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Show 26 -- 23-- He identifies Complainant's Exhibit No. 48, a photograph which is " a typical view of Glen Canyon, at a point where the walls are relatively low." R. 72. He identifies Complainant's Exhibit No. 49, a photograph showing the typical Canyon wall going through Glen Canyon. " The stone there is a sandstone, principally, and at the outer bends in the river, especially, the river has out itself steep wall banks, that rise from 180 to 300 or 400 feet above the level of the water. By the Special Waster: " Q That is a very different formation from that lower down, is it not? " A No; there is no place like Glen Canyon, which has steep wall sides. Down below it has steep wall sides, but it is igneous rock." R. 73. His boat, the " Powell", drew about 14 to 18 inches; the " Dellenbaugh" drew about the same amount. All three of them drew about the same amount of water. R. 73. Between the junction of the Green and Colorado Rivers on down to Lees Ferry, he did not encounter any other boat and saw only one man. " At the head of Glen Canyon, probably five miles below the mouth of the Fremont River, we saw a cabin on the shore, with smoke curling from the chimney, and we went ashore and found there a man named William Carpenter, a miner and trapper who lived there alone; he lives there alone year after year. He goes into town every two or three months for supplies, but otherwise he is right there. |