piRoucn A LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE = o se U. x; 4G 1 t^. i$ I »-» 0 Cj Q .1. 0 <:5i ^ u 0, ^ A, J -." .N < - 0 -^ 1 <^ 0 ^\ 0 <; 0.5^ ,0 'v. ^ \^^ 2 Through Shenkan THE ACCOUNT OF THE CLARK EXPEDITION IN NORTH CHINA, 1908-9. By ROBERT STERLING CLARK and ARTHUR de C. SOWERBY Edited by Major C. H. Chepmell T. FISHER UN WIN LONDON: ADELPHI TKRRACE LEIPSIC: INSEI^TRASSE 20 1912 3S7/0 CL(o3 ■ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. INTRODUCTION. ■yHIS book is issued in the hope that it may be of some interest to the general public, at a time when China is once again fixing the attention of all Western peoples. In its compilation an attempt has been made to carry the imagination of the general reader — by pen, brush, and film — into the very heart of the Celestial Empire ; and further, to set down with accuracy, and in as com- prehensive a way as possible, such facts and figures as may form a solid basis for the future explorer in North China. Including preparations, the expedition, in the course of which these facts and figures were obtained, extended over a period of eighteen months. During this time about two thousand miles of road were traversed. The names of convenient halting-places are, of course, mentioned as we reach them in the narrative, but complete itineraries for the use of future travellers in these regions are given in Appendix I., together with a table containing the latitudes and longitudes of all those places, whose positions were determined by observation. We venture to think that future explorers may rely safely on these figures, as very great pains have been taken to ensure their accuracy, and much of the route having been traversed twice, ample opportunity was afforded for checking results. It should perhaps be pointed out that figures given in the text are usually in round numbers, greater exactitude being reserved for the Appendices. The large Map (scale 1/1,000,000), which accompanies the book (in a pocket at the end), has been coinpiled from the plane-table survey made on the expedition by an expert. The original survey was on the scale of four miles to the inch, and the work was checked by astronomical observations, taken at intervals of not more than one hundred miles, along the line of march. A short description of the means and methods employed to ensure accuracy, together with a slight sketch of similar work previously done in the locality, will be found in Chap. XIV. For the general reader, a birds- eye map is given showing the more important points along the route. (i) Special attention has been devoted to the Zoological work of the expedition, in which connection some very interesting discoveries were made. Detailed scientific papers on the Mammals and Insects collected have been embodied in Appendices (II. — V.) ; but as the collections of Birds and Cold- Blooded Vertebrates contain no new species, scientific descriptions are not necessarj-, though the reader will find Chapters dealing in a more or less popular waj' with both these branches of Biology, as well as a review of the whole Biological work. The Meteorological observations will be found in tabulated form (App. VI.), interesting points concerning the climatic conditions of the country being detailed in Chapter XV. An attempt, too, has been made to give a general sketch of the Geology of the country passed through. The photographs and coloured plates which illustrate the book, have been chosen with a view to presenting different types of natives, geological formations, scenery, and other matters of general interest. It is unfortunate that, owing to the necessity for a distribution of the plates throughout the volume, these cannot always fall at — or even near — the mention of them in the text ; but, as far as possible, references are given where they illustrate places visited or explain points raised, as, for example, in the Chapters on Natural History and Geology. We take this opportunity of acknowledging our debt of gratitude to the British War Office for lending the services of Captain H. E. M. Douglas, V.C., D.S.O., R.A.M.C. ; and to the Survey of India for those of Hazrat Ali, our surveyor, whose sad death in the performance of his duty is so deeply regretted by every member of the expedition. Out best thanks are also due to the Hon. N. Charles Rothschild, M.A., F.L.S., for the paper on Siphonaptera ; to Mr. H. R. Hogg, M.A., F.Z.S., for his contribution on Araneidae ; to the members of the British Museum Staff, who kindly examined and classified the specimens belonging to the orders of Invertebrates contained in the collection ; to Mr. Gerrit S. Miller, of the Smithsonian Institution, for his description of five new species in the collection of Mammals ; and to the Rev. Frank Madeley for his assistance in connection with the history of the mounds and monuments examined round about Hsi-an Fu. Major L. D. Fraser, Royal Artillery, afforded invaluable assistance in undertaking the preparation of the Map, in correcting the spelling of Chinese place-names, and in so many other ways — not only in the production of the book, but also in the original arrangement and fitting-out of the expedition —that it is impossible to over-estimate our obligation to his kindness. Owing to the circumstances under which a great part of the manuscript was produced, it stood in need of considerable revision and compilation, and in the absence of both authors from England, Major C. H. Chepniell, late R.A., kindly undertook these duties, and has carried out a difficult task with painstaking skill. Expert assistance was obtained where special knowledge was required; and our best thanks are due to Mr. R. I. Pocock, F.R.S., Professor J. Logan Lobley, F.G.S., F R.G.S., and Mr. R. Corless, M.A., F.R.Met.Soc, . for consenting to revise our proofs dealing with Natural History, Geology, and Meteorology respectively. ROBERT STERLING CLARK. ARTHUR DE C. SOWERBY. August, 1912. (iii) CONTENTS, Chapter I. — Inception, Aim, and Outfitting of the Expedition .. II. — Narrative OF March TO THE Yellow River .. ,, III. — Passage of the Yellow River — March to Yu-lin Fu. . IV. — March to Yen-an Fu — Winter Quarters ,, V. — Clark and Sowerby's Narrative of Journey to Hsi-an Fu . ,, VI. — Description of Hsi-an Fu — Clark and Sowerby's Journey to Lan-chou Fu . . ,, VII. — March of Douglas and Grant to Lan-chou— Description of Lan-chou Fu . . ,, VIII. — Murder of Hazrat Ali IX. — Return March of Grant and Sowerby from Lan-chou to T'ai-yuan ,, X. — Biological Work^by A. de C. Sowerby . . . . ,, XI. — Birds of North China — by A. de C^ Sowerby ,, XII. — Reptiles, Bairachians and Fishes — by A. de C. Sowerby „ XIII. — Geological Notes — by A. de C. Sowerby . . „ XIV. — Survey Work of the Expedition — by R. S. Clark . . ,, XV. — Meteorological Report — by A. de C. Sowerby Appendix I. (a). — Itineraries „ I. (b). — Table of Latitudes and Longitudes ,, II. — Mammals Collected in Shansi, Shensi and Kansu — by A. de C. Sowerby „ III. — Invertebrates Collected on the Expedition — by A. de C Sowerby ,, IV. ■ — Description of three New Species of Siphonaptera, — by the Hon. N. Charles Rothschild, M.A., F.L.S. , V. — Araneidae of the Clark Expedition to Northern China (Diagrams p. 218) — by H. R. Hogg, M.A., F.Z.S. , VJ. — Dlary of Meteorological Observations PAGE I 6 16 24 34 44 55 63 70 79 96 109 115 130 135 155 170 171 186 194 204 219 COLOURED PLATES. PACING PAGE The Fort, near Yii-lin Fu, Ordos Border . . . . 20 Cave Inn, near Yen-an Fu . . . . . . . . 36 The Yellow liiver, near K'ang-chia-t'a, Shansi 76 Brown Snake and Toad-headed Lizard Sunset on the Ordos Border In the T'sing-ling Shan PACING PAGE. no 130 PLATES. Plate I.— Hazrat Ah 2. — Native Hunters, T'ai->Tian-Fu, Shansi. . 3.- — Camp at Chao-chuang, T'ai-yiian Plain. Waishing Sheep 4. — Chin-sso Miao Pagoda, near T'ai-yiian Fu, Shansi . . 5- — View from Summit of Mo-erh Shan, Shansi 6. — Threshing Floor, Shansi 7. — Ch'eng-wu Miao (Temple), Ch'ing-ting Shan, Shansi 8. — Washing Clothes. Shansi Type 9. — The Yellow River at Huang-ho-yiieh . . 10. — Sand Dunes, east of Yii-lin Fu, Shensi 11. — Pi Jung-pei, Head of the PoUce, Yii-lin Fu, Shensi . . 12. — Chinese Lady 13- — Towers of the Great Wall, north of Yii-lin Fu, Shensi . . 14. — View of the Great Wall, showing encroaching sands . . 15- — Epitaphs in Sandstone Outcrop, near Yii-hn Fu, North Shensi . . 16. — Horse Fair, outside South Gate, Yii-hn Fu, Shensi . . 17- — The Sandstone Strata near Ch'ing-chien Hsien, Shensi, in winter . . 18. — Cave Temple (Sung Dynasty) at Yen-an Fu, Shansi . . 19.— Representation of Buddhist Hell, in the Lung-wang Miao, at Yen-an Fu, Shensi 20. — " Goddess of Mercy " in the Cave Temple atYen-an Fu, Shensi 20A. — Cormorant Fishing on the Wei Ho, Shensi 21.— Robert S. Clark (left) and Arthur de C. Sowerby (right) with Christmas Day's Bag of Pheasants . . 22. — Loess Canon and Plateaujf, south of Fu-chou 23. — Sowerby and his First Bustard 1 Plate 2.). — Gateway marking Boundary between 2 the Provinces of Shensi and Honan •> 25. — Roadside Scene, Honan. . 4 „ 26. — Rubbing from Tablet in the Pci Ling (Monument Grove), Hsi-an Fu 6 „ 27. — Camel Inn at Ta-yii-ch'eng, Shensi 28. — Hua-kuo Shan, Shensi . . 8 ,, 29. — Colossal Buddha, at Ta-fu-ssQ, Shensi. . 10 ,, 30. — General Ma's .\ venue, Kansu . . ,, 31. — Criminal in cage on his way to execu- 12 tion in Lan-chou Fu, Kansu . . 14 ,, 32. — Temple on Loess Spur at Kan-ts'ao- 16 tien, near Lan-chou Fu, Kansu . . 18 .. 33. — Yellow River at Shao-shui-tzil, near Lan-chou Fu, Kansu. The river 22 here cuts through granite . . 24 .. 34- — Peasant Woman. Kansu Type 35. — Ssu-ch'uan Women, settlers in Kansu. . 26 .. 3(>- — Peasant Woman. Kansu Type „ 37. — Wang Tao-t'ai of Ku-yiian Chou, with 28 his Secretaries and Guard . . „ 38. — Loess Valley, near Hui-ning Hsien, 30 Kansu „ 39- — Loess Canon, Ying-t'ao-ho, Kansu 32 ■, 40. — Manchu Lady 41. — Our Military Escort from Lan-chou Fu £4 „ 42. — Exiles in Chains. Hui-ning Hsien, Kansu 38 „ 43. — Chang-t'ai-p'u, Kansu . . 44. — Guard House on Hsi-an to Lan-chou Road, Kansu 40 ,, 44A.— PecuUar Head-dress. Only worn in the vicinity of Ch6n-yuan Hsien, 42 Kansu 45. — Deserted Cave Village, Kansu . . 42 ,, 46. — Isolated Column of Sandstone, Hai- shui-ssQ, Kansu and Shensi border „ 47. — Wild Boar shot near Yen-an Fu 44 . 48. — Chipmunk. {Eutamias asiaticus sene- scens) 46 „ 48A. — Mole-rat. (Myospalax cansus) 48 ,, 49. — Sand Hamster. (Phodopus hedfordice) . . 50 52 54 St* 58 60 62 64 68 70 72 74 78 80 84 88 90 94 96 100 104 104 106 108 112 114 114 120 FACING PAGE* Plate 49A. — David's Squirrel. (Sciurotamias david- ianus) . . .. .. .. 120 „ 50. — Three-toed Jerboa. (Dipus sowerbyi) . . 122 ,, 51. — Suslik. (Citellus mongolicus) .. .. 126 5 1 A.- — Polecat. (Mustela larvata) .. .. 126 52. — AUactaga. (Allactagamongolicalongior) 128 52A. — The Pika. (Ochotona annectens) .. 128 „ 53. — Wild Pig. (Sus moupinensis) . Shot near Yen-an Fu, Shensi . . . . 136 ,, 53A. — Domastic Pig .. .. .. .. 136 54. — Mud Turtle. (Trionyx sinensis) .. 140 54A. — Day's Bag near Yen-an Fu. Roedeer, pheasants and hare . . . . 140 FACING PAGE. Plate 55. — The Summit of Mo-erh Shan, Shansi . . 144 ■ • 55A- — Sandstone Beds, west of the Chiao- ch'eng Shan, Shansi . . . . 144 „ 56. — Loess Plateaux, east of Fu-chou, Shensi 148 ,, 56A. — Loess showing stratification, Shansi . . 148 „ 57. — Valley near Chen-yiian Hsien, showing the dip of the Sandstone beds . . 150 ,, 58. — Sandstone Strata at Sui-te Chou, Shensi . . . . . . . . 154 ,, 58A. — Canon in Limestone Formation west of Fcn-chou Fu, Shansi . . . . 154 MAPS. General sketch of route followed by expedition (Scale 1/6,000,000) . . . . Frontispiece. Route of the Clark Expedition through Shansi, Shensi and Kansu (Scale 1/1,000,000) (In pocket at the end) PLATE 1. r\ CHAPTER I. INCEPTION, AIM, AND OUTFITTING OF THE EXPEDITION. CIX centuries have elapsed since Marco Polo returned to Europe from his long sojourning in the unknown East. Wonderful indeed were the tales he brought, but none surpassing his description — incredible as it seemed — of the mighty dominions of the Grand Khan. It is related that on his death-bed the Venetian traveller was adjured to recant his narrative. But he remained firm ; succeeding years have steadily piled up an overwhelming weight of testimony to his truthfulness ; and never throughout this whole period have the peoples of the West failed to find in China a source of most lively interest and unlimited speculation. Nor, indeed, has this interest been of a purely abstract character, for, as centurj' has followed century', merchants, missionaries, explorers and scholars, have made their way in ever-increasing numbers, to the shores and boundaries of the Celestial Empire. They have penetrated into the interior, studied the language, and investigated customs, classics, and folk-lore. They have written many books, compiled maps, and brought away pictorial records on film and canvas. Numerous Treaty Ports have been established, each with a large and increasing European population. In many towns of the interior, schools, colleges, and hospitals have been started under the direction of Europeans, who, living thus amongst the Chinese, obtain ample opportunity of studying their characteristics. Railways, too, have been opened, connecting the large cities of the maritime provinces, as well as those of the Hinterland. With all these facts in view, we may be tempted to wonder whether any great scope for the explorer still remains. And yet how little is really known. Cathay, with its paradox of barbarism and civilisation, its teeming millions of fellow-skinned agriculturalists — toiling to-day with implements as rude as those their forefathers wielded two thousand years ago — its mighty rivers and mountain ranges, its rich mineral deposits, its ancient tombs, and its relics of a bygone prosperity, remains still a land of mystery — enigmatic, perhaps inscrutable. Who can say that he knows the Chinese people ? What scholar has wrested from their classics and their records all the secrets of that dim past, when war raged without cease along the Tartar marches, and the first dynasties of the infant Empire were emerging from the tumult and the strife ? Can we be confident that even in the littoral and more traversed regions the flora and fauna hold in store no new surprise for the biologist ? Can the geologist explain intricate hill systems, or tell the formation of high mountain ranges and vast plains that occur throughout the length and breadth of the land ? No. All these questions must be answered in the negative. Much useful knowledge has been brought to light by many and eminent explorers ; much has been done, much remains to do ; and this, too, in almost every branch of human knowledge. A reliable map is useful to the explorer ; a complete and accurate surve}' indispensable to the geographer ; and yet at the present time vast areas remain still unmapped, whilst a large proportion of the maps in use are misleading in their detail. The naturalist needs good collections of animals from all parts, in order that he may form a comprehensive idea of the spread of species in Eastern Asia, and of their relationship to the creatures of the surrounding islands. The enormous mineral resources of the country are only now beginning to be realised in the West, and great financial schemes — depending for their successful development on an increased knowledge of potential markets — all tend to augment the clamour for full and trustworthy information. And thus it came about that the expedition, of which this book gives the account, was undertaken in the hope of rendering some service to the Western world by increasing — be it only by a fraction — the knowledge of China and things Chinese. The expedition, organised and financed by Mr. Robert Sterling Clark, of New York, should start, it was proposed, in the autum of 1908, from T'ai-yiian Fu in Shansi, and after traversing Shen-kan {i.e., the provinces of Shensi and Kansu), skirt the Tibetan border to Ch'eng-tu Fu, in SsiSch'uan ; then descend- ing the Min River to Sui-fu (Hsu-chou Fu) return to Shanghai via the Yang- tzu. Its primary objects were, a careful plane-table survey of the whole route followed, and astronomical observations for latitude and longitude of all important towns visited along the line of march. In addition, it was decided to take and record daily meteorological observations ; and photography was to play a great part in many ways. A useful and extensive outfit of instruments for all these branches of work was purchased in Europe, in addition to tents, camp furniture, stores, and other equipment required for a long trip in Palsearctic regions. Mr. Clark, after making all preparations possible in England, proceeded to India, and was there fortunate in securing the services of an expert native draughtsman, kindly placed at his disposal by the Survey of India. This was Hazrat Ali, a native of the Panjab, who, with fifteen years' experience of survey work in the Army, and speaking seven languages (including English PLATE 2. 3 :3 •a 3 E a Z and Chinese), had every qualification for the undertaking. A good Mussul- man, he required a co-religionist to do his cooking, and in consequence a second Panjabi, Muhammad Husein, who had been a camp follower in the Soudan and South African wars, was also engaged. Accompanied by these two men, Mr. Clark continued his journey to Peking, and there engaged the services of Mr. Grant, a gentleman who had resided in China for several years, as interpreter, and to assist in the general management of the expedition. Mules and horses had been purchased already in Honan, and these were sent to T'ai-yiian Fu, the city which, as stated above, was to be the starting-point. Thither, too, the party proceeded by rail, with a following of native servants, and the numerous boxes and panniers containing stores, and settled down to perfect their preparations for the long journey westward, meteorological observations being commenced on May i6th. On May 27th a camp was made close to a small village named Chao- chuang, situated on the plain about five miles north-west of T'ai-ytian Fu. Here Messrs. Clark and Grant, with Hazrat Ali, Muhammad Husein, and some of the Chinese servants, took up their quarters for the purpose of measuring a " base line." Owing to many interruptions this work took a long time, but eventually a base line of 2400 feet was measured twice over by means of an invar tape ; the probable error working out to one in fifty thousand (i in 50,000). A visit of four days duration was paid to a temple in the hills about ten miles north-west of T'ai-yiian Fu. From a peak close to this, angles were observed to various other peaks and stations, including both ends of the base line in the plain, and various other points in the vicinity were fixed. Hazrat Ali, then commenced his plane-tabling, and before very long had mapped out a wide sweep of the country extending north-east and north-west of T'ai-ytian Fu for a distance varying from twenty to fifty miles. A splendid view of the surrounding country was obtained, and a good idea of its configuration could be formed. The following description is taken from a diary kept at the time : " Fifteen hundred feet below, the valley of the Fen Ho, now covered with bright green rice-fields and the golden ripening corn, spreads southwards in an ever-widening plain of rich alluvial soil, irrigated by numerous canals from the river. Ten miles beyond the river, to the east, the mountains, which, running northwards, ultimately join the Wu-t'ai Shan, rise in successive terraces of loess to a height of 5000 feet. To the north-east of this position rugged bare mountains form a half-circle, and join up with this range, which is rocky and steep on its eastern side, but slopes gently in the usual loess terraces towards the river on the west. A little to the north the F^n Ho cuts through the range, and there the sides are precipitous. Beyond this and away to the west stretch range upon range of mauve-blue mountains, some of the peaks in which are from 8000 to 10,000 feet high." During our visit frequent thunderstorms and heavy rains were experienced so that the river was continually on the rise and fall. After rain in the mountains to the north-west, there would be a great rush of water, and the river would become impassable for several hours. Every time the water rose large quantities of silt were brought down, and the fords had to be moved repeatedly, owing to the treacherous and shifting nature of the river bottom. On several occasions different members of the party got into trouble with their ponies in crossing ; but although the animals would sink rapidly in the quick- sands up to their haunches, they always succeeded in scrambling out again. The camp was frequently visited by sick natives asking for help, which they usually received in the form of simple drugs, or "first aid" treatment in the case of injur}'. A lad with his head cut open would be brought in, or an old man with a shoulder dislocated would hobble from his work in the fields e.xpecting some miraculous cure ! The mules during this time were kept in T'ai-yiian Fu, but the ponies, being required for work continually, were kept tethered in the open out at camp. By July i6th everything in connection with the base line and triangula- tion had been completed, and the party returned to T'ai-yiian Fu, where