| Josiah Conder - Gazetteers - 1834 - 748 pages
...it afterwards separates the Spanish territory from the Portuguese province of Tras os Montes, and, in the lower part of its course, forms the boundary between the Portuguese provinces of Heira and the Entre Minim e Douro. It finally discharges itself into the Atlantic... | |
| American periodicals - 1852 - 610 pages
...rains, south of the tropic of Capricorn, but it seldom overflows the banks. The Uruguay river, which, in the lower part of its course, forms the boundary between the Argentine territories and the State of Uruguay, is 800 miles in length ; but its course is broken by... | |
| George Luxford, Edward Newman - Botany - 1853 - 394 pages
...Festuca elalior, and Osmunda regalis growing on a single cliff at the Cove. - •• " * The liver Dee, in the lower part of its course, forms the boundary between the counties of Aberdeen and Kincardine. " The cultivated tract presents little of any interest, except... | |
| 1876 - 400 pages
...palace ; turning southward, we crossed a low range of hills, and entered the basin of the river which in the lower part of its course forms the boundary between the two countries ; visited an ancient Abbey and a busy manufacturing town in that basin ; traced the course... | |
| S.W. Silver & Co - South Africa - 1880 - 642 pages
...impracticable country, and, like other South African rivers, is barred or rocked up at its mouth. This river in the lower part of its course forms the boundary between the Cape and the Transkeian Territories, the country comprised between the Great Kei and the Natal Colony.... | |
| United States - 1937 - 1596 pages
...conclusions" set forth, any circumstances in justification for the assumption by the United States of the whole or any part of the cost of such alterations;...at the mouth; a channel 35 feet deep and 500 feet wide up the river to the mouth of the Willamette, at Portland, 99 miles, and thence 30 feet deep and... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Commerce - 1937 - 596 pages
...Conclusions", set forth any circumstances in justification for the assumption by the United States of the whole or any part of the cost of such alterations...than 40 feet deep and half a mile wide through the oc«an bar at the mouth ; a channel 35 feet deep and 500 feet wide up the river to the mouth of the... | |
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