314 
K>'OT OP AJTTIOQUIA. 
WMte ulrfi iSS' 'to‘°1350 toit» 
moimtams ot Autioquia, between the Cauea and the Atr-ito 
AitoiiTl,S«i',fUr teXS!'* 
Thrh4i,l''fl“'^1-"r p”-*"''™; of or S2X: 
Tth?waTe“^f point of partition^ 
8ea ?ht 3™ and r'^’ Pacific and tI.ecLbbean 
oftli i4l,i ’ n ^ corresponds with the parallel 
iiie Atrato It s remarkable that m this sroup, more than 
and'T°'^t}m^h-’”l‘^’ f "*'’*^**^ between lat. 5i'' 
and / , the hi^diest masses rise towards the west • white 
turther south, before the union of the two chains of Ouindiii 
and Choco, we saw them on the east of Cauea ^ 
of ^he pTil ell' f»ti-iaia,'on the north 
only tlrn their in ■ known ; it is obsen-ed 
only that their lowering IS in general more rapid and eom- 
plete towards tlie north-west, in the direction of the ancient 
province of Biriiquete and Darien, than towards th“ 
and nor h-east, on the side of Zaragoza and Bimiti Frl 
the northern bank of the Eio ^fare, near its confluence with 
a r “"ST™,; otL'r»» 
ton the sZt r^S «‘"lithasfar as San Bartolome 
(on the south ot the mouth of the Eio Sogamozo)- white 
eastward, in lat. 7f and Sf, the spur of th^e mStarnf of 
InbroTr.-/'^ the distance; they are inhabited by sLe 
tribes ol Mohtoue Indians. The second branch of the^m-oup 
S Sa'‘ntS8l'^''t of Saniitarra) commences at the mou^ainl 
ot Santa ^sa, stretches out between Zaragoza and Caceres 
and terminates abruptly at the confluenerff the Eio NecUi 
