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Show Record on those sheets has also been added; and the matter in green lead pencil, the descriptive matter, as well as that in red pencil, has also been added. On sheet 4 I prepared this little portion of Navajo Creek. Sheets 5, 6 and 7 were not prepared by me. On the lower river we got our supplies form Greenriver, Utah. They reached the Colorado at North Wash and later at Halls 3899 Crossing. There were supplies at various caches and at different points on the river and we would go to those caches and get them, or as we passed we would pick up what supplies we needed. We got all the supplies that our party needed for the remainder of the work at Halls Crossing when we passed there. Will R. Chenoweth testified on re- direct examination as follows: And those supplies came in overland from Greenriver. Through the cataracts Elmer Kolb was the head boatman. 3900 Lee Lent was with us through the cataracts. I preceded the boats through the Dark Canyon rapids. I left the operation of the boats to Mr. Kolb and Mr. Lent. Hugh D. Riser recalled, and testified for complainant as follows: 3902 Exhibit 500 is plate 9 in Bulletin 471 of the United States Geological Survey. It is a map of a certain portion of the San Juan River extending from a point near the mouth of Chinle Creek down to and a few miles beyond Honiker Trail. Exhibit 501 is a geologic map of the same country. Those two maps were carried through the country by myself. Exhibit 499 is a report by E. G. Woodruff on the geology of the San Juan oil field, Utah. I also had that with me at the time. 3903 Exhibit 502 consists of two topographic maps pasted together, one of the Henry Mountain sheet, the other Abajo sheet, showing the San Juan River between Bluff City and the Colorado. This map was consulted before, during and after the trip through the canyon in 1921. The portion covering the San Juan River appears 563 |