TJJIJI AND TANGANIKA. 
369 
I scoured the country eagerly in search of game, but, 
though tracks of buffalo were numerous, I failed to 
obtain a glimpse of a single head. Safeni, who was the 
coxswain of the Meofu canoe, accompanied me, and 
pointed out various points of interest in connection with 
Livingstone, as we followed the road which he had 
travelled over in his last fatal journey to Lake Bemba. 
The myombo and borassus palm flourished on the higher 
terraces. 
On the 4th, after rounding a point of a ridge — three 
VOL. II. 2 B 
spirits, have been erected in several of the bends. Ivawa 
river empties into this bay. 
During the 2nd and 3rd of July we rowed close to 
the uninhabited shore, and at noon of the 3rd arrived at 
the extreme south end of the lake — which we ascertained 
to be 8°47' south latitude — in the district of Ukituta, 
The little stream Kapata issues into the lake at this end 
through a dense and dark grove, the dead trees standing 
in front of the grove bearing witness to the destructive 
action of the rising waters. 
THE EXTREME SOUTHERN REACH OF LAKE TANGANIKA. 