they put up at a private house, rented for the purpose, to await the arrival of further supplies. Preparations in the way of packing the provisions and outfit, in loads suitable for mule transport, were commenced. This was no light task, as can be imagined, when we consider the length of journey contemplated, and the varied nature of outfit necessary ; and it kept all at work. Further, it had been decided to have a medical man with the party, and the services of Captain H. E. M. Douglas, V.C., D.S.O., of the Royal Army Medical Corps, were very kindly lent by the War Office for this purpose. On arrival. Captain Douglas at once took over the meteorological work. Mr. Clark desired, moreover, to add a zoological department to the expedition, and to undertake the charge of this he engaged the services of Mr. A. de C. Sowerby, who had recently returned from a collecting trip in Shensi. This increase in personnel naturally entailed a further store of provisions, to obtain which Mr. Grant paid a visit to Shanghai, at which place, too, he took over an additional supply of photographic material just arrived from Europe. Arrangements, too, were made for the telegraphic determination- (from PLATE 3. c V u c is a a. a :3 >-. '5 c n 3 u 6 £ •J •J Tientsin) of the longitude of T'ai-yiian Fu. Major Davies, of the General Staff, a well-known Chinese explorer, very kindly undertook to perform the observations necessary at Tientsin, whilst everybody was kept busy at the T'ai-yuan end of the line on the nights of September gth and loth. The determination was entirely successful, and the longitude thus obtained — together with the latitudes already taken — were reduced to the Hsin-an M6n (the Eastern Gate of the Southern Wall of the city), the position of which was found to be : longitude, ii2°-33'-55'.73 E., and latitude, 37°-5i'-36".3 N. After this, final preparations for an early start westward were pushed on with all speed and completed by September 27th. AH stores were packed away in suitable cases, the surveying instruments carefully stowed, the photo- graphic material arranged so as to be easily accessible, and each member of the party finally told off to his individual task. The constitution of the expedition then at starting was as follows : — Leader R. S. Clark. Doctor and Meteorologist - - Captain H. E. M. Douglas, V.C, D.S.O., R.A.M.C. Artist Haviland B. Cobb. Interpreter and General Manager G. A. Grant. Naturalist - - - - A. de C. Sowerby. Surveyor ----- Hazrat Ali. Muhammad Husein, fifteen muleteers, three grooms, two survey coolies, eight personal servants, and Josephus, a young shikari, engaged for two months only ; making a total of thirty-six persons. At the last moment it was found necessary to hire several extra pack animals, so that the expedition started with forty-four mules and five donkeys. There were besides eight ponies for the use of the Staff and two attendant grooms. CHAPTER II. NARRATIVE OF MARCH TO THE YELLOW KIVEK. "yHE 28th of September broke fine and clear, and in the courtyard of the house which had sheltered the members of the expedition since the middle of July all was bustle and excitement. Outside, the street was crowded with mules, braying and kicking, their drivers busy roping up the last few loads. But by eleven o'clock the last load had been hoisted on to the last mule, and the long train, slowly working its way across the city, passed out through the Western gate to a stretch of level flats already bared of their rich crops of grain. It made a striking picture as it crossed the low-lying land between the muddy waters of the Fen Ho and the great d\ke raised to shield the city from the summer floods. The pack-animals, each with his jangling bells, swinging tassels and waving pompons, were kept in single file by their drivers, who swore at them, cracked their whips, and seemed anxious generally to outrival the bellowing of their charges. The animals were all fresh, well- conditioned, and full of fight, and, though their spirits calmed down wonderfully after a few marches, always ready to give trouble. It had been decided to make the first stage a very short one, so after fording the river without any mishap, we pitched our camp on the threshing- floor of a village named Nan-shih, about five miles west of T'ai-yiian Fu. This village was the home of our shikari, Josephus, and he and all his people did their best to make things comfortable for us. The loads were deposited in a field hard by, and the servants set to work with a will on pitching tents and erecting our cooking-stove, and although their good intentions were hampered by a lack of experience, everybody was comparatively snug and comfortable by nightfall. Two policemen had been sent by the Yang-wu-chu (Board of Foreign Affairs) " to protect the foreigners," and were set to guard the loads. These worthies, not relishing the task, hunted up the head-man of the village, and warning him that he would be held responsible in case of theft, ordered him to send someone to watch the things. This proved to be a verj' sound and sensible arrangement, and the practice was adhered to throughout the whole expedition. The servants, as was to be expected, found the greatest difficulty in preparing food ; but as they gained in experience, and got at home in the new conditions, our meals became soon quite appetizing. There were five tents in all, of which two were occupied by the Staff, one by PLATE 4. c n ■Si £ c (3 :3 o 3 c G Hazrat Ali and his compatriot, and the remaining two by the personal servants. The muleteers and grooms found quarters for themselves and their animals in the village, and, during the time that tents were used, camping- grounds were always chosen to be within easy reach of some suitable village. On September 29th an early start was made. Just before camp was struck we received a farewell visit from Mr. and Mrs. McCoy, who, with Miss Sowerby, had ridden over from T'ai-yiian Fu to see the last of the expedition. For the first five miles our road gradually ascended the dry boulder-strewn bed of a mountain stream. It then entered a deep, narrow gorge, and up this we travelled for several miles, and after a sharp ascent reached the village of Hsieh-tao-ts'un. From this point we obtained a last view of T'ai-yiian as-it lay in the plain, a thousand feet below us, with its gate-towers and sweeping city walls. From Hsieh-tao to Sheng-yi, where camp was pitched, the road lay along the tops of shale ridges ; in places it was very rough, but no great difficulty was experienced by the sure-footed mules. The country along this part of the road was wild and covered with scrub, whilst the slopes surrounding Sheng-yi were clothed in conifers. This district is full of small game and wild pig, and in consequence is frequently visited by residents of T'ai-yiian Fu during the shooting season. The natives we found to be very poor, sufficient crops to last them through the winter being raised only with the greatest difficulty. Several coal mines were noticed near Hsieh-tao ; but the low price of coal in T'ai-yiian affords the miner but a poor return for his labour. The coal, after being carried for fifteen miles on mules, is delivered to the consumer at the rate of two and a half cash per catty, which works out at about eight shillings a ton. From the figures recorded on the road-wheel, Sheng-yi was estimated to be sixteen miles from T'ai-yiian Fu, and almost due west of it. On September 30th the caravan left Sheng-yi, and continued its route over the mountains, still in a westerly direction, patches of scrub, pine spinneys and small spaces of cultivated ground being met with. By climbing a peak to the left of the bridle-path, which served as a road, an extended view of the surrounding country could be obtained. Ahead of us some eighty miles towered the Chiao-ch'6ng Shan, and so clear was the air that in every direction the peaks stood out sharply defined, as though viewed through some powerful telescope. Throughout the march a sharp look-out for game was kept by the more enthusiastic sportsmen of the partj'. Clark and Grant found abundance of subjects for their cameras ; the naturalist busied himself in the pursuit of chipmunks through the ravines ; and from time to time Hazrat Ali and his coolies could be Seen hard at work in country which, for the purposes of the surveyor, it would be hard to beat. After reaching an altitude of well over 5000 feet, we commenced to descend ; at first gradually, but after some distance the end of the ridge was reached, and the road fell away sharply as the valley of the Ffin Ho came in sight. At about four o'clock we entered Ku-chao, a large village situated on the right bank of the river, and some thirteen miles from Sheng-yi. It may be noted that the river runs from Ku chao in a south-easterly direction, but then taking a turn enters the plain iifteen miles north-west of T'ai-yiian Fu and, having fallen 300 feet since leaving Ku-chao, flows past that city in a southerly course, thus forming two sides of a triangle, along the base of which we had travelled. The population of Ku-chao was estimated at five hundred, including women and children. A peculiar square-built tower, rising above the rest of the buildings, was found to mark the house of a local magnate. Several other small villages could be seen scattered along the valley in both directions. We halted at this place for a day to afford the servants an opportunity of getting things straight, for, unaccustomed to this nomadic life, they had allowed our commissariat to get in a terrible state of muddle. On the following day, October ist, the journey was continued still in a westerly direction. At a spot about a mile from Ku-chao the Fen Ho, coming from the north-west, changes direction as a large affluent joins it from the west, and up this latter lay our road to the Chiao-ch'eng Shan, so that the caravan had perforce to quit the bed of the main stream. The road was good all the way to Tsa-k'ou, where we pitched camp. During the day we passed some nine small villages, with an average population of from a hundred to a hundred and fifty. In one was a little Roman Catholic church, and all the villagers appeared to be converts. The valley varied in width from one to four furlongs, and though boulder-strewn or sandy in places, contained occasional cultivated fields. The hills on either side were covered with the usual loess terraces, bearing rich crops of millet, buckwheat, castor-oil, and potatoes, and the natives were busy harvesting after a very good season. On October 3rd our march was resumed up the valley, the sides of which were now lined with lofty straight-boled poplars. The road soon became very rough, and began to ascend sharply, until at last a high pass was reached at a height of over 6000 feet. The descent from here into the bed of a second wide stream, running from south to north, and consequently at right PLATE 5. angles to that just quitted, was very steep and roiigli, but it was negotiated without mishap. Mi-yiieh-ch'^ng, distant from Tsa-k'ou about nineteen miles, was reached in the afternoon, and we encamped in a grassy field close to the village. From Mi-yueh-ch'eng the road ran southward up the valley, the country becoming wilder and the mountains higher with each succeeding mile, until at last the valley narrowing and changing direction we began to ascend, west- wards again, to another high pass. Here an altitude of nearly 8000 feet was attained, lofty forest-clad peaks rising still higlier to right and left. A descent of about 1000 feet brought us into the Mo-aii valley, and a camping-ground was chosen in a sheltered ravine at the foot of a mountam named Yiin-t'ing Shan (" Cloud-roof Mountain"). No village was passed during this day's march ; only here and there a cluster of two or three huts, and the muleteers were forced to go on down the valley for about five miles to a village, where they could stable their mules. The grooms, however, managed to find sufficient accommodation for the ponies in the cattle-sheds of a tiny hamlet across the valley, near the camp. The ravine chosen for the camp was comparatively wide, and opened towards the north, so that astronomical observations could be made comfortably. Towards the south it soon narrowed, ascending rapidh' at the same time until lost in the forest-clad slopes of Yiin-t'ing Shan. The ridge to which this mountain belongs runs east and west, commencing with a series of peaks, heavily covered with forests of larch and fir, and diminishing in size till they merge into the shale and loess foothills, and terminating in the supreme grey granite crest of Mo-erh Shan. From its base again branch out several lower ridges, of which the largest, curving towards the south, splits into a number of sharp peaks. As a rule, the slopes facing north are clothed in dense forests of pine, spruce, larch, and birch, interspersed with patches of impenetrable hazel scrub, whilst the slopes facing south are grassy, or covered with low herbaceous growth. The forests commence at about 7500 feet, and extend to the summits of the ridges. At the season of our visit the larch's autumn foliage of bright gold and the coppery tints of the hazel stood out in striking contrast to the deep blue-green of spruce and pine. A trip was made during our stay in camp to the summit of Mo-erh Shan for the purpose of taking a round of angles to check the plane-table work. From this point the panorama that stretched itself before us was magnificent in the extreme. In every direction winding vallejs threaded by sparkling streams ; granite crests and rugged scaurs, all ablaze witii colour ; and, as a background, the more distant ranges shading away, wave upon wave, in every tone, from mauve to deepest blue. Eastward, beyond the T'ai-yiian valley, the Lung-wang Shan were plainly discernible, flanked to north and south by ranges marshalled in complex and bewildering formation. Only to the north- west was the horizon flat, indicating the wastes of the great Ordos desert. To the west, ridge upon ridge of rounded loess hills, broken only by the three lonely peaks of the Ch'ing-ting Shan. It is no exaggeration to say that our view e.xtended for over a hundred miles in every direction, except perhaps the south — a scene indeed not easy to match in either the Old World or the New. The expedition remained in this neighbourhood for nearly a fortnight. Deer were reported plentiful, and several hunting trips were organized, but without any very remarkable success, though hare, pheasant and partridge were frequently bagged. Sowerby, however, was more successful on a miniature scale, and managed to secure a good collection of mice and voles. The vegetation of the district is luxuriant, and comprises not only the forest trees and hazel already mentioned, but herbaceous trees and shrubs in countless variety. The natives, though poor, are healthy-looking ; the men stalwart and well-built, the women decidedly better looking than those in and around T'ai-yiian Fu. However, goitre seems not uncommon, and we noticed many cases of sore eyes, the result, no doubt, of smoky wood fires. The cultivation of oats and potatoes — the only crops that will ripen at such an altitude— affords a meagre source of livelihood. The cutting and hauling of timber, though supplying fuel and building material for the rude huts, are useless for trade purposes, no easy means of transport existing, such as the Fen Ho provides to the people of the Ning-wu district further north. During the winter months musk-hunters visit the district, and medicine-hunters from Ssuch'uan prosecute their search for genseng . and other roots at all times of the j'ear. Roman Catholic missionaries have penetrated these mountains and made many converts, who abjure the smoking of opium. One or other of the Fathers from T'ai-yiian Fu visits the district twice yearly. In 1900, during the Boxer troubles, Yu-hsien, the Governor of T'ai-yuan, sent troops to execute the converts ; but the people, most of whom own a firearm of some sort, and are of a sporting turn, rose at once, and chasing the soldiers over the mountains killed them almost to a man. On its becoming known that one of the party was a doctor, the usual deputations begging for medicine invaded the camp. One and all received attention and a " cure " in some tangible form, even were this nothing more ro PLATE 6. imposing than a reliable pill. The weather was now becoming very cold, and before the party left the nei,s;hbourhood a heavy fall of snow had draped the mountains in its thick white mantle. ~ At last, on October i6th, camp was struck, and the caravan moved slowly down the valley, winding from side to side like some monstrous serpent. Several large villages were passed, and word having gone ahead, the inhabitants turned out en masse and stood in groups, mouths agape and eyes wide open, to stare at our procession. We felt gratified at the thought that they evidently regarded us as some sort of travelling circus. After the first two or three miles of rough and rocky going, the valley opened to a width of about a quarter of a mile, and the path became less uneven, sloping gently to the west. Soon the high ridges and wooded slopes were left behind, and we found ourselves once more amidst the shale and loess. Camp was pitched at Ma-feng, a village situated at an altitude of about 4500 feet, and some ten miles from Yun-t'ing Shan. The inhabitants, about three hundred in number, took the greatest interest in our proceedings, crowding eagerly round the camp. This was natural enough, as the only Europeans they had seen before were Roman Catholic missionaries, who adopt the native style of dress. The explorers, with upturned moustaches, outlandish clothes, leather saddles, and countless strange accoutrements, were indeed something to see, and will probably afford a subject of conversation for many years to come. That night our larder was raided by a wolf. He got away safe, and no doubt satisfied, for the servants thought it necessary to send to the village for Josephus and his gun, though several members of the party would have been only too happy to exchange their chances of sleep for a shot at the robber. On October 17th the journey was continued down the valley, which here bends to the south, and Feng-hsiang-ch'eng, a village of some size, was reached. From Ma-feng to this point, a distance of about eight miles, and on to Yung-ning Chou, a good cart-road exists, though no carts were met with. Just beyond Feng-hsiang we turned up into the loess hills to the west. Our road ascending gradually, and becoming more and more rough as the loess gave place to shale, finally reached the head of the pass, at a height of about 5300 feet. From here the valley of the Yellow River was distinctly visible. Descending slopes, covered with scrub-oak and hazel, into a deep and narrow ravine called Sung-chia-k'ou, we passed three tiny hamlets, and pitched our tents in a ploughed field lying between a towering cliff and a sheer drop of about fifty feet. This latter bid fair to become a death-trap to many of the mules, rampaging madly round after being relieved of their loads. At this 11 place it was found necessarj- to get rid of the head-groom. He was found to have been habitually under-feeding the ponies and bullying his subordinates, and was dismissed on the spot. From his departure there was a verj- marked improvement in the condition and spirit of the animals ; some which, till now, had seemed lazy and unwilling, developing a liveliness which made it imperative to ransack our stores for curb-bits. The altitude of this camp was estimated at about 3900 feet, and its distance from the last halt about seventeen miles. The following day after continuing down the ravine for another ten or twelve miles, we arrived at the walled town of Lin Hsien, situated on the slope of a broad valley. Just before we quitted the ravine, a fine golden eagle was shot whilst feeding on the body of an infant child by the roadway. Such a sight is by no means uncommon in a country where the people refuse to bury dead babies under the curious belief that if eaten by a wild animal the child is born again to its original parents. On hearing of our approach, scores of men, women, and children, poured forth from the town gates. They flocked round the camp, and were only kept from entering our tents with the very greatest difficulty. The gentleman acting as deputy in the absence of the Hsien magistrate certainly did his best to make things comfortable for us, but he had no real authority over the crowds that surrounded the camp. The party entertained him, however, together with a native Roman Catholic evangelist at dinner the same evening, and they seemed to appreciate the meal. We had another visit that night, this time from three wolves ; how- ever they contented themselves with a serenade. Sowerby went after them, but the moonlight was insufficient to afford any chance of a shot. Lin Hsien, a well built town, surrounded by a wall in an unusually good state of preservation, contains a population of about 3000. The Roman Catholics have established here a Mission station, where a priest resides. The place owes its prosperity mainly to the fact that it forms the mart and distributing centre for a large stretch of country. Situated, as already stated, on the western slope of a broad valley, running north and south, a part of its wall ascends and encloses the crest of the hill overlooking the main portion of the town. This is a means of protection very frequently employed in a land where towns and cities are perforce built under high cliffs and hills. In the river bed to the eastern side of the town a strong d\ke of massive stone blocks has been constructed to withstand the fierce attack of mountain torrents. These sweeping down the valley in the rainy season, unbroken sheets of water eight or ten feet deep, and filling it from side to side, would very quickly 12 PLATE 7. c a C a U c "5. 