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Show 176 CATARACTS OF THE ORINOCO. ;hich each tree annually ripens three. This fine tree might be called the peach palm. The fleshy fruits are from the luxuriance of vegetation most often devoid of seeds, and offer to the natives a nutritious, farinaceous food which, like plantains and potatoes, can be prepared in a variety of ways. Hitherto, or as far as the mouth of the Guaviare, the Orinoco flows along the southern declivity of the Sierra de Parime; and from its southern bank the vast forest-covered plain of the Amazons River stretches far beyond the Equator, even to the 15th degree of south latitude. When the Orinoco turns suddenly to the north, near San Fernando de Atabapo, it breaks through a part of the mountain chain, along the base of which it had previously flowed j and this is the site of the great waterfalls of Atures and Maypures. The river bed is here everywhere hemmed in by colossal masses of rock, and divided, as it were, into separate reservoirs by natural dikes. In front of the entrance of the Meta, there stands, in the middle of a mighty whirlpool, an isolated cliff, to which the natives have given the very appropriate name of the "Rock of Patience;" because, when the waters are low, it sometimes costs those who are ascending the river two days to pass it. Here the Orinoco, eating deep into the land, forms picturesque rocky bays. Opposite to the Indian mission of Uarichana the traveller is surprised by the singular prospect which presents itself to his view. His eye is involuntarily riveted on an abrupt granite rock, el Mogote de Cocuyza, a cube with vertically precipitous sides above 200 feet high, and bearing on its upper surface a forest of trees of rich and varied foliage. Resembling a Cyclopean monument in its simple grandeur, this mass of rock rises high above the tops of the surrounding palms, its sharp outlines appearing in strong relief against the deep azure of the sky, and its summit uplifting high in air a forest above the forest. In descending the Orinoco from this point, still within the range of the Carichana mission, we arrive at the part of the river where the stream has forced for itself a way through the narrow pass of Baraguan. Here we recognize everywhere traces of chaotic devastation. To the north (towards Uruana and Encaramada), masses of granite of extraordinarily notched and serrated outline and grotesque |