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" Bowl), from thence it [283] turns south, having some obstructions to its safe navigation, and receiving many tributaries in its course to Colville, among which are the Kootanie, or Flat Bow, and the Flat Head or Clarke river from the east, and that of... "
Travels in the Great Western Prairies: The Anahuac and Rocky Mountains, and ... - Page 283
by Thomas Jefferson Farnham - 1843
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Rambles in the United States and Canada During the Year 1845: With a Short ...

Thomas Horton James - Canada - 1846 - 292 pages
...chief. This great river is bounded thus far on its course by a range of high, well-wooded mountains, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is 2,049 feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of 550 feet in 220 miles. Fort Colville stands...
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Rambles in the United States and Canada During the Year 1845: With a Short ...

Thomas Horton James - Canada - 1847 - 282 pages
...chief. This great river is bounded thus far on its course by a range of high, well-wooded mountains, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is 2,049 feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of 550 feet in 220 miles. Fort Colville stands...
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Rambles in the United States and Canada During the Year 1845: With a Short ...

Thomas Horton James - Canada - 1847 - 280 pages
...chief. This great river is bounded thus far on its course by a range of high, well-wooded mountains, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is 2,049 feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of 550 feet in 220 miles. Fort Colville stands...
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A Pictorial Description of the United States

Robert Sears - United States - 1854 - 668 pages
...west. This great river is bounded thus far on its course, by a range of high mountains, well wooded, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is two thousand forty-nine feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of five hundred and fifty feet in two hundred...
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A Pictorial Description of the United States: Embracing the History ...

Robert Sears - United States - 1876 - 664 pages
...west. This great river is bounded thus far on its course, by a range of high mountains, well wooded, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is two thousand forty-nine feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of five hundred and fifty feet in two hundred...
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The Quarterly of the Oregon Historical Society, Volume 12

Oregon Historical Society - Local history - 1911 - 424 pages
...Colville from the west. It is bounded in all its course by a range of high mountains, well wooded, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is 2,200 feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of a little over 100 feet in 220 miles. To the...
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Early Western Travels, 1748-1846: A Series of Annotated Reprints ..., Volume 29

Reuben Gold Thwaites - Mississippi River Valley - 1906 - 446 pages
...navigation, and receiving many tributaries in its course to Colville, among which are the Kootanie, or Flat Bow, and the Flat Head or Clarke river from the east,...is not navigable, and takes its rise in the Lake of Cceur d'Alene. Thence it pursues a westerly course for about sixty miles, receiving several smaller...
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The Quarterly of the Oregon Historical Society, Volume 12

Oregon Historical Society - Local history - 1911 - 420 pages
...Colville from the west. It is bounded in all its course by a range of high mountains, well wooded, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is 2,200 feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of a little over 100 feet in 220 miles. To the...
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The Quarterly of the Oregon Historical Society, Volume 12

Oregon Historical Society - Local history - 1911 - 438 pages
...Colville from the west. It is bounded in all its course by a range of high mountains, well wooded, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is 2,200 feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of a little over 100 feet in 220 miles. To the...
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Oregon Historical Quarterly, Volume 12

Oregon Historical Society - Northwest, Pacific - 1911 - 420 pages
...Colville from the west. It is bounded in all its course by a range of high mountains, well wooded, and in places expands into a line of lakes before it reaches Colville, where it is 2,200 feet above the level of the sea, having a fall of a little over 100 feet in 220 miles. To the...
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