OCR Text |
Show 550 feet in elevation." R. 1341- 1342. There are horse trails; and come trails which have been aided by man, so they can get the cattle from the rivers up on to the high ground; they have built up rock at certain places to keep the cattle from clipping off the trails." R. 1343. He identifies Complainant's Exhibit No. 145, being a volume of photographs which he took himself or were taken by R. C. Coffin, the chief geologist of the Midwest Refining Company, and are photographs taken along the Green and San Juan Rivers and adja-cent areas which are contingent to one of those streams. R. 1343- 1343. The photographs are all num-bered. These photographs were taken from 1921 to 1926, various times before this litigation started. R. 1345. The Exhibit is offered in evidence together with the accepted statement as to the location of the photographs. R. 1347. No. 1 is a picture taken looking right into the anticline at the Kane Creek structure. No. 1 or Kane Creek. " It shows the sharp, precipitous walls, and shows the structure, shows the width of the river, as well. I have pointed out that one or two trails coming into the lower country come through this notch, and that during the time we stated exploration work at the Midwest Refining Company's well on this done that trail was the only one accessible; the |