
and the falls of F'low (Felou in Labat), 5^ still higher up. Kayee may 
therefore be taken at 36 miles, and F'low 48, above St. Joseph; the 
bearing a point or more to the southward of east. 
F'low is the lower fall, (below which the river continues navigable gene- 
rally, to the sea,) and Govinea, the upper fall. The distance between them 
is very differently represented, by different persons; but I believe, is from 
12 to 14 leagues, perhaps 30 G. miles, direct. It is true that Labat says, 
* Mr. Park seems to reckon 18 G. miles in a direct distance, a long journey : and 16 
to 17 seems to have been his ordinary rate, when left to himself. This is also the ordi- 
nary rate of travelling, with those who perform journies on foot, or with loaded beasts, 