3 u C undermine the walls, were it not for the protection given by the dyke, which stretches the whole length of the wall, and incidentally forms an excellent esplanade. Next day camp was struck, and our march resumed. For the first three miles the road lay in a northerly direction up the valley, and then entered a ravine on the west. The rest of the day's journey was up this ravine, which, commencing of some width, where it meets the Lin Hsien valley, gradually dwindles to a chasm in the loess. At Kan-tsao-k'ou, where a suitable camping ground was found, it again widens out, and divides up into several branches, which run up into and drain the eastern slopes of the Ch'ing-ting Shan about two miles distant. Kan-tsao-k'ou means literally " dry grass pass " — the name being applied equally to ravine and village. This nomenclature is almost invariably adopted where a village lies near the head of a long ravine. For example, Sung-chia-k'ou (literally " the pass of the Sung family ") was the name applied not only to the ravine where the expedition passed the night of October 17th, but also to the village just above that camp. From Kan-tsao-k'ou it was decided to make a trip to the summit of one of the Ch'ing-ting Shan peaks, to estimate the altitude, latitude, and longitude, and also to secure a round of angles to check the plane-table work. As this would necessitate a halt of a few days duration, Cobb and Sowerby decided to go on in advance of the main body. The former was anxious to get to Yu-lin Fu that he might set up a temporary' studio, and fix his impressions on canvas ; the latter to make a collection of the desert fauna before -the cold weather definitely set in. Marching from Kan-tsao-k'ou with their baggage and the mules necessary on October 2ist, these two gentlemen reached Yii-lin Fu six days later without adventure. They found quarters first at an inn inside the town, and afterwards in a fine temple, San-yeh Miao, outside the south gate. Meanwhile at Kan-tsao-k'ou we had been obliged to postpone our r.scent of the mountain for several days owing to heavy rains ; but on October 24th, after a stiff climb, the temple of Ch'eng-wu Miao was reached. This is a building curiously like a mediaeval fortress. No observations were possible that night owing to cloud and mist ; but next day was clear and sunny, and a fine view was obtained. This isolated upland covers an area of not more than twenty-five square miles, and protrudes in a peculiar manner above the sur- rounding loess, of which the whole neighbourhood on three sides, save one low range across the Yellow River, is formed. This gives the scenery a very curious and distinctive character ; the country with its hummocks and water 13 courses resembling nothing so much as a Titanic crumple of brown paper. Eastward, the hills are more rocky, and {gradually increasing in height fade away into the blue and lofty peaks of the Chiao-ch'^ng Shan. We returned to camp on October 25th, and the following day resumed our march to the Yellow River. A high pass, about 5400 feet, between two of the peaks of the Ch'ing-ting Shan, was easily negotiated, the ascent being neither rough nor steep. An equally easy descent brought us into yet another deep ravine, along which our route was continued till Ts'ai-chia-wei, a village of about 300 inhabitants, was reached. The first five miles of this march had lain through limestone and shale, which then gave place entirely to loess, cut and hollowed by many rains into the most fantastic shapes : weird grottoes, deep chasms, narrow ridges, and isolated columns. On October 28th, after leaving this village and following the ravine for about ten miles, we ascended about 1000 feet, and kept along the top of a winding ridge, terminated by the steep descent to the bed of the Huang Ho, facing the little village of Huang-ho-yeh. The altitude here was estimated at 2400 feet. As it was found impossible to cross the river that night, camp was pitched on the eastern bank. The slope behind the village opposite being very steep, it had been found necessary to build platforms for the houses. These were constructed in the form of rows of Roman arches, with the result that the whole village had the appearance of the ancient Roman ruins so common in Italy, In fact Mr. Cobb, the artist of the party, has declared that the hills and general scenery of Western Shansi recall in a most striking manner the clear and sunny atmosphere of the Apennines. These vaulted platforms, supporting similarly vaulted houses, are characteristic of the villages along the banks of the Yellow River, in this district. They are also found in other parts of Shansi and Shensi, but nowhere so frequently as here. A good idea of the formation of the sedimentary rock, which extends through a large part of Western Shansi and over the whole of Shensi north of the Hsi-an Fu plain, was obtained at this spot. The Yellow River having cut deeply into this bed, a section some five hundred feet deep is exposed. Nowhere were any faults noticed, though the strata were found to be in places slightly undulating. The general conformation of the country between the Fen Ho and the Yellow River may now be considered briefly. The most striking feature is, of course, the range of high mountains, which, commencing near Ning-wu Fu, about one hundred miles north-west of T'ai-yiian Fu, and stretching south- 14 PLATE 8. iinasTr^«r >; i ®; ■^Ji-'^ .!.'.=.. t/) e ward in a more or less unbroken line beyond Ffen-chou Fu, a large city about seventy miles to the south-west, forms the watershed between the two rivers, F6n and Huang. The average height of this chain is between 7000 and 8000 feet, but here and there great peaks like Mo-firh Shan rise to a far greater altitude. These are usually of granite, or some similar crystalline rock, probably of an intrusive nature. On the eastern side of this divide numerous ravines running together form valleys, which vary in width from one to four furlongs, and extend in a more or less easterly direction. Those near the source of the Fen Ho in the Ning-wu district run south-south-east, and are succeeded a few miles further down the course of the river by others running south-east, whilst in the country west of T'ai-yiian Fu the valleys run almost due east. West of the divide there are fewer large valleys, but these are broader and run more nearly north and south between ridges of shale and loess. They are joined on either side by numerous gorges, which cut down through the strata to a considerable depth. The broad valleys join the bed of the Yellow River some distance southwards. It was noticed that the country east of the divide was much rougher and more irregular than that on the west, whilst the hills were uniformly higher and more pointed. Reference has been made already to the peculiar isolated peaks of Ch'ing-ting Shan. West of these the ravines all had a south-westerly direction, opening finally into the bed of the Huang Ho. 15 CHAPTER III. PASSAGE OF THE YELLOW RIVER — MARCH TO YU-LIN FU. ^^N October 29th we proceeded to cross the river, an undertaking which required some little management owing to the recent heavy rains. Several large ferry-boats were brought over from Huang-ho-yeh, and into these the mules and baggage were all bundled without further ceremony ; though anyone who knows the Chinese boatman, and the Chinese muleteer and mule, will realise that the operations were conducted without any very elaborate regard to silence. Each ferry-boat was divided into three compart- ments, of which two were occupied by the animals, and the third by their loads. The crossing — effected by keeping the nose of the boat pointed at an angle up and across the stream — was a perilous undertaking. As each of the unwieldy craft approached the western shore it was caught in a swirling eddy, and seemed bound to capsize, but at this juncture, the ferrymen, bending vigorously to their oars, forced it slowly to the land. These oars are effective but very primitive in pattern, usually split tree-trunks, one end pared down to form a handle, and each is manned by two or three men. The mules showed no reluctance to leave the ferry-boats, which, by the end of a passage, contained several inches of water. It took five hours to get the whole caravan across, and we were fortunate in that no losses were sustained. The current was running like a mill-race, and, had one of the oars broken under the strain to which it was subjected, the result would have been disaster. At last, when all had been landed safely, the pack-train, preceded by the Staff on their ponies, entered the mouth of a deep gorge leading westward. The walls of this caiion rose sheer for over a hundred feet and the floor was very rough, strewn with boulders and square masses of rock. A comparatively large stream flowed through the cafion, and the strata, which were of sand- stone, exhibited surfaces honeycombed in a peculiar manner. The remains of a well-paved road were in places recognisable, and seemed to suggest that this had been at one time an important highway. For some distance the canon continued rugged and bare, but at one place, where it narrowed, a small stone fort guarded the passage. At last the loess began to show on the sides, and we noticed the first village, or sign of cultivation, since leaving Huang-ho-yeh. A steep ascent was made and camp was pitched near a village named 16 PLATE 9. / ^ ^'^^ 3 r Liu-chia-mo, some five and a half miles from Huaiifj-ho-yeh and at an altitude of about 3100 feet. Sand from the desert, in small patches, was noticed here for the first time. The following daj', October 30th, our road led first over a small plateau, from which it descended into the sandy valley of the Tui Ho. This river, though not large, flows swiftly down a channel which it has worn out of the rock, leaving the greater part of the valley to the wind-borne sand, drifted doubtless from the Ordos. After crossing the Tui Ho near a small village, the road ascends another rough ravine. For the rest of the day's march no villages and but very little cultivation were seen ; the country was growing steadily wilder and more desolate, desert sand was noticed, and the loess itself was composed of larger particles of silica. The ravines and gorges were found to shelter large coveys of red-legged partridges, many of which were bagged for the pot. We reached camp rather late. This had already been pitched by the now expert servants at Chin-chia-k'ou, a village some seventeen miles from Liu-chia-mo. The weather was becoming a trifle too cold for tents ; the stoves leaked abominably, and no fuel but a very smoky bituminous coal was obtainable. The minimum temperature at Chin-chia-k'ou was 23"5 Fah., which gives sufficient indication of our experience. The altitude worked out to about 3400 feet. Next day a march of five miles brought us to Chiu-ts'ai, a hamlet on a stream called Chia-lu. This lies slightly lower than our last camp, but the going was very bad, the road being mainly across an isolated belt of sand — the first really definite sign of the great Ordos Desert towards which the expedi- tion was gradually working. On November ist the journey was up a broad valley, varying in width from a quarter to half a mile. A good road e.\tended all the way. Sand in patches was frequently seen, and it was also observed on the coarse-grained loess forming the sides of the valley. Two tiny hamlets were the only signs of habitation noticed ; but camels loaded with soda, and donkeys bearing coal and salt were encountered, giving some idea of the products of the neighbour- hood. After a march of about nine miles we halted at Yang-chia-tien, where quarters were secured in a large Buddhist temple. Of this the priest seemed rather the landlord than an officiating minister; however, to show his piety, he had instituted religious processions, in which apparently all the ragamuffins of the locality took part twice daily. The impossibility of serving God and Mammon holds as little real place in Chinese ethics as perhaps in those of some other nations. So comfortable were the quarters that we were loath to B 17 hurry, and it was decided to spend a day in idleness. This fact was turned to account by the sick and ailing, who came to Captain Douglas with their troubles. A good many proved to be maJades imaginaires, and were treated to Livingston Rousers, which the experienced Army Surgeon declares of the highest efificac)' in this class of case. Several of the native servants were noticed during the day sitting in the sun with their coats off, conducting exhaustive investigations into the probable cause, or causes, of a personal dis- comfort from which they had for some time suffered. It may be mentioned in this connection that the Staff of the expedition had recently found it advisable to make their own beds. On November 3rd the march was continued up the valley for about two miles, and then up a narrower gully for three more; the latter portion running along an overhanging path but a few feet wide. Then, a loess divide being crossed, our tents were pitched near the small but well-built and prosperous village of Liu-chien-hua. It was estimated that at least one quarter of the terrain passed over that day was of loose sand. The cliffs and hills, too, were very sandy in their composition, and it was only on the highest and most wind-swept ridges that loose sand was not in evidence. Vegetation had been for some time very scarce, and the stunted trees were everywhere half buried in the sand. Nevertheless there was no sign of drought, for every ravine held its stream of fresh, if not always very clear, water. The salt, of which we had seen some fifty donkey-loads in the day, was for distribution amongst the villages on the Yellow River. The altitude of this camping-ground was estimated at 3500 feet. Next morning, November 5th, an early start was made with a view to covering the fifteen miles lying between us and Yii-lin Fu in good time. The road proved to be satisfactory almost the whole way, but the sand became markedly more abundant. The sides of the streams were no longer cliffs, but high banks of loose sand sloping sharply to the water's edge. At last Yii-lin was reached, and we gladly took up our quarters in the warm and comfortable accommodation provided by the hospitable officials of the city. San-yeh Miao, a Buddhist temple of considerable dimensions, and admirably suited for the purpose, had been placed at our disposal. It com- prised two large courts, one some ten feet higher than the other. Into the former opened several smaller courts, containing the living rooms which had been done up for our reception. The large upper room and side rooms of this court were devoted to images of Buddha with his attendant spirits ; whilst the far end of the lower court was occupied by the usual theatre-stage. One IB PLATE 10. *i X ^»4i ft f ^ c '■ ^ large room was set aside as our dining and general living room, adjoining which w;is a small sleeping chamber. This latter was converted into a dark- room, and Grant, who had a large number of plates to develope, had his bed set up in the living room. Clark and Sowerby found comfortable quarters in two cave rooms, and above was Cobb's studio, where he had his bed and a small stove. Douglas, preferring quiet and early hours, betook himself to a well-ventilated apartment adjoining the outer court, where it was only by a most lavish use of rugs and blankets that he survived the cold. It was decided to stay some time in Yii-lin Fu, as there was plenty to be done. A large number of exposed plates had accumulated since the commencement of the journey, and it was thought best to get these developed and packed away out of hand. Some time, too, was necessary for making the good collection of desert fauna, upon which the naturalist had set his heart ; and, in addition, the surrounding district had to be investigated. It was also desirable to get a good set of astronomical observations, and considerable interest would attach to a series of meteorological data collected over a lengthy period. Cobb and Sowerby had, at their arrival, called upon the Chih-hsien (District Magistrate), at whose residence they met several other local officials. They were kindly received, and, presenting their cards and that of Mr. Clark, e.xplained the objects and work of the expedition. The mention of astro- nomical research seemed to awaken particular interest, and it transpired subsequently, through certain remarks made by the Chih-fu (Prefect), that these eminent public servants had jumped to the conclusion that Clark was a learned astrologer, and his failure to predict deaths in the Imperial Family, which occurred a few weeks later, was to them a source of the most grave disappointment. On his arrival, Mr. Clark, in turn, accompanied by Sowerby as interpreter, paid a round of visits to all the officials, who promptly returned the calls. One and all sent presents — sheep, chickens, eggs, and sweetmeats — to which Clark responded by taking their photographs and presenting them with copies, which were highly appreciated. Although long conversations were held with the Chih-fu and the Head of the Police, little of interest concerning the history of Yii-lin Fu was obtained. The informants seemed as ignorant of the subject as their interrogators. The Head of the Police, Pi Jung-pei, was a particularly pleasant and agreeable old man, and he often called for a little chat, or when some official communication had to be made. The highest military official in Yu-lin Fu was the Brigadier-General, or Chfin- t'ai ("Commander of One Thousand Men"), of whose force, however, 19 some six hundred had existence on paper only. At the date of our visit he was suffering from chest trouble, and the severe effects of having to abandon the use of opium. For this reason he excused himself for not calling; but a professional visit from Douglas seemed to be much appreciated by the invalid. Yii-lin Fu, an ancient border city on the eastern bank of the Yii-lin Ho, is a busy place, forming, as it does, the chief mart for all commerce between the Southern Ordos Mongols and the Shensi Chinese. On the eastern side, sand from the desert has in many places banked itself up in a ramp against the city wall, thus affording an easy means of entrance to belated travellers. The western wall runs along the valley of the Yii-lin Ho. There are numerous temples within the city, in one of which, situated on high ground at the eastern end, a fine spring rises and pours its waters into a stream which, flowing through the town, fills in turn some large ponds within the western wall. From these the water escapes through a low heavily-barred archway, and is utilised to irrigate a large tract of cultivated land lying between the river and the city. One long street runs north and south from gate to gate, and from this issue many side streets. The main street, lined as it is with shops and pedlars' stalls, presents a busy and interesting scene. Hides in great numbers lie pinned out to dry in the sun, whilst on all sides blacksmiths are busy turning out Mongol stoves, wolf-traps, household utensils and agricultural implements. Provisions, such as flour, vegetables, fowls, and mutton are very cheap. Excellent mutton may be bought at thirty-five cash per catty, or about a penny a pound ; ten cabbages can be bought for the same sum. The chief commercial products of the city and district are horse and cow hides, the skins of antelopes, foxes, sheep, and goats, camel's wool, and various sorts of hair and wool, both unmanufactured and in the form of felt and sacking. We obtained some very serviceable felt socks, made to fit over the boot, whilst the serA-ants and muleteers laid in an ample stock of the strong native boots, for the manufacture of which the city is famous. A bituminous coal, which burns well, though with too much smoke, is obtained from a mine about a mile from the south gate. Outside the same gate several horse fairs are held annually, to which Mongols from every part of the Ordos bring their ponies, shaggy and unbroken, for sale or barter. One of these fairs took place during our stay, and an opportunity was thus afforded us of seeing some of these typical desert-dwellers. Just within the Great Wall, and about three miles north of the city, stands a large fort built originally to guard the entrance, through which runs the 20 The Fort near Yii-lin Fu, Ordos Border. .isbioa eobiO ,uH nil-iiY iBsn J-ioH srtT ^ ^ ^ • V ^ \ i I ^. i X ^^ i\ main road from the Ordos. It is some ninety feet in height and surrounded by a high wall. There are three storeys : the first a solid block of masonry about thirty feet square ; the second and third similar, but lessening in size. Access to the second storey is gained by a stairway inside the lowest, but the steps from this to the top are on the outside. From here a splendid birdseye view of the desert is obtainable — countless sandhills stretching away north and south to the horizon ; in the near distance two affluents of the Yu-lin Ho, their banks marked out by elms and willows. The sandhills assume varying hues of pink and yellow, swept from time to time by a darker patch of mauve, the shadow of a drifting cloud. The delicacy of the colouring, remarkable at all times, becomes specially so at sunset. A peculiar phenomenon was noticed from the temple, the great sandbank that lies beyond the river taking on at night a deep red glow particularly noticeable in the moonlight. The Great Wall at this point, and indeed along the whole boundary-line between the Ordos and Shensi, is little more than a low ridge of earth. Its course, however, is easily distinguishable by the watch towers still existing at intervals of about three hundred yards. In many cases these are in admirable preservation, leading to the supposition that the Wall in this part was not itself faced with brick or stone. It seems possible that there were battlements of brick, but there is no indication of any further masonry. It has been suggested that the towers are of later date than the W^all, or that they alone have been kept in repair ; but there is no good reason for either view, and certainly there is no trace of any repair whatever.* But so much has been written about this stupendous work that any further discussion or remarks here would be superfluous. An interesting visit was paid to a temple situated on the bank of the Yii-lin Ho. at the point where it cuts through the Wall. It is formed mainly by caves hewn out of the solid sandstone, which appears here as a massive outcrop. Opposite the temple, on the western bank of the river, are numerous epitaphs carved on the face of the cliffs in Chinese and Tartar characters. They are to the memory of officials and Mongol princes, whose sepulchres can be seen as deep excavations below. Photographs of the fort and temple, and of the Wall at various points, were secured. A series of astronomical observations of both sun and stars, reduced to the South Gate, seemed to indicate that the old Jesuit longitude is about twenty-eight miles out. * A< a matter of historical irtemi, it may be mentioned that the Wall was repaired by Chien Sben, of the Ming dynasty (1463-87). 21 The country about Yii-lin Fu is wild and inexpressibly dreary. Very few trees are to be seen, and the bare brown cliffs and yellow sand are devoid of any vegetation, save an occasional tuft of some sage scrub. In places, especially where, as in the north-east, it rises to any prominence, gloomy chasms, with deadly quicksands lurking in their depths, gape in the sandstone and the half-formed shale. To north and west the prospect is heart-breaking. Sand-dunes and sand-dunes, and again sand-dunes — shifting with every storm and obliterating every landmark. Only here and there, as tiny islands in a sea of desolation, small clusters of mud huts, where some little oasis marks the site of a spring or well. An unpleasant discovery was made soon after our arrival at Yu-lin Fu. The current expenses of the expedition had been under-estimated, with the result that there was a serious shortage in the silver available. After some consultation it was decided that Cobb and Grant should start at once for Hsi-an Fu, the capital of Shensi, where it would be possible to negotiate certain drafts and wire to Peking for a further supply of specie. As Cobb's time was nearly up, and there were urgent reasons for his early return to Europe, he decided to make this his farewell to the expedition, and to push straight on to the coast from Hsi-an Fu. Grant would return with the silver as far as Yen-an Fu, a city midway between Yii-lin and Hsi-an, where the main body would meet him. After a farewell dinner, and amidst the customary leave-takings and regrets, Cobb and Grant, with a small caravan of mules, started southward on November 27th. The winter was now coming on apace, and it was thought wise to set about making an early start for Yen-an Fu, where we could go into winter quarters, and accordingly the remaining members commenced to busj' them- selves packing and preparing to resume the march. A few days later we were all astounded by the news of the three deaths in the Imperial Family — those of the Dowager Empress, Emperor, and Emperor's uncle. This was indeed startling. What would happen ? Would the long-expected revolution break out and sweep all before it ? Where were Cobb and Grant ? These and a hundred similar questions tormented our minds, for there was nothing to be gained by ignoring the fact that we were in the heart of a country where very many atrocities had from time to time been committed. However, after discussing matters, we came to the conclusion that everything would pass off quietly, and that there was little need for anxiety. Nevertheless, as a precautionarj- measure, the rilles wore overhauled and a good supply of i2-bore cartridges filled with buckshot and issued to all hands. The Chinese 22 PLATE II. ---^-. ^ 1 — - •;^ ^^ I , \ '- ^ ^ ' — ^^'•mjf\. V. --v \ j|«jmk ,-*■ Pi Jung-pei, Head of the Police, Yii-lin J-u, Shensi. Seep. ig. officials sent reassuring messages to the leader of the expedition by the mouth of Pi, the Head of the Police, who himself anticipated no trouble whatever. And thus reassured, the party continued their preparations for an early move southward. 23 CHAPTER IV. MARCH TO VEN-AN FV — WINTER QUARTERS. /^N December 5th our long string of animals were once more on the march. The mules, after their month's rest, were particularly obstreperous. Loads were pitched off in every direction, and kicking, braying animals went careering over the sandy flats. However, after much trouble, the refractory brutes were captured, the loads straightened out or re-made, and the train continued on its way. The cold was now severe, and the travellers often suffered acutely. The stoves were hardly adequate in such temperatures as were now registered; and the doors of the inns en route were as a rule ricketty, ramshackle contrivances, miracles of ventilation, calculated to admit the maximum of air in the minimum of time. Very often too the only fuel available was a smoky coal, which caused many severe headaches and con- siderable discomfort generally. It should be remarked that tents had been discarded for the time being. The whole journey between Yii-lin and Yen-an occupied fifteen days ; the country passed through taking the form of loess hills of from 500 to 1000 feet in height above the valley bottoms, and their summits characterised by a singular uniformity of level, which in conjunction with the excessive cold, rendered Hazrat Ali's work extremely difficult. However, he stuck bravely to his plane-table, though of course the extent of country mapped on either side of the road was of necessity reduced. This uniformity of level is the natural result of the geological formation. A huge deposit of loess, cut up in every direction by deep ravines and gulleys, lies upon a substratum of carboniferous rock — sandstone, shale, and slate. In many places there are seams of coal, and at one spot there were thought to be signs of mineral oil. This is by no means improbable, as the famous oil wells of Yen-ch'ang Hsien are not far distant. Unlike those of Shansi, every ravine and gully here has its stream of sweet clear water, which flows into some affluent of the Yellow River. The majority of these affluents are of a quite respectable size, and all flow in an easterly direction. Except for the eccentric behaviour of the mules at starting, the first day's journey was without incident. The road followed the course of the Yii-lin Ho all the way. The country was covered with thick layers of sand, and very little cultivation was noticed. Many little streams enter the river on either 24 PLATE 12. Chinese Lady. side. A mile or two south of Yii-lin P'u we passed a massive stone bridge spanning the river at a point where it cuts through an outcrop of rock, and some miles further south came upon the remains of a swinging chain bridge. So far as could be gathered, two chains, their ends fastened to rocks on either side, had carried across the river a roadway of timber. In any case the contrivance had long fallen into disuse, the chains were rusted nearly through, and but fragments of the planking still visible. At other points the passage of the river had to be effected by fords, or ferries. Seven small villages were passed, and towards the end of the day, after covering twenty-one miles, we reached Yii-ho-p'u, a small walled town which at one time held a garrison of soldiers, though the present population cannot exceed two hundred all told. Our entry was effected over the top of the north wall, where sand had banked up to such an extent as to render this possible. Huge mounds of sand from twenty to thirty feet high were also noticed inside the wall. December 6th saw us once more on the march. The road still continued down the valley of the Yii-lin Ho, and was excellent throughout. Shortly after leaving Yii-ho-p'u, the last of the sand was left behind. The valley widened out considerably, being bounded on either side by low loess hills overlying a thick, faultless and slightly undulating stratum of shale. The bed of the river was cobbly, but no signs of limestone, or anything but slate, sandstone, and shale were visible. The river flowed down a bed some ten to twenty feet below the level of the rest of the valley. Round the villages we noticed numerous plantations of jujubes valued for their sweet, date-like fruit. It was ascertained that wheat, millet, and sorghum form the chief crops grown in the valley, and on the surrounding hills. The latter are not so carefully terraced as in Shansi, where the natives dislike cultivating any but level surfaces. At a village named Yen-wa (literally " salt scrape " or " scratch ") extensive salt works were found. To collect the salt, flat surfaces are prepared, and allowed to remain for a few days, at the end of which time an efflorescence appears. This is scraped off, and put into large perforated earthenware jars, through which water is allowed to percolate, thus dissolving out the salt. The impregnated liquid is next boiled down, and the salt extracted. This product, containing as it did a considerable portion of alkali which could not be separated, was found to be of very poor quality. The whole population was engaged in this industry, and the village looks a very dismal place. We noticed the remains of numerous forts, some perched on the hills, others extending across the valley; whilst high mounds at half-mile intervals marked the sites of watch towers, which had run in a regular chain 25 from Yii-lin Fu. Mi-chih Hsien, a walled town of about two thousand inhabitants, was reached after a long march of over twenty miles. As at Lin Hsien, the wall encloses the hill behind the town. In this case, however, the hill is extremely steep, and rises to about 700 feet above the valley. Satisfactory quarters having been secured at the inn, it was decided to remain here for two days. Moreover, it had been found that in this class of country Hazrat AH could only manage from eight to ten miles a day, and it was thought best that the main body should rest and march on alternate days, covering from eighteen to twenty miles at a time ; thus the number of our halts would be halved, and the surveyor, without losing touch with us, could work along daily at the rate which best suited him. During our stay we were fortunate in escaping what might have been a nasty accident ; one of Clark's trunks had its bottom burnt through, having been placed on the kang immediately over the fireplace ; the smell of burning wool was noticed just in time for the explosion of a case of Express cartridges in the trunk to be prevented. The maximum and minimum thermometer was stolen during the night, but on investigation it was " discovered " by one of the inn servants some twenty feet away from the window-sill, where it had been placed. On December gth we left Mi-chih Hsien, and continued our journey southward. The road was still excellent, and followed the valley of the Yii-Iin Ho till Sui-te Chou was reached. Here the Yu-lin changes its name, and becomes the Wu-ting Ho (literally " river of no certainty.") This name is given to it owing to the uncertainty with which it rises and falls. The same features which had characterised the country between Yii-ho-p'u and Mi-chih still prevailed, though the valley was considerably wider, and the hills much higher. The road in places skirted the edge of the valley, with the river some thirty feet below it. Everywhere the country was under cultivation, and the villages looked decidedly more prosperous. Sui-te Chou is situated some twenty-one miles south of Mi-chih Hsien, and on the opposite (right) bank of the river. The walls here are of stone, and embrace a large portion of ridge to the south. Just before reaching the town the river makes a sharp turn to the east, and is crossed by a temporary trestle bridge, very shaky and insecure. The town is a picturesque place of some importance, four high roads meeting here, viz., those from Yu-lin Fu, T'ai-yiian Fu, Yen-an Fu, and Ning-ling T'ing in Kansu. That a considerable amount of traffic passes through may be gathered from the number of inns. Few of these, however, offer accommodation suitable for European travellers, and it was with difficulty that we managed to secure rooms at all passable in the southern suburb. 26 PLATt 13. On December nth, the expedition left Sui-te Chou, and entering the hills to the south commenced to wind up and down a tortuous ravine, usually not more than sixty or seventy feet wide, and with perpendicular sides of considerable height. In this ravine, as in all the others encountered during the day, a stream, now covered with a thick layer of ice, flowed down a channel carved from the bedrock. Here and there large hollows held deep pools; numerous frozen waterfalls were passed, and from the sides of the ravine hung great masses of icicles. In short there was every indication of an abundant supply of water for the inhabitants of the small villages dotted at frequent intervals along the line of march. Soon after leaving Sui-te the end of the first ravine was reached, and after crossing a high pass we entered a second. This was followed throughout its course until a small village named T'ien-chuang was reached, and here we halted for lunch. The road turned up next into a third ravine, which was followed to within a short distance of its head, and here quarters were secured in a small village named Shih-ts'ui-yi. This, as the name indicates, was at one time a changing post for the quick horse-courier service. This organisation has long been dispensed with owing to the peaceful state of the border, but in the days when constant watch had to be kept for Mongol raiders the village must have been a highly important place. The present population cannot be more than one hundred and fifty, and the houses are roughly built of shale slabs rudely cut and arranged in herring-bone pattern. The distance from Sui-te Chou is about nineteen miles, and the road being newly cut was excellent, though some of the gradients would not allow of wheeled traffic. Hazrat Ali arrived on the evening of the I2th, having completed his survey up to this point. It was fortunate that he passed this night within reach of medical assistance, as he was taken violently ill : a result of poisonous fumes after his long exposure to the cold. This necessitated our spending another day at this place. On December 14th the journey was resumed, and we crossed a high pass, 3725 feet, a few miles south of Shih-ts'ui-yi. The top of the pass was barely a hundred feet lower than the surrounding hills, so that a view to the south and east was obtainable. The horizon was remarkably level, the summits of the loess hills being, as usual, of uniform height. The descent into the valley, which we followed for the rest of the day as far as Ch'ing-chien Hsien, was very steep. The road though good, was frequently on the bedrock, into which the stream had cut very deeply. Ch'ing-chien, an insignificant town, is distant from Shih-ts'ui-yi about eighteen miles. Here an excellent quality 27 of lignite is obtainable I this is mined at An-ting Hsien, another small town about twenty miles higher up the valley, to the west. One day was spent at Ch'ing-chien, and on December i6th, after a march of nearly twenty-two miles, we put up at a miserable village named Ma-chia- k'ou. The road for the first two-thirds of the way followed down the same valley as before, but just before reaching the dilapidated and almost deserted town of Yen-ch'uan Hsien, it turned to the west up another ravine. The same geological formation was noticed, and nothing worthy of note occurred. The whole country from Yii-lin Fu to this point was remarkably bare of vegetation, and almost equally devoid of game ; only a few small coveys of partridges, and some large flocks of rock-doves being sighted. Adhering to the decision made at Mi-chih Hsien, we halted here for a day to enable Hazrat Ali to keep pace with us. Only very poor coal is obtainable in the place. Next day a distance of twenty-four miles was accomplished ; a high pass — about 3600 feet — being surmounted without difficulty, thanks to the good quality of the road ; and after following down a wide valley for some miles, we entered that of the Yen Shui, a short distance up which lay Kan-ku-yii. This day's journey was somewhat more interesting. Pheasants were seen in considerable numbers, whilst a flock of several hundred pigeons came in for its fair share of attention. Out of this flock thirteen birds were bagged at one shot. There was considerably more vegetation in the valleys, which were themselves broader than any met with since the Yu-lin Ho had been left behind. This night we had thirty-eight degrees of frost. Kan-ku-yii must have been at one time an important town, as indicated by the remains of a high and well built wall. At present it contains but one small street of very poor houses and inns. It is probable that, but for its being a regular stopping place for travellers passing between Sui-te Chou and Yen-an Fu, the place would be utterly deserted, The country generally was under cultivation, though very thinly populated. On December 19th a start was made with the intention of covering not more than ten miles, but no suitable quarters being found anywhere on the road it became necessary to push on to Yen-an Fu, which place we reached late in the evening. All along the valley, which was fully a mile wide in places, the patches of scrub yielded any number of pheasants, so that we managed to enjoy the best shooting yet secured on the expedition. Only very small hamlets had been passed during the day, and but little traffic was noticed. The Yen Shui was frozen over to a depth of several inches. Really 28 PLATE 14. good quarters were obtained in Ycn-an Fii, and we all settled down to spend Christmas and New Year in comfort. Yen-an, a city of about three thousand inhabitants, was built, it is believed, early in the Sung dynasty. It has sustained many sieges from time to time, these chiefly at the hands of the Mongols, whose ravaging hordes poured in from the Ordos by the valley of the Yen Shui, on which river Yen-an Fu is situated. During the Ming dynasty the northern part of Shensi was in the hands of the Mongols, from whom it was wrested "by the famous Yang. This intrepid soldier, making his headquarters in Yen-an, drove the intruders back across the border, and there held them successfully at bay. His remains lie in a large cemetery situated in the valley about a mile to the north of the city. In more recent times the city was sacked by Mohammedan rebels, the inhabitants cruelly massacred, and the temples — in part at least — destroyed. It is built under the brow of a high and precipitous hill, and the wall as usual runs up the steep slope taking in the crest, which is divided from the rest of the ridge by a deep chasm cut by the original builders to preclude the possibility of attack from that quarter. Immediately outside the eastern wall flow the muddy waters of the Yen Shui. Up the side of a high sandstone cliff, facing the city on the left bank of the river, is built a most beautiful temple — a relic of the Sung dynasty. Its most interesting feature is an enormous hall hewn out of the solid rock, in which sit three colossal Buddhas, each on the sacred lotus lily. These, however, received but little of our attention, as though large and very gorgeously painted they are made only of mud. But the walls of the hall itself are lined with thousands of little Buddhas carved from the rock in strong relief, not one square foot of wall being left blank. Here and there were larger statues of other deities; one of which, a beautifully carved figure of the Goddess of Mercy in a reclining attitude, called forth our special admiration, and considerable pains were taken to obtain a good photograph of this exquisite piece of work. There were evidences that the carvings and statues had been at one time coated with paint ; but that they look far better in their present condition we have no doubt. There were signs of a strong Indian influence in this artistic work. The priest attached to the temple told us, on being questioned, that it was si.x hundred years old. On the crest of a high hill above, and beyond this, there are still visible the remains of what must have been at one time another magnificent temple. It was evidently of very considerable proportions, and is said to have been destroyed by the Mohammedans. Sections of an immense stone stairway are still visible on 2!) the sides of the steep hill. Inside the citj* walls are several other temples, Confucian and Buddhist, whilst in the cliff near the northern gate is another cave similar to the one across the river, but in a sad state of disrepair. From the sportsman's point of view, Yen-an Fu affords winter quarters hard to beat. Several large valleys meet at this point, and in these the numerous patches of thorn-scrub shelter great numbers of hares and pheasants. The rocky sides of the valleys form the homes of large coveys of red-legged partridges, and at no great distance from the town roe-deer and wild pig are abundant ; the former having been seen even within a mile of the town walls. Wild fowl, chiefly mallard and teal, may be shot on the Yen Shui, where they are often to be found disporting themselves in the open spaces of an otherwise ice-bound river. They afforded a very welcome addition to our bill of fare ; in fact during our stay we may be said to have lived almost entirely on the spoils of the chase ; deer, hare, pheasant, partridge, pigeon, mallard, or teal always contributing to our table. It was a great disappointment to find that Josephine, who had come with us from T'ai-yiian and had the looks of a good setter, was useless in the field. The birds would lie low till the guns were right on top of them, when they would break cover with a terrific thundering of wings, flying in every direction. The result was disconcerting in the extreme. On being disturbed they would always make for the hills, when long tiring scrambles would become necessary, if more birds were to be secured. Needless to say that shooting under these conditions was often erratic, whilst the bags were never very large in spite of the abundance of game. However, hot corners were frequent, where the sportsman could have managed very well with two or three loaders. Even as things were, it was often possible to load two, three, or even four times before the last bird rose from the surrounding scrub. On Christmas Day, Clark and Sowerby had a particularly good day's pheasant shooting. The latter on his specimen-trapping excursions had obtained a good idea of the spots where pheasants were most likely to be found in large numbers. Riding out at about lo a.m. with their guns and a mounted attendant, they made for a large patch of thorn-scrub some distance from the Yen Shui valley. It was their intention to work back slowly from here to the city, and then up another valley till daylight failed. The sport commenced with a hot corner, where the guns got right into the thick of a large flock of pheasants, bringing down six birds with the first few shots. From that spot onwards the place seemed to be alive with birds, and throughout the day the party never once drew blank. Here a bouquet yielded its quota of fine fat 30 PLATE 15. £ to X u C Z 3' :3 cocks; there a couple of hens, driven up by the p;room, were neatly bafjgcd as they headed for the hillside. At last a long patch of scrub was reached, from which it seemed impossible to drive the birds away. They flew out and back again ; a bird or two being secured each time they rose. A couple of hares breaking cover were bowled over before they had gone a dozen yards. Then as the day drew to a close and the pheasants had all gone away to roost up the deep ravines, the sportsmen, tired and hungry but in high spirits, returned homewards with a bag of twenty- five pheasants and two hares. A certain amount of rivalry had only sufificed to rnake both men more keen, and the day's shooting ended in Clark's favour, with two hares and three birds to the good. As usual, several wounded birds got away into the thick scrub, and were lost. In some places the shooting was so hot and the birds rose in such numbers that it was impossible to mark every bird that was hit. The groom who was holding the ponies was able, by watching the proceeedings carefully, to point out many lost birds, but a good many escaped even his hawk-like eyes. The absence of reliable dogs is certainly to be regretted, but they are very difficult to obtain in the interior ; Josephine, in fact, had only been lent to us by a friend in T'ai-yiian. Later on, when Clark visited Shanghai, he brought back two good pointers, but the season was by that time rather far advanced, and the expedition came to an end before we could get the full benetit of their services. The natives occasionally use dogs — half pariah and half wolf — for hunting pig, but they are not of much use. No doubt if good boar-hounds were procurable, a fine old-fashioned form of sport could be enjoyed : the hounds bringing the boar to bay, and the hunter using the spear on foot. The native dog of the hilly and mountainous country is a fine looking animal, closely resembling a wolf in appearance, and capable of enduring extremes of both heat and cold, but so far as is known he has not been trained to the chase. Hazrat Ali was a shikari of a very high order. His object, however, was not sport, but rather to make sure of a good bag. With this intent he might be seen creeping cat-like upon a covey of unsuspecting birds, and when he fired two or three brace were often the result. He prided himself that the number of birds killed usually exceeded the number of cartidges expended. He kept careful tally of both, and could give a good account of each cartridge he used. A ludicrous incident occurred, in which this quiet but deadly fowler drew down upon himself vials of wrath from the rest of the guns. The whole party was on its way to take observations from a peak to the north of the city, 31 when a flock of mallard was spied on a small open patch of water in the river. Clark, Grant, and Sowerby at once dismounted, and started off down stream with the intention of working round, and coming upon the ducks under cover of a high bank on the opposite side of the river, where they could take the birds as they rose. Meanwhile Hazrat Ali, who apparently had not grasped the meaning of their manoeuvre, advanced upon the ducks in the open. The rest of the party, having caught sight of the intruder moving rapidly upon what they justly considered their game, howled at him to desist. Not hearing the remonstrances hurled at him, he continued to move towards the apparently mesmerised ducks, and when within easy range opened fire killing three. This was typical of all his shooting ; heedless of the rules of sport, he was, nevertheless, an excellent pot-filler, which is after all a ver}' useful attribute on an e.xpedition of this nature. On December 28th, Grant arrived back from Hsi-an with a huge mailbag. He reported all quiet at the capital, and gave us the account of a pleasant journey to Hsi-an and back again. Cobb had started off safely in a litter for Honan, whence he could proceed by rail to Hankow. Grant reported excellent game country almost all the way to Hsi-an, in support of which intelligence he had several brace of pheasant and duck, beside a couple of geese on his mules. He stated that Cobb and he had been somewhat alarmed at the news of the deaths in the Imperial family, and that on the day of its receipt they seemed to meet an unusual number of men travelling northward with their women and children, and noticed also several bands of disreputable beggars hurrying south. The former they took to be fugitives ; the latter human vultures flocking to scenes of butchery. Their fears, however, were dissipated, for on reaching Yen-an Fu they found everything quiet. Amongst the letters brought back by Grant were some advising of the landing of provisions, etc., at Shanghai; these being to enable the expedition to prolong its duration and extend its work. As matters now stood, our equipment was inadequate for extended work on the Tibetan frontier ; our ammunition especially was running very short ; the tents though good were found to be insufficient for the party; and the stoves were by this time almost useless. Nothing but charcoal could be used in them without their smoking badly ; their chimneys were too narrow, and indeed the rough handling of careless natives had practically demolished them. It was therefore decided to separate for the time being as follows ; Clark and Sowerby would hurry down to Hsi-an Fu. from which place Clark would go on alone to Shanghai, take 32 PLATE 16. 3 :3 > 3 O '71 V c r over the provisions and two large tents specially ordered for the summer work, procure suitable stoves, and with all speed proceed to Lan-chou Fu, picking up Sowerby again on his way. Sowerby, after Clark's departure from Hsi-an, would stay in that neighbourhood and collect, until on the receipt of a wire from Shanghai he would proceed to Honan, and there re-join Clark. In the meantime Douglas and Grant, with the greater part of the pack-train and stores, were to proceed westward into Kansu, taking an unfrequented road to Lan-chou, at which place they would await the arrival of Clark and Sowerby. Hazrat Ali would accompany this party, and carry on his plane table survey from Yen-an to Lan-chou. Everything having been arranged in this way, the party set about re-packing stores, etc., to suit the altered plans ; and on January 28th Clark and Sow-erby left Yen-an Fu on their southward journey. A few days later the remaining division, having completed their arrangements, started westwards. 33 CHAPTER V. CLARK AND SOWERBY'S NARRATIVE OF JOURNEY TO HSI-AN TV. AS already stated in the last chapter, we left Yen-an Fu on January 28th on our way south to Hsi-an Fu, the capital of the province of Shensi. We took with us a small caravan of hired mules and three ponies. A groom to look after the ponies, and three personal servants including Lao Chao, a muleteer temporarily promoted, formed our retinue. The mules, of course, were accompanied by their owners, but these last devoted their energies mainly to opium-smoking, and incidentally to driving and feeding their animals. Lao Chao had first attracted attention in camp at Chao-chuang by his courage and unusual strength — on one occasion he forded the F6n Ho in flood to get provisions for the party. Showing himself very ready to be of use, he had been selected to accompany Cobb and Grant on their journey to Hsi-an Fu, and even went with the former as far as Honan, working his way back independenth' just in time to come with us on this trip. Grant had kept notes of the country passed through on his journey some weeks earlier, and these supplied us with a list of halting-places and inter- vening distances, information always warmly appreciated by travellers in China. The first day's journey was across some very fine game country, which had already been visited by Grant and Sowerby deer-hunting. The travellers followed a long valley to its head in the high shrub-covered loess hills ; a pass was crossed and a second valley entered, similar to the first. Numbers of charcoal-burners were noticed in this wooded area. Near the pass stood a roughly made hut, sheltering a small detachment of soldiers, who were stationed there to protect travellers against highwaymen, for whose atrocities this lonely stretch of country was at one time notorious. The robbers found ready cover in the many ravines branching off from the main valley ; but since the opening of the new road, and the posting of this little garrison, they had found it advisable to disappear. The first halt was made at a small town named Kan-ch'iian Hsien, ninety li from Yen-an Fu, and here comparatively comfortable quarters were found. An early start, and a long journey down an ever-widening valley, where large numbers of pheasants were seen and a few shot, brought us next day to a village not far from the large town of Fu Chou. 34 PLATE 17. The road branched off to the east up a small ravine about a mile north of Fu Chou, and at this point two or three inns and a few miserable houses formed the village of Ts'a-fSng ; and here we halted. This stage is reckoned to be eighty-five li. At this time of year travelling was anything but pleasant, owing to the severe cold. The inns were never warm, the badly-fitting doors and torn windows admitted streams of cold air, which effectually counteracted any benefits accruing from the use of charcoal braziers and a small portable stove. The innkeepers are far too poor to keep the kang fires lighted during the day, and as these estimable contrivances take some hours to heat up, and in addition smoke abominably, they were tabooed. By hanging up waterproof sheets over the doors and windows we could manage to render the temperature a little more endurable ; but bed was the only really comfortable place. The early rising, necessitated by our desire to cover long stages every day, was perhaps the hardest trial, although again precedence might be given to the keen head wind which, in spite of the heaviest clothing, seemed on some days to cut through to the very bone. Usually, however, when once fairly on the move, we found that the interests of the road, the not infrequent opportunities of sport, and the varying scenery kept us from noticing the low temperature and the biting wind. The road was in excellent condition, and in that way did credit to the soldiers who made it. But it is probable that the absence of wheeled traffic had more to do with its present smooth surface than anything else. At first it was hard to understand why no carts made use of this magnificent road, but after seeing some of the gradients no further explanation was necessary. The only wonder that remained then was why so much labour should have been expended to construct a cart road, whilst such important details as suitable gradients, easily obtainable with very little extra work, had been utterly neglected. However, even this is explainable by the reflection that the work was carried out by Chinese. Leaving Ts'a-f6ng before daybreak, we travelled for a short distance up the small ravine which we had entered the night before. Snow commenced to fall, and alas ! for hastily formed opinions, the road became abominable. Its smooth surface becoming greasy offered no foothold, and as several steep ascents had to be made, travelling became not only unpleasant, but distinctly dangerous. The mules with their heavy loads had the greater difficulty in keeping their feet, but even the ponies floundered about in a most distressing manner. However, the badness of the road led to no mishap, though Clark met in another fashion with a most unfortunate accident. In stepping from a high kang in an inn, where the party stopped for lunch, he slipped and 35 sprained his ankle severely. Coming, as it did, soon after an earlier injury sustained out pheasant-shooting, just before we left Yen-an, the sprain assumed a dangerous aspect. It was only by exercising the greatest care that he could set foot to the ground by the time Hsi-an was reached. Needless to say, the rest of the journey was rendered anything but enjoyable to the victim of such misfortune. Soon after the departure from Ts'a-feng a steep ascent was made, and we found ourselves upon a flat wide plateau of loess, cut up in every direction by canons of considerable depth. These, however, were not noticeable till the observer got within fifty, or one hundred yards. After travelling across this table of loess for some five or six miles, the party came to the edge of a vast valley, across which lay the road. On the other side of the valley could be seen the commencement of a second tableland, and this sort of experience was repeated all this day, and half of the next. It seems probable that this formation represents a great loess deposit in its early stages, before the action of rain and water has rounded the great sections between the caiions and ravines into the hills and ridges so typical of most loess country'. Indeed, the moulding process was noticed along the sides of the larger valleys, where, instead of the abrupt cliffs and sharp edges of the ravines and canons, the sides were rounded off, and sloped with comparative ease to the stream below. On the plateaux some bustards were seen not far from the road, whilst a fox was put up from a clump of graves. Pheasants were noticed still on the fields, but they were few in number and very shy. The surfaces of the plateaux were under cultivation, but nowhere could any villages be seen. This was explained, when it was discovered that the villages were either built on the sides of the smaller ravines, or formed by extensive excavations below the surface level. In the latter case each dwelling would consist of one large square pit, twenty to thirty feet deep, and forming the courtyard, from which opened deep cave-rooms, occupied by the members of the family and their live stock. The courtyards were reached by long and gently sloping shafts, fitted at their lower ends with stout wooden doors. The villages built above ground were the larger and more important, and few and far between. After crossing three plateaux, the caravan stopped, late in the evening, at the town of Lo-ch'uan Hsien, where the usual well-ventilated quarters were secured. This day's journey was eighty li. The following day, after crossing two more plateaux, and winding up and down several deep valleys, the party reached Chung-pu Hsien, close to which is situated a huge mound, supposed to be the grave of the great Huang Ti, or Yellow Emperor (B.C. 2700), one of the five mythical emperors of Chinese 36 Cave Inn, near Yen-an Fu. .uT ns-nsY -inaa ,nnl 3V*3 ^^ >, ^ -^ /^, •■■••' V history. The mound was noticed certainly, but so great is it, that we actually took it for a hill. A large grove of cypress trees, planted near the town in memory of the same monarch, was also obsen-ed. The country immediately to the south of Chung-pu Hsien was unin- habited, and very wild. As in the case of the deserted area south of Yen-an, this district was well wooded, and large flocks of pheasants were seen. The travellers amused themselves by shooting at these with their revolvers ; so much good shooting had been enjoyed that it needed something more than a pheasant to draw anything but a few revolver shots. It snowed heavily half the day, and in consequence much difficulty was experienced in negotiating the heavy gradients of the road. It was fortunate for Clark that he was riding a particularly sagacious and careful pony, for he was, of course, unable to dismount at difficult places, as the others did. Even as it was, poor Blacky, as the pony was called, slipped once, and rolling over, threatened to crush his rider. Sowerby and the groom left their ponies and rushed to the rescue, helping Clark up on to his sound foot. At this juncture all three ponies took it into their heads to bolt, and were soon lost to view round a bend in the road. Things looked decidedly bad, as the mules were a considerable distance away, and the nearest village was ten miles off. The ponies did not go far, however, and, stopping to feed on the stubble by the roadside, allowed them- selves to be caught. Later on, one of the mules went down a steep slope, and as it frantically struggled to regain its feet, was momentarily within an ace of destruction by falling over the edge of the deep ravine. From this terrible predicament it was only rescued with the greatest difficulty. A halt was made that night at a small town named Yi-chun Hsien, seventy li from Chung-pu Hsien. The following day we passed through a splendid game country, where the beauty of the scenery seemed emphasised and enhanced by its covering of new-fallen snow. The road for the first eight miles led along the top of a long ridge of high shale mountains. Many deer were seen from the road, and in one place a huge wild boar was chased right across our path by a pack of hounds, followed shortly by their master. Unfortunately the necessity for haste on this journey prevented us from joining in the chase. The last two- thirds of the day's march were along a deep, rocky, and very beautiful ravine, which widened out into a fine valley towards the end of the day. In the ravine we saw, besides many other birds, a large number of handsome blue magpies. Here, for the first time in North Shensi, was any faultiness noticed 37 in the sandstone and shale strata. In places immense folds existed, and everywhere were evidences of considerable disturbance. At a small village, where the midday halt was made, a band of SsQch'uan emigrants was encountered. These people, in their light summer clothing and hemp sandals, seemed to be suffering great distress. It was a pathetic sight to see little children of four and five trudging along in the snow and slush, each carrying a little bundle. The still younger children were carried on their mothers' backs. These unhappy folks had travelled up from Ssuch'uan, via Han-chung Fu, in the coldest part of the cruel winter, in order to reach their destination in time to till the ground for a summer crop. They seemed to be possessed of but few goods and chattels ; what they had, being carried on their backs, or in wheelbarrows. Their faces were rounder, and the features flatter, than in the natives of this portion of the country ; and they wore turbans. The hemp sandals formed their only footgear, and they seemed to have little in the way of quilted or wadded clothing, just braving the winter in their thin cotton things. Such men and women could hardly fail to make good settlers, and, in later journeys in Kansu, opportunity was given to some members of the expedition of seeing the good results obtained b}' these hardy peasants. That night, T'ung-kuan, a military town, was reached, and a visit was received from the Secretary to the Head Military Official, who made apology for the absence of his chief. He offered the party a small escort of soldiers to see them safely to Hsi-an Fu. This offer, however, was politely declined, there being no necessity for such guardianship. This town is situated ninety li from Yi-chun Hsien, the stage being long and difficult. T'ung-kuan produces a fine class of dried persimmon, than which few more palatable and nourishing dried fruits exist. The next halting-place was Yao Chou, a large and busy town, but of no particular interest. On the road between T'ung-kuan and Yao Chou a belt of limestone was traversed, the first sign of this rock yet noticed in Shensi. The day's journey was not so long and fatiguing as the one before, the distance covered being seventy li. Throughout the greater part of the following day, the road led down a broad valley, which finally opened out into a series of great loess terraces or steps, on which were observed several large flocks of bustard. Sowerby tried hard to secure one of these magnificent game-birds, and was rewarded finally with a nice sixteen-pounder. Towards the end of the day the little party descended from the heights to a great plain — the valley of the Wei Ho — in 38 PLATE 18. c eg ■ c > a u c 3 H which is situated Hsi-an Fu, one of the ancient capitals of China. That night we put up at a miserable inn in the large, busy and populous city of San-yiian Hsien. Though only a " Hsien " {i.e.. sub-prefecture), San-yuan is larger than any of the prefectural cities in the province north of this point. An immense ravine has been eroded by water since the citj- was built, and is now spanned by a large and well-constructed bridge. The sides of this bridge are built over with shops, after the fashion of old European bridges, so that, but for a glimpse he gets as he approaches it, the traveller would not suspect that he is crossing a ravine of considerable width and depth. Many industries are carried on in the southern, and by far busiest, portion of the town. Brass- work of all descriptions forms the most important of these ; but there is also a considerable amount of carpentry and bamboo-work. It may be noted that there are not more than 400,000 inhabitants in the province north of this. The change from the mountainous to the flat country was also accom- panied by a decided difference in the character and appearance of the people. Not only do these stamp them as being of a southern type, but their manners and customs are also markedly distinct from those in the country just left. A great difference was noticeable in the food, and method of eating. It seemed as if everybody ate their meals in the street, purchasing them from stall- keepers, who prepare them on the spot. And not food only, but boiling water as well, for it is only the more wealthy citizens who keep fires in their houses. There was something not at all displeasing in this mode of taking meals, extreme sociability being the keynote. Numerous tables, on either side of the street, and sheltered by light mat roofs from sun or rain, afforded accom- modation to scores of merry diners. Travellers from all parts of the Empire freely mi.xed and chatted with the citizens of the town, and everybody seemed thoroughly happy, and perfectly contented with the prevailing conditions. A distinctly southern touch was added to the streets by the huge bamboo baskets of oranges, pommeloes, and sugar-cane — delicacies never seen in towns of the northern interior. The streets, paved with huge stones and crowded to suffocation, formed a marked contrast to the wide and dusty streets of the towns recently passed through. San-yiian Hsien may be considered in some respects a rival of Hsi-an Fu itself. It is situated eighty li from Yao Chou. Being anxious to reach Hsi-an in good time, we made an unusually early start on February 5th. Our intention was to ride hard so as to arrive in time for lunch, knowing as we did full well the hospitality of the missionaries whom we were likely to meet. It was still dark as we rode clear of the suburbs of San-yiian ; but ere long a faint glow in the east heralded the approach of day. The air was filled with the distant honking of geese ; and, with the spreading of the glow in the east, long chains of wild fowl became visible, flying south- ward. Presently a small river was reached, and there, thick upon the southern bank, were hundreds of geese and duck, the latter being of the species Sheldrake, or as it is usually called in China " Yellow Duck." Soon after sunrise we passed a large pagoda, which had been noticed standing out against the gathering mists as we descended the heights the preceding after- noon. At last the bank of the Wei Ho was reached, and considerable delay experienced in getting across. The weather was very gloomy, whilst the mournful calling of the ducks, the dismal flats, and grey sombre river all combined to enhance the feeling of depression which seized the travellers as the heavily-laden ferry moved slowly across the sluggish water. Though the temperature was not in reality very low the cold seemed unbearable, a result doubtless of the moisture in the atmosphere. Moored alongside either bank of the river were huge coal-barges with quaint roofs and dragon-headed joss- poles, which, in the morning mist, seemed to assume strange forms, gigantic and menacing. As the ferry-boat passed close to a sandbank in the middle of the river, an immense cloud of duck rose with a thundering whirr. After circling overhead, and flying up and down the river in a rapidly moving, ever- changing cloud, the birds suddenly swooped into the water, countless little jets of spray marking the spot where they had struck its smooth surface. On landing we noticed some geese not far off, and Sowerby, riding up to the small flock, managed to secure one from the saddle. The rest of the journey to Hsi-an lay over a flat country, the first part of which was much intersected by irrigation canals, supplying water to the swampy rice fields. Here many mallard and teal were feeding, and round the villages the beautiful pink and white ibis waded knee-deep in the black, oozy mud. As Hsi-an was neared, the rice fields and canals gave place to wide, rolling fields of early wheat, the green of which was hailed by the party with the liveliest satisfac- tion. The pleasure afforded to the eye by a green field, after the yellow, grey, and brown of a North China winter, cannot be expressed. A quaint charm was added to the scene by strong battalions of geese drawn up in serried ranks, as if on parade. In every direction, too, were little detachments, giving the impression of the outposts, pickets, and scouts of main opposing armies. When approached and fired upon, the flocks arose eii masse, honking wildly The noise was deafening, and the sky black with frightened birds till, breaking into chains, they flew off in all directions. 40 PLATE 19. 3 u c 3 _J U £ X ■o 3 Q. For some time we had been straining our eyes for a sight of the city of Hsi-an Fu. It seemed difficult to beheve the natives, who declared it to be close at hand ; but when the travellers were within a quarter of a mile of the place, suddenly the massive towers and solid walls sprang into view, and the capital lay revealed in a large depression. Entering by the East Gate we made straight for the Baptist Missionary Hospital, where Dr. and Mrs. Jenkins gave us a warm welcome, and entertained us royally. Then a visit to the Post Office, to secure any letters that might be there ; and Mr. Mullen, the Postmaster, insisted on his visitors taking their evening meal with him, an invitation which, after months of rough and often badly cooked food, they were only too ready to accept. The inn at which accommodation was secured turned out to be surprisingly poor, especially when the size and importance of the city are remembered. However, parado.xical as it may appear, it seems to be the rule in North China that the quarters obtainable vary inversely with the size and prosperity of the town. Away in some lonely place, where the people hardly know how to secure a living, it is almost invariably possible to find roomy and comfortable lodgings ; but in a large and populous city such as Hsi-an, full of fine residences, large shops, and all signs of considerable luxury, the only accommodation procurable is of the very dirtiest and poorest nature imaginable. We could, of course, have accepted the hospitality generously offered by the Missionaries or the Postmaster, but a short stay only being anticipated, it seemed a pity to disturb the routine of their quiet households. Observations were taken at Hsi-an on the 5th and 6th, and the rate of the chronometer-watch determined ; and on the 7th the party left the city and reached Lin-t'ung, a place fifty // distant, where some famous hot-springs exist. Quarters were secured in the grounds of the gardens attached to the springs, and the exquisite luxury of a hot mineral bath was enjoyed. The discovery of the springs goes back to a very early date, but the building of the present commodious baths is attributed to the famous K'ang-hsi (1662-1723). There is no charge for the use of the baths, a small tip to the attendant securing privacy in the warmest and cleanest of the series. This spacious bath lies under the arch of a large cave, and is capable of holding comfortably some fifty or sixty bathers. It is fed from a spring that issues directly from the back of the cave, and is divided from a second bath by a wide stone platform, pierced by several low arches through which the water flows. This second bath lies in the open, but is enclosed by a high wall. From here the water is conducted underground to two small private baths, 41 adjoining large staterooms. From these in turn the water escapes into a beautiful artificial lake, planted with lotus-lilies and full offish ; its sides steep, and overhung with masses of yellow jessamine. In the centre of the lake stands a pretty T'ifig-tzu, or summer-house, intended as a dining-room for visitors. The grounds are planted with flowering shrubs and stately trees ; and the clear placid lake, its surface faithfully reflecting summer-house, trees, and wealth of golden flowers, presents an entrancing picture. In an adjoining compound, a second series of baths fed by another spring is devoted to the use of the common people. When first built this series was intended for K'ang-hsi's queen and her court, whilst her lord and master disported himself in the beautiful grounds first described. The waters are slightly sulphurous in composition, and having, therefore, a very relaxing effect upon the system, are far-famed for their medicinal properties. The temperature of the water was found to be io8 Fahr., and entering the bath is a slow process, as it is necessary to accustom the body to the great heat gradually. So hot indeed is the water that bathers, after leaving it, can dry and dress themselves in a keen wintry wind, without suffering any inconvenience. From both series of baths the water, still quite warm, flows out eventually into small canals, covered in with matting, and is thus conducted over ground carefully cultivated, where rich crops of vegetables are raised. These — onions, and a special variety of garlic during the winter months — are grown in hollows, and are also covered with matting. There can be little doubt that the splendid crops obtained, as well as the wonderful display of jessamine-blossom round the lake, are largely due to the warmth of the water which permeates the soil. A large pool, just outside the grounds, must not be forgotten : here all the pigs in the neighbour- hood wallow, their snouts just showing above the surface. On February 8th, Clark tore himself reluctantly away from Lin-t'ung and started off for Shanghai, via Ho-nan Fu and Hankow ; and three or four days later Sowerby returned to Hsi-an Fu, and proceeded to investigate the fauna of the mountains to the south of that place. At the end of a fortnight, spent in the collection of mammals and birds, Sowerby received a telegram from Shanghai, and in accordance with its instructions started for Ho-nan Fu, from which place he would proceed by rail to Hankow, there to await Clark's arrival. Leaving Hsi-an Fu, he marched to T'ung-kuan Hsien, a town situated close to the junction of the three provinces of Shensi, Shansi and Honan. The road, though exceedingly bad and marshy, is very interesting, running a few miles north of, and parallel to a chain of magnificent, and precipitous mountains. At Hua-yi Miao a PLATE 20. "tioddess of .Mercy" in the Cave Temple at Yen-an Fu, Shensi. .,_._, ^ Cormorant Fishing on the Wei Ho, 5hensi. palatial temple with gold-tiled roof and beautiful grounds is to be seen, built in the face of a precipitous and castle-like mountain. Hua Shan, one of the five sacred peaks of China," famous as representing Buddha's hand. Indeed, several deep chasms, cutting perpendicularly through the massive square-topped peak, seem to suggest the fingers and thumb of a Titanic hand. Numerous Buddhist temples are perched about its summit, and these form places of pilgrimage for the devout, as well as admirable summer resorts for the wealthy people of the plains. At T'ung-kuan Hsien, the Yellow River, after having flowed southward between the provinces of Shansi and Shensi, turns abruptly to the east. All along the road from Hsi-an Fu to this point waterfowl of every description were very abundant, and remarkably tame ; so much so, indeed, that on one occasion Sowerby was able to ride into a small flock, and bag a goose with a cut of his whip. From T'ung-kuan eastward the road lies along deep, and most disagreeable loess gullies. Dust lies on the surface of the road to a depth of a foot or eighteen inches, the depth of the gullies preventing any possibility of its removal by the wind. The result being that in dry weather it is raised in high, choking clouds by every passing vehicle, and in wet it forms a veritable morass. After experience of both wet and dry weather in the district the opinion may be expressed with confidence that this is the very worst road in North China. Being, of course, anxious to reach Ho-nan Fu by the date given in the telegram, Sowerby managed to accomplish the last four days" journey — 109 miles — in thirty-six hours ; a performance which, considering the state of the roads, speaks well for the endurance of his mount, a typical Manchurian pony of thirteen hands. Nothing of any particular interest occurred at either Hankow, or Ho-nan Fu. Some difficulty was experienced in obtaining the carts necessary for the transport of the additional stores at Ho-nan Fu, but eventually arrangements were made, and we left this place on April 13th, and regained Hsi-an Fu on the 24th after an uneventful journey. * The five Sacred Peuks of China ore : Hang Shan, in Shnnsi ; Hua Shan, in Shensi ; .*^ung Shan, in Honan ; Heng Shan, in Hunan ; and T'ai Shan, in Sbantun|{. 43 CHAPTER VI. DESCRIPTION OF HSI-AN FU — CLARK AND SOWERBV's JOURNEY TO LAN-CHOU FU. l_ISI-AN FU, the Western City of Peace, ancient capital of China, the home and burial-place of many illustrious emperors, lies in a great plain watered by the Wei Ho, a navigable and important tributary of the still mightier Huang Ho or Yellow River. A city of no mean appearance, its extensive walls and massive gate-towers rival those of the modern capital. The population, fixed and floating, is very large ; merchants, pedlars, and other travellers of every sort flocking hither from all parts of the empire. The traffic of six great highways pours daily through its streets. The road from Peking, joined at the frontier of the province by that from Honan, enters on the east ; a second from the south-east, in which direction lie Hankow and the Han River, with the water-borne commerce of Shang Chou ; a third taps the produce of Han-chung Fu and Ssuch'uan in the south-west ; a fourth enters the western side from Kansu, and its north-western extension, the New Dominion, and from Tibet ; a fifth and sixth from the north-west, and north respectively, bringing with them, the former skins and wool from Ning-hsia Fu, the latter the trade of North Shensi, and Mongolia. The unceasing ebb and flow of wealth from this enormous area places Hsi-an Fu in the first rank of importance as a distributing centre. The plan of the city differs but little from that of any other large Chinese capital. Outside are the usual extensive suburbs, and within long streets lined with shops, and crossed at intervals by shorter streets; some of the points of intersection being spanned b}- square, four-arched towers. The most important and central tower in the place, the Ku-lu* (or Drum Tower), is, however, set slightly back from the main street, and astride of one of the cross streets. The open spaces in front of the various Ya-mcn are thronged with busy crowds ; cooked food of every description is sold and eaten in the streets ; and on all sides hawkers display their wares under booths of straw- mat or blue cloth. The fat lands round the city produce great quantities of wheat, rice, and cotton. Of these, the last is sent off in wheelbarrows to the railhead+ at Ho-nan Fu, whilst the surplus grain is distributed over Kansu and South Shansi. * Our obser\'nttoiis for latitude and longitude were reduced to the centre of the base of this tower. t The projected railway from Honan-Fu to Hsi-an Fu tiV! Shan Chou and T'ung-kuan Hsien, has as yet only fifty miles of earthwork under construction, starting from the first-named, 44 PLATE 21. c a a £ a. (*■ c u O 73 'J U ■a u 3 u u o Living in Hsi-an Fu is extremely cheap, flour being sold at eighteen to twenty cash per catty, or about a half-penny a pound. Vegetables are sold at correspondingly low rates, and even meat is less expensive than in most places further north. Oranges, pommeloes, pears, persimmons, and grapes are particularly abundant, though only the last three are actually grown in the district. The two first, together with sugar-cane, bamboo -shoots, and innumerable dried luxuries — cuttlefish, mushrooms, shrimps, and sharksfins — are imported at comparatively low prices from the south-east and south-west. But in the present chapter it is proposed to deal, not so much with the commercial importance of Hsi-an, as with the many interesting relics which are to be found in the neighbourhood, and which bear witness to the former glory and prosperity of the ancient capital. A thorough e.xamination of these would demand months, at least, of patient research ; an adequate description would fill several volumes ; so that we must content ourselves with making mention of such objects of archaeological interest as were brought to our notice, and setting down any legends or stories about them which came to our ears. The visitor to Hsi-an, as he travels over the rolling plain from no matter what direction, cannot fail to notice numerous mounds of unusual shape dotted about everywhere like immense molehills, often attaining a height of at least 100 feet, and standing on bases of very considerable area. So remarkable are they that he will instinctively seek information concerning them, and will learn that they are the tombs of kings and emperors, and their wives, and of scholars and sages notable in their day. But few indeed have anything in the way of tombstone or epitaph to tell who sleeps beneath the tons of yellow earth ; though, concerning some, fantastic legends still linger in the minds of the people. Perhaps the best known of the many hundred mounds that go to make the Hsi-an plain a veritable Royal Cemetery, is the one that marks the burial place of Shih Huang-ti, of the Chin dynasty, the builder of the Great Wall. This mound is situated some twelve or fifteen miles to the east of Hsi-an and close to the small town of Lin-t'ung Hsien, famous for the hot springs already described. This mound differs from the others in resembling a bell-tent, much depressed, instead of a camel's hump, and in being surmounted by a monument. It rises to a height of about thirty feet, and is said to contain vast treasure. The story goes that e.xtraordinary precautions were taken to prevent the rifling of the tomb ; special mechanism was devised to secure the vault, and the workmen who constructed it were buried inside. Shih Huang-ti (iie Prince Ch'eng) was hated by the literati of his age because 4S he ordered the destruction of many classics and other valued books, and eventually, on remonstrance being made, burnt alive 400 of the philosophers themselves. He sought to strengthen the nation by means of martial exercises rather than by increased book-learning, with the result that his countrymen, averse to militarism in any form, remember him with odium to this day. In fact the people living in the immediate vicinity of his tomb still use his name to frighten their children into good behaviour, and as a term of abuse in scoldings and quarrels. The next mound of more than ordinary interest is situated on a loess rise some six miles south of the city. It contains the remains of Kao-ti the first Emperor of the Western Han dynasty, which lasted from 206 b.c. to 25 A.v. Not far distant, on another prominence in the loess, lies a third mound, wherein rests the Empress Dowager, illustrious mother of Kao-ti, and heroine of a quaint legend. Of humble parentage, it seems that when but a girl she had a dream in which an old man informed her that she would become the mother of an emperor. She told her strange dream to the neighbours ; and being spread abroad, it came to the ears of the reigning emperor. With true Oriental cunning, this superstitious but wily ruler hit upon the simple expedient of marrying the woman, who, in due course, presented him with a son. In this way the succession was assured to his family without any opposition being offered to the supposed divine prophecy. As already indicated, the son, although as born of a secondarj' wife, not the real heir, actually succeeded to the throne, and became the first Emperor of the glorious Han dynasty, and at his death was buried in the spot now marked by a huge mound. Both these famous mounds can be seen from the walls of the city. Before leaving this subject we will refer to the mound which marks the burial- place of the famous Yellow Emperor at Chung-pu Hsien. One of the five semi-mythical emperors of China, Huang-ti*, is supposed to have begun his reign in the year 2698 B.C., and to have continued on the throne for 100 years. Beyond this, little is known of the warrior king. It may be interesting to note that according to our generally received chronology, Noah must have been a comparatively young man — about 250 years old — at the time of Huang-ti's accession. Other mounds contain the remains of emperors of the Western Han and Chou dynasties. The district further abounds in ancient tablets and monuments of stone, some adorned with beautiful pictures, others studded with characters and * This monarch h/nr ixcel/eact ihe Huang. li (Vellow Emperor) of Chinese history, though all hi* successors h»ve borne the same title. 