APPENDIX, N“ II. 
. 51 7 
and through different places, from tVilman- 
slrand to Nenschlot. 
Rivers on the Coast of Incermanland. 
The Luga ; small, but in spring, during the high 
water, vessels and floats of wood pass, from 
the neighbourhood of the town of Luga, to 
Narva. 
Narova, is only navigable from the town of 
Narva to its falling into the Gulph of Finland. 
In the course of this river, from its source 
at the extensive Lake of Peypus, to the town 
of Narva, are such cataracts (one of which 
is fourteen feet perpendicular) as will ever 
render the navigation of this river absolutely 
impracticable. From the Pima, barks and 
timber are conveyed to the Narova, for the 
port of Narva. This river is remarkable for 
its great annual inundations in spring. The 
Lake Pskof which is only a continuation of 
the Lake Peypus, Tzudskoe, being one body 
of water, is more remarkable for its fisheries 
than the navigation carried thereon : some 
barks, however, pass through it, from the 
Cataracts of the Narova and the Embach, to 
Pskof. Several rivers fall into it: the Velihaia 
is the chief, as some barks pass through it 
from the neighbourhood of Opotsha, during 
its high water in spring. Its bottom is full 
