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Show 74 -- 71-- 104, " a bar which apparently was not in place in 1909. The survey of this bar is shown on Plate 23, there being a drop of 3 feet through the riffle. The channel depths there were from 1 to 3 feet, with numerous submerged rocks." R. 167- 168. No mention of this bar as such is made in the 1909 Army engineers' report, " and I assume it was not there, became engineers' report, " and I assume it was not there, became they made a very careful survey of all the riffles." R. 168. This reference to the rocks in the channel may refer to the rocks which are now in the Sunaba bar. " Of course, I would have no way of knowing. Their maps that they were using - they were using the mileage below Greenriver, without carrying along a continuous survey; so that there may be a mile or difference in what they are describing and what we saw." R. 168- 169. The second Anvil bar at 101.5 miles above the mouth of the Green River, is practically that of the 1909 survey. R. 168. " On Plate 26 is the first Anvil bar and riffle, 100 miles above the mouth; and the comparison is shown between this in 1909 and 1928. And at the mouth of the San Rafael, 94.9 miles above the mouth of the Green River, is shown a survey of the conditions that were found in 1928, Also on plate 29 is shown the comparison between the bar as it was in 1909 and as it was on March 2, 1928, which was sketched from a photograph taken on the right bank, and referred to as 33- A in the Plates or photographs, and the survey of 1928. This particular bar [ called the San Rafael] is at the mouth of the San Rafael, and it is |