46 PLATE 22. 'iS»iidX.\^»i'*.-^Ji »kh 3 O u 3 a c o o -J recording interesting historical events. Thus of the many large and beautiful temples within the confines of the city, the famous Pei-ling (Monument Grove) is perhaps the most interesting. Here are preserved over a thousand tablets of stone, on which are carved many of the ancient masterpieces of Chinese brushwork, both literary and pictorial. .Ml styles of writing are represented, many being of extraordinary beauty and quaintness. The temple is a somewhat rambling place, and the tablets are arranged in rows in long halls, or grouped under shed roofs. Others are let into the walls, but these are smaller and would be more liable to unauthorised removal. The place of honour in the grand upper hall is occupied by a large portrait of Confucius, and to this the Chinese who visit the place always make obeisance on entering the hall, or in crossing the pavement that leads up to it. There is a certain dignity in the features of the Oriental teacher, as depicted on the tablet, but it cannot be said to equal several portraits of the sage extant in various parts of China. In the same hall there are full-length portraits of other celebrities and deities. To the left the Goddess of Mercy is shown on a large monument. The artist, in this instance, has succeeded in getting wonderful grace of line in the sweeping curves of the drapery. The typically Indian features, pose, and attire only serve to emphasise the strong influence which that country has had upon the Chinese in religion, culture, and art. .A. smaller monument near to the sacred Confucian portrait gives a remarkable picture representing a certain Ta-mo (pron. " Dah-mah "). who, according to ancient legends, came from the West about the beginning of the Christian era as the teacher of a new religion. He is supposed to have carried his religion to the Japanese, crossing the sea by miraculous agency on a straw. A picture of the missionary standing on a stem of wheat, which floats on the conventional waves of Chinese art, also stands in the Confucian hall. In both pictures the head is remarkable by its difference from the Mongol type. The abundance of curly hair, the markedly Semitic nose, the thick eyebrows, moustache, and beard — all suggest the Je^\ . From the Rev. F. Madeley comes a tentative suggestion that the original of these portraits and legends was no other than St. Thomas the .\postle, who is supposed to have travelled into Central -■Ksia as a missionary. The name is distinctively suggestive. Kuan Li (or Kuan Kung), the God of War, is also represented in this wonderful stone portrait gallery. In the accounts of this redoubtable warrior, fact and fiction are so inextricably mingled that it is difficult to know what to believe concerning him. However, it seems fairly certain that, originally a market-huckster {circa i8o A.D.), on becoming a soldier he espoused the cause 47 of Liu-pei, towards the end of the second century A.D., and became a national hero. He was canonised in the I2th century, " became in time a tutelary deity " at the end of the i6th century, and was " promoted " to the " rank of God " by the Emperor Wan Li (Ming). Let into the wall, and immediately behind the Confucian portrait, is a small tablet on which are shown the two sides of a fan. On the one side, amongst reeds and water lilies, stand two cranes, on the other is neatly written a quotation, or composition. The original picture and writings, from which the cuttings were made, are acknowledged to be the handiwork of the scholarly Emperor K'ang-hsi ; and they certainly attest his ability. Leaving the grand upper hall, we pass down a roofed pavement, lined on either side with large tablets covered with various writings in everj' conceivable style of character. To-day some of these even Chinese scholars cannot decipher. Here and there a single large rendering of the character " Fu" (prosperity) occupies the whole surface of a tablet, and is much admired by scholars as the work of some famous scribe. One example, executed with a single continuous sweep and flourish of a large brush, is placed to the credit of K'ang-hsi, and is especially valued and admired. Turning to the right, when about half way along the avenue of monuments, one reaches shortly a large side room, wherein a fine collection of massive monuments are arranged in picturesque confusion, some standing on solid cubical bases, some leaning against the walls or propped against one another. This room seems to be devoted to artistic productions rather than to literary works, and some of the pictures it contains reach a high standard. Particularly is this the case with a large tablet that faces the door ; a repro- duction of a rubbing from this stone is given in Plate 26, so that a description is unnecessary. On another tablet, of equal size, are given the eight principal views round Hsi-an Fu, a description of each appearing below it. This tablet, and two others bearing quaintly executed representations of T'ai-pei Shan and Hua Shan, two of the five sacred mountains of China, show that scenic beauty appeals to the cultivated Chinese mind. T'ai-pei Shan is a lofty peak lying some days' journey south-west of Hsi-an. It is studded with temples, but extensive and very precipitous, giving shelter to the Tahkin (a peculiar animal, looking like a cross between an ox and a goat), the goral (goat- antelope), and other animals of shy and retiring habits. The priests of the temples, and the natives of the district, being good Buddhists, do not chase these animals, which fact no doubt accounts for their presence in great numbers. Hua Shan, as stated in the preceding chapter, is situated close to 48 PLATE 23. ■4 > ' 13 i !5 the eastern border of the province of Shensi, not far from T'ung-kuan, and is supposed to represent Buddha's hand. The pictures of both mountains have something of the form of charts, each temple having its name cut beside it ; whilst the paths up to them are marked by dotted lines. Sweeping clouds, mountain torrents, lakes and waterfalls are all represented conventionally, but with wonderful grace. Our attention is next drawn to what is known as the Kno-t'wg, a sort of lobby that divides one court from another in large Chinese buildings. Here we find the famous Nestorian tablet,* about which so much has been written. This was erected about 7S1, A.D., to commemorate the advent of Christianity into China in the 6th century, the followers of Nestorius founding a church in Shensi about this period. Up till about two years before our visit, the tablet stood unprotected in the west suburb of the city ; but on an attempt being made by a Swedish collector to carrj' it off for some western museum, the Chinese authorities realised that what was worth removing was worth retaining, and it was placed amongst the other tablets in the Monument Grove. This interesting relic of early Christianity in China stands upon a large stone tortoise and is of considerable size. The combined height of tablet and tortoise must be over ten feet, so that one does not envy the collector the task he had set himself in endeavouring to transport it out of the country. As a matter of fact, this enterprising gentleman had an exact counterpart of the monument made, and this he almost succeeded in getting out of the country ; but after endless troubles with Customs officials and others, he dumped it down and left it somewhere along the Yang-tzu. The mention of museums recalls a story told by one of the missionaries at Hsi-an Fu. He had bought a complete set of rubbings of all the massive stone monuments in the Pei-ling — one thousand odd, and sent them to a famous museum in Europe. The rubbings were returned with thanks, and an intimation that the originals would be greatly appreciated! A set of galleries — in many wa3's the most interesting part of Monument Grove — is next reached. The sixteen classics are here set forth in ordinary caligraphy, written upon both sides of some one hundred and fifty tablets of immense size. These alone would serve to mark the galleries for special veneration and respect amongst all classes in China ; but there are, in addition, many other tablets of interest and renown. What are supposed to be the oldest of Mohammedan monuments find shelter within these sacred walls. A very interesting account of tl.c Ncstoriiiii tablet is given in *'Cbina and Relipion," by Profes^-r E, If. Piuker, M.A. D 49 The}- are dated 742 A.D. and are special!}- interesting as giving early Arabic and Chinese history. The Rev. Frank Madeley, for some years resident in Hsi-an, was the first to draw the attention of Mr. Marshall Broomhall (of the Chinese Inland Mission) to the two monuments, and the latter subsequently brought out a book upon them. The monument Hsia Yu Ch'ii Shui Pi (" How Yu of the Hsia dynasty controlled the flood ") is also ensconced within this building. As the description sets forth, it deals with the controlling of a flood by one Yii, who lived in the 21st century B.C. The flood referred to was doubtless due to the overflow of the Wei Ho, and to this day the banks of the river have to be carefully watched, continuous earthworks running parallel to its course some little distance from the water's edge. The stor}- goes that the great Yu was deputed by the then ruler of the kingdom to reclaim the flooded lands, and confine the river to its proper course. He showed great devotion to this duty by labouring unceasingly for two years; nor did he once during that time cross the threshold of his home to see his newly-wedded wife. Even when he heard the cry of his infant son, as he passed the house, he refused to enter. He eventually succeeded in bringing the water under subjection in the year 2286 B.C., and was ennobled. In 2205 he ascended the throne and founded the Hsia dynasty. His death took place in 2107 B.C. ; from which it will be seen that he enjoyed a portion of the longevity so common at that period of the world's history. This monument is in the " bird-foot " character, with ordinary Chinese character added where the meaning is known. A quaint picture carved upon a small tablet and representing a clump of bamboos— the leaves cunningly arranged to form a number of Chinese characters — is supposed to be the work of Kuan Li, the God of War. Close by stands another interesting tablet of about the same si^e. This has, carved on alternate squares, what seem at first five weird symbols, and paragraphs of descriptive writing. The five symbols are supposed to be maps of the Five Sacred Mountains already mentioned. The pictures and writings in most cases were executed originally not on stone, but on paper. They were carefully preserved, but in spite of all precautions began to show signs of perishing. Accordingly, the famous and scholarly Emperor K'ang-hsi had the valuable inscriptions and pictures accurately transferred to stone, so that they might be everlastingly preserved to the Chinese people. Thus many of the monuments themselves are not more than 250 years old, though the originals of the writings and drawings preserved upon them are mostly of great age. A fair proportion of the actual 50 PLATE 24. o E a ■a c c a ■s monuments themselves are of considerable antiquity, notably the Hsia Y(i Ch'ii Shui Pi, the pair of Mohammedan monuments, the Nestorian tablet, and the sixteen classics. The stones are usually oblong in shape, and over six inches thick. In many, the sides have been decorated with beautiful scroll work, showing marked signs of Indian influence. In some of these designs are figures of animals and birds that strongly call to mind the Assyrian sculptures. Especially is this the case with some lions, which bear no resemblance whatever to the conventional Chinese form. For a moderate sum excellent rubbings of all the monuments can be bought from the gate-keepers of Monument Grove, who are moreover ready with any amount of information, accurate or otherwise. In a large pagoda a mile or so south of Hsi-an are two Buddhist monuments dated the fourth year of Yung Hui, which corresponds to the year 653-4 A.D. of our Calendar. They tell of the visit of a Chinese pilgrim to India to learn what he could of Buddhism ; of how, after crossing the Ganges, he studied the language of the country and the new faith ; and of his eventual return to Hsi-an, where he was loaded with honours. The stones further relate how he translated 250 Buddhist books into Chinese ; but perhaps their date is the most interesting feature, coming as it does within a year or so of a date upon the Nestorian tablet. This seems to suggest that Christianity and Buddhism may have reached parts of China almost simultaneously. A few other monuments or tablets may be noticed here, though they cannot be said strictly to belong to Hsi-an Fu. Two of these form a pair near Chou-chih Hsien, a small town situated at the foot of the Middle-South Mountains (Chung-nan Shan), fifty miles west of Hsi-an. On these monuments are inscribed the whole of the Tao-iei-ching, the Taoist classics. At Yao Chou, a large town some fifty miles north of Hsi-an, is a broken Buddhist tablet dated 529 a.d. This is one of the oldest monuments in the district, but is otherwise of no great interest. There are besides, tablets, though of no very ancient date, cemented into the walls of the buildings within the grounds of the hot springs at Lin-t'ung Hsien, and testifying to the healing properties of the waters. At Hsi-an we were detained some days by the necessity of taking astronomical observations, but by May 6th we were once more on the road to Lan-chou. After clearing the western suburb and traversing some ten miles of low-lying country, we once more crossed the Wei Ho, and stopped the first night at Hsien-yang Hsien, which lies on the bank of that river. About three miles from this town the road begins to ascend a series of loess steps, and from 31 there onward steadily rises till it reaches an altitude of nearly 9000 feet at the summit of the Yung-yao Pass to the west of P'ing-liang Fu (Kansu). These mountains make a formidable barrier and can only be negotiated with great difficulty. The eastern slope is about three miles in length, in which distance it rises about 3000 feet. To accomplish this ascent, each cart needs about treble its usual number of mules, and several carters have to combine to help one another, their wretched animals being forced to make the heart-breaking journey two or even three times during the day. Not infrequently a caravan will spend the whole day in getting across this difficult pass. The severity of the strain on the animals may be gathered from the innumerable skeletons that litter the slopes close to the road. The difference in temperature between the eastern and western slopes of these mountains was very noticeable. On the eastern side foliage was well advanced ; the valleys and ravines were filled with dense bushes already in full leaf; the slopes were covered with scrub in an equally advanced condition ; whilst the trees that lined the roads had assumed their summer livery. The western side presented a very different aspect ; the slopes, valleys, and ravines were almost nude ; no green was to be seen ; a few straggling trees stood bare and brown in the bottoms of the hollows. In crossing the pass the travellers had stepped from a beautiful country, rich in animal life and sylvan scenery, into a dry, cold, and barren wilderness. At a small village about five days journey from Hsi-an, we came across a temple of the T'ang dynasty, Ta-fu-ssii (Great Sage Temple). This consists of a cave close upon seventy feet high, and proportionately wide and deep, in which sits a colossal Buddha placidly contemplating the eternal cycle of things, and supported on either side by gigantic attendant deities. The figures, as well as the cave itself, have all been hewn with infinite labour out of the solid cliff. This temple had been repaired recently, and the figures were covered with plaster and gorgeously painted. It is possible to view this Buddha from three different points ; the ground floor, a balcony at about half the height of the figure, and a second balcony on a level with the face. From this last a photograph of the face was obtained, and is reproduced in this volume. It may not be out of place here to mention another temple of the same dynasty lying some six miles south of Ho-nan Fu, and known as Lung-k'ou Miao (Dragon's Mouth Temple). This consists of a series of large caves in the side of a deep gorge cutting through a range of low, rocky mountains. Within the caves are large images of Buddha, and attendant sages, all hewn 52 PLATE 25 # So 4 \ ' F-. ^ < C3 c CHAPTER VIII. MURDER OF HAZRAT ALL MOW occurred the unfortunate murder of our survejor, Hazrat Ali, who was wantonly killed by the Chinese during the course of his survey duties. This outrage, which was committed without the least provocation on the part of the victim, or of any other member of the expedition, brought our journey to an untimely end. How bitterly we all regret the loss of one who was ever a faithful friend and a devoted worker, it is impossible to say. The sad occurrence is best described by extracts from the diary of Sowerby, who was the only foreigner travelling with Hazrat Ali at the time : " I left Lan-chou on June 20th with Hazrat Ali, his servant, Muhammad Husein, and a small following of Chinese, with half-a-dozen mules, escorted by two Chinese soldiers. " Our objective was Min Chou, a town about five days' journey to the southward, and we expected to be caught up by Clark's party en route. " Our road skirted a dry watercourse, which passes close to the west gate of Lan-chou, and at about five miles from the city we met a caravan of Tibetans. They were a picturesque-looking set of ruffians, some mounted on camels or shaggy little ponies, whilst others, including all the women of the party, trudged on foot. The ladies looked as ferocious as the men and were equally ready to engage us in conversation, which was an easy matter as both parties were familiar with Chinese. " All the Tibetans took great interest in our equipment : saddles and guns particularly causing much excited comment. " One, who appeared to be the leader of the party, was very anxious that I should present him with my rifle, and, indeed, tried to draw the coveted weapon from its case. Unfortunately I did not feel disposed to fall in with his somewhat extravagant demand, though it is possible that, had we not been so close to Lan-chou, the party might have attempted to help themselves by force. 68 " Later on we met a wealthy Kashgari, who had been trading in the south of the province. He was seated in a large cart, evidently not of Chinese build, to which three horses were harnessed abreast, in Russian fashion. "We continued to pass numerous carts and strings of camels and mules, which testified to the popularity of the road as a trade route. " At Wa-kang-ch'eng, a large village about ten miles from Lan-chou, the inhabitants were engaged in the manufacture of rough earthenware vessels, clay being plentiful in the district and fair coal obtainable in the neighbouring ravine. " About thirteen miles from Lan-cho\i, vegetation became denser and the watercourse, which had been dn*' up to now, commenced to hold a streamlet of water. We wound up the ravine for another two miles and then began a steep ascent to the summit of the pass (6500 feet) , whence we descended a steep ravine to the village of Ma-chia-k'ou. Here we decided to halt for a day, as the surveyor wished to visit some of the neighbouring peaks for purposes of triangulation. " Although everyone appeared perfectly friendly, I thought it better to re-iterate my warnings to Hazrat Ali never to work unarmed and always to take one of the Chinese soldiers with him on his excursions, as a sign that the party was travelling under official sanction. " On June 21st, Hazrat Ali started at an early hour to commence his survey from one of the high peaks about six miles to the east of our camp. " Unfortunately I was called away on some camp duty and missed seeing him before he left. I was consequently much annoyed to find later on that he was not accompanied by one of the escort. His servant assured me, how- ever, that he had gone out well armed, so that there appeared to be no cause for anxiety. " Rain fell heavily during the day, and, as I knew this would interfere considerably with the progress of the survey, I did not expect Hazrat Ali to return until towards nightfall, as I knew how conscientiously ,he always carried out his day's work. " As night drew in without his returning, I decided to take out guides to his assistance, in case he should lose his way in the darkness. " As our party was on the point of setting out, one of the plane-table coolies crawled into camp, covered with wounds and with his arm broken. " The poor fellow informed us that the survey party had been attacked, without warning or provocation, by a large gang of natives from the villages 64 PLATE 31. on a plateau about six miles east of our camp. The man himself had been severely assaulted and robbed of his watch, but had made good his escape. He knew nothing of the fate of the surveyor or of the other plane-table coolie. His assailants had informed him that they intended to make an immediate attack on our camp at Ma-chia-k'ou, in order to kill all the foreigners. On hearing this, the servants became panic-stricken, and vainly implored me to return forthwith to Lan-chou. The night was now pitch dark and the guides flatly refused to assist me in searching for traces of the surveyor, and without their aid it was impossible for me to find Hazrat Ah, as I knew nothing of the neighbourhood. " I therefore sent back a mafoo (groom) towards Lan-chou with a letter to Clark, urging him to obtain search-parties from the officials to look for the missing man. " Meantime I prepared against the threatened attack on our camp by distributing all available firearms amongst my party. I was now further disquieted to find that Hazrat Ali, in spite of my express injunctions, had left his weapons behind, and had not even a revolver with him. " Our defensive preparations became known to the villagers of Ma-chia- k'ou and they probably warned our intending assailants, for although at about 2 a.m. we heard a considerable beating of drums, the noise died away and we were not molested during the night. " As soon as it was light enough to see, I collected a search-party to beat the ground to the east of our camp, and at the same time sent back the mules and baggage to Lan-chou. " Just as our search-party was starting, the second survey-coolie arrived in camp, covered with blood and showing signs of severe ill-usage. He had contrived to escape whilst the mob were pursuing Hazrat Ali, but of the latter's fate he knew nothing. After attending to the wounded man, I set out accompanied by Muhammad Husein and three servants. The official escort declined to come with us, and returned to Lan-chou with the baggage. We started to ascend the hills to the east, but had not gone far when we were overtaken by the ma/oo, bringing Clark's reply to my letter of overnight. I was relieved to learn that the officials had promised every assistance in searching for Hazrat Ali, and that soldiers were probably even then on their way. " After a march of some miles through a broken and difficult country, much intersected by precipitous ravines, we came upon traces of Hazrat Ali — easily distinguishable by his hob-nailed boots. There were also footprints of a 8 65 crowd of Chinese, evidently bent on his pursuit. The tracks showed that the surveyor had been headed off in more than one direction, but had finally made his way to the end of a deep ravine, where all signs of him were lost, though there were the marks of a crowd of Chinese at this spot. From these indica- tions I concluded that the unfortunate man had been captured, and had probably been taken to one of the neighbouring villages. I therefore decided to make for Wa-kang-ch'eng, a distant village on the high plateau where Hazrat Ali had been first attacked, to see if any traces of the surveyor could be found there, and also to effect a possible junction with the promised search- party. " En route we arrived at a village, all the able-bodied inhabitants of which were absent, and were informed by some old men and women that they had heard rumours of the murder of a foreigner but were ignorant of any details. " As darkness was now coming on we headed for Wa-kang-ch'eng, which was reached about ii p.m. Here we learned that Clark's party had passed through about five hours before and were now at Ma-chia-k'ou. I found a lady-missionary in the village, and, in view of the disturbed state of the vicinity, told off Muhammad Husein and one of my servants to escort her to Lan-chou. I myself with one servant hurried to Ma-chia-k'ou, only to find on arrival that Clark's party had passed through an hour before. By pushing on rapidly, I managed to catch them up about 4 a.m. Clark informed me that in spite of strong representations to the officials, the promised search-party had never been sent, and that, fearing for the surveyor's safety, he had been obliged to ask the four available Europeans to push off with him at once in relief. Clark, before leaving Lan-chou, had informed the officials of his intentions, but they acted in the usual dilatory manner and afforded him no assistance." The party, now united once more, determined to make a thorough search through the neighbouring villages, and at the first one entered found several Ya-inen runners comfortably smoking in one of the huts, whilst their horses were tethered outside. When questioned, they said they had been sent out to investigate the affair but had as yet discovered nothing. This was hardly surprising, as, except for themselves, the village was absolutely deserted ! These loafers having flatly declined to assist us in the search, we visited several of the neighbouring villages, all of which we found deserted except for the women and children, who disclaimed any knowledge of the affair. We now came to a tableland, intersected by deep ravines, and on several commanding positions we observed parties of men collecting. With a view to 66 extending our inquiries as widely as possible, the party was now split up, each of us making for a different isolated group of men. Emboldened by the fact that they had only a single man to deal with, the natives in some cases assumed the offensive, and it was unfortunately neces- sary to have recourse to firearms in self-defence. Two of our party received injuries in this unfortunate affair, whilst one native was killed and two wounded. The use of force was much regretted by us all, but the attitude of the natives was extremely threatening and our revolvers were only used as a last resource. On reassembling, two of the party brought in apparently reliable reports that Hazrat Ali had been murdered, but no information was forthcoming as to where his body might be found. The whole position was now so serious that it became imperative to telegraph at once from Lan-chou a full report to the British and American Ministers at Peking. Whilst awaiting their instructions, the leader of the expedition made repeated representations, in person, to the local authorities, the remainder of the party continuing to prosecute inquiries in the neighbourhood of the tragedy. Warned by recent experience, they kept together, a course which, though practically dictated by circumstances, had the disadvantage of delaying the rate of search. But more clearly, almost hour by hour, the sickening conviction was borne in upon us that hope was slipping away, and that we must prepare our minds to accept the worst. The storj' told by the natives, as it began to disentangle and shape itself — or be shaped — was that the surveyor had been alarmed by a crowd of peasants chasing a runaway cow, that he had thought the demonstration directed against himself, that he had tried to escape from his imaginary danger and had fallen over a precipice. All the versions agreed in these two points : that he was dead, and that his body was irrecoverable. At Lan-chou the officials received Mr. Clark with effusive civility and every protestation of friendliness, coupled indeed with edifying homilies on the virtues of patience, and with these for some time he had to be content ; for although every persuasion was tried to arouse them to action, it did not appear that they had any intention whatever of taking practical steps in the affair. However, after a little, it became evident that they had in reality been engaged in satisfying themselves, through the reliable channels of information at their disposal, that Hazrat Ali had in truth met his death. This heartbreaking confirmation of our fears carried with it but one consolation, and that of a 67 poor sort ; he was at least no longer in the hands, or at the mercj', of Chinese captors. Sympathy, of an official sort, was freely proffered ; ' It had been an acci- dent, no doubt, and most regrettable ; but one of their own countrymen had been killed as well, making one each side, so that we were now quits.' It was in vain that Mr. Clark appealed for such redress as was possible and for punishment of the guilty parties ; the formula of reply was always the same : ' An accident no doubt, and most regrettable,' and concluding invariably with the cold-blooded balancing of human lives. It was just one of those situations where he who cares least comes off best ; and the man, who had lost not only a faithful fellow- worker but a personal friend, was at great disadvantage in face of hide-bound officials, who could treat the fate of their own countryman with the bland unconcern of chess players discussing the sacrifice of a gambit- pawn. That they were not altogether so easy in mind as they would have had it believed, was evident, and they would have given much to be able to produce Haxrat AH alive; for, after all, some very searching interrogatories were bound to come from Peking. That they were a little doubtful about the truth of its being an accident was indicated, perhaps, by a tendency to post- date the surveyor's death till after the shooting of the Chinaman ; but this was not very clear, and discussion through interpreters may easily lead to misunderstanding. Eventually it became quite obvious that, if any sort of reparation was to be obtained, this would only be forthcoming at the Capital. However, before there had been time to decide on a course of action, the replies to Mr. Clark's telegrams arrived from the Ministers. These, whilst promising full enquiry, strongly counselled — in fact, allowing for diplomatic forms, peremptorily demanded — the return of the expedition. There was, of course, no alternative but to comply. It should be mentioned that on obtaining trustworthy official confirmation of the surveyor's death, Mr. Clark had at once withdrawn the search-party to Lan-chou, as no further good could be done, and the risk of bloodshed was ever present. In spite of the fact that the entire party were now concentrated in Lan-chou, it would have been inconvenient for the whole expedition to start at once on its long march, and the actual details of withdrawal required some little consideration. Mr. Clark's presence in Peking was urgently necessary, and Captain Douglas, as a British officer, had to comply with the 7\mbassador's instructions at the earliest possible moment ; but at the same time the recent tragedy had opened our eyes to the risks run by a small party travelling in Kansu, However, after due consideration, it was decided that, well-armed 68 PLATE 32. 3 7) C a u. o c 3 D. E and well-mounted, the little body would run no unjustifiable risk of attack ; and accordingly Clark and Douglas started on July 2nd, and travelling via Hsi-an Fu and Ho-nan Fu reached Peking by the end of the month. Grant and Sowerby, after a fortnight spent in getting matters ship-shape for the return journey, started for the capital via Ch'ing-yang, Yen-an, and T'ai-yiian on July 15th. Thus the sad occurrence described above forced us to retrace our steps just as we had reached the threshold of what promised to be the most interesting part of our travels. The death of Hazrat Ali was a deep loss to the whole party, and a real blow to everyone of us. Besides being a first class surveyor, he was a faithful and loyal friend, cheerful under all circum- stances, and had endeared himself to his comrades of the expedition. It is regrettable that, although every sort of pressure Was brought to bear upon the Chinese Foreign Office, no reparation has ever been made for this deliberate murder of a British subject. CHAPTER IX. RETURN MARCH OF GRANT AND SOWERBY FROM LAN-CHOU TO T'AI-YUAN. UAVING disposed of as much of the ammunition, photographic materials, and provisions as the European community in Lan-chou could take, Grant and Sowerby, with a train of fifty heavily-laden mules, left the citj' on July 15th. Their instructions were to follow the road leading through Ching- ning Chou, Ku-yiian Chou, and Ch'ing-yang Fu to Yen-an Fu, and thence proceed via Sui-te Chou and Fen-chou Fu to T'ai-yiian Fu. En route they were to take astronomical observations for latitude and time at the following places: Ching-ning, Ku-yiian, Ch'ing-yang, Yen-an, and Fen-chou. In addition, meteorological observations were taken twice daily, three aneroid barometers, checked from time to time by the mercurial barometer, being used. Boiling-point readings were also taken, and the humidity of the air tested with wet and dry bulb thermometers. A good deal of attention was devoted to photography. Grant made some very successful attempts at photographing small living animals, and the results are given in the chapters dealing with the biographical work of the expedition. A large number of quarter-plate pictures of Chinese countrywomen were taken with the handy Reflex camera, in the use of which Grant became an expert ; and a unique collection of portraits were obtained. The utmost ingenuity was necessary in dealing with the fair sitters. Far less trouble was experienced in dealing with the case of Sowerby's nervous little animals, for these were usually tied by a string, and willy-nilly had to come into the picture. The ladies, on the other hand, at the shghtest sign of an attempt to snap them, would seek their homes, whence nothing could dislodge them. Anything striking in the way of feminine head-gear was sought after most eagerly ; whilst scenery and peculiarities in geological formation were not neglected. Sowerby kept a sharp look-out for anything of biological interest : snakes, frogs, and lizards all finding their way into his alcohol tanks ; and butterflies being eagerly chased and captured to be packed flat in specially made envelopes. In one place a large collection of Mammals was made, containing three new species. But all these will be dealt with in their right place, and it is best to return to the commencement of the journey, taking events in their proper sequence. 70 PLATE 33. 1 3 O c 3 U. 3 O -1 3 s>i isan ,i9vi)l wollsY ailT a ^ \-A 'I ^ I heavy rains being experienced, which rendered the roads very bad. The latter, being cut in the loess, became very slippery and treacherous. So bad was th'e weather that we were forced to make a halt of one day at Kan-ch'uan Hsien ("The dry fountain town"). In the Lo Shui, which flows down the valley, numerous mud-turtles were seen, and the party indulged in the (to them) novel sport of turtle-shooting. Sowerby, of course, claimed the bag for scientific purposes, and the ugly creatures were carefully preserved in alcohol. On the third day after leaving Fu Chou we entered the fine game preserves where deer were shot the previous winter, and we decided to camp there that night and try our luck. We were amply rewarded for our pains, each securing two roedeer that evening, while Sowerby shot a magnificent wild boar next morning, an account of which is given in the chapter on the general biological work of the expedition (Chapter X.). On August 22nd Yen-an Fu was reached, and astronomical observations were taken. Next day we ascended a peak some distance south of Yen-an Fu, where we made solar observations for latitude. The temperature on this peak was now about 90° Fahr. in the shade — a striking contrast to that experienced in January, when the party visited the same peak for similar purposes. The thermometer then registered — 1° Fahr. at 10 a.m. On August 25th we left Yen-an Fu and travelled northward to Sui-tfi Chou. Nothing worthy of mention occurred on this part of the road, which has been dealt with already, except that one of the mules died from the excessive heat. Travelling up the deep loess ravines the caravan was cut off entirely from any cooling breezes, and the heat became insupportable. It is noteworthy that in this same district the travellers had suffered most severely from cold during the previous winter, when the temperature fell to —e'' Fahr. After leaving Sui-te Chou the party turned eastward once more till the Yellow River was reached two days later at a place named K'ang-chia-t'a. The crossing was effected once more in safety, and all rejoiced at setting foot again on Shansi soil. The road now lay along the rocky boulder-strewn valleys so characteristic of Shansi. The first large town passed was a busy, evil-smelling place named Liu-lin-chen. This town should have been called " the city of flies," for nowhere in all our travels had we seen such swarms of these noisome insects. The food on the street stalls was literally buried beneath black masses, which, when disturbed, flew up in dense clouds— the air filled with the hum of myriad wings. They swarmed on the mules and on the naked backs of the natives, who, however, did not seem to mind ihem in 77 the least ! They tormented the Europeans beyond endurance, so that it was with considerable relief that we quitted the place on September 3rd. The arable land along the valleys was devoted with great success to the cultivation of millet, sorghum, beans, tobacco, indigo, cotton, castor-oil seed, melons, and pumpkins, rich crops of which Were seen on either side of the road. Yung-ning Chou, a large but dilapidated town with but a small population, was reached on the evening of the 3rd, and the following night the travellers put up at a small place named Wu-ch'eng, situated in the midst of high rocky mountains known to be full of game. Time, however, could not be spared for a shooting trip, and, on September 5th, Fen-chou Fu, a large and populous city on the T'ai-ytian plain, was reached. Here astronomical observations were again taken, and we continued our march north-eastward towards T'ai-yiian Fu. The crops in this plain seemed to be very rich indeed, consisting chiefly of millet, sorghum, and beans. Part of the country between F6n-chou and T'ai-yiian is famous as being the finest grape-producing district in North China, and we were able to indulge in the luscious fruit at a halfpenny per pound ! T'ai-yiian Fu was reached on September 8th, and here the ponies and mules were sold and the expedition came to an end, the party proceeding by rail from T'ai-yiian to Peking. 78 PLATE 36 3 c P CHAPTER X. BIOLOGICAL WORK — BY A. DE C. SOWERBY. HTHE narrative of the expedition having been set forth in the preceding pages, this chapter takes the form of a general description of the biological work, which was entrusted to me. The specimens which I collected were presented by Mr. Clark to the United States National Museum. Captain Douglas made an interesting collection of insects, which were presented to the British Museum. As our route has already been described, it is needless for me to do more than mention the names of places from which specimens were taken. My outfit for the work was very simple and somewhat incomplete. Except for a few traps and instruments, which I already had, I was obliged to get all my requisites locally. The chief trouble was the lack of a good supply of traps, especially those for large animals. The main object of my work was the collecting of mammals. Birds were taken whenever interesting species were seen, and I was not too busy with mammals to prepare them. Reptiles, batrachians and fishes were caught whenever met with, and were preserved in alcohol. Captain Douglas confined his attention chiefly to blood-sucking and parasitical insects, such as fleas, ticks, and mosquitoes, but he also collected a few beetles, spiders, and flies. I made a large collection of butterflies and dragonflies towards the end of our expedition in Eastern Kansu and Central Shensi. Before going into further details of the present work, it might be well to say something about that already done in the same districts. In connection with the Duke of Bedford's Exploration of Eastern Asia in the early part of igo8, Mr. Malcolm P. Anderson and the writer had already made collections of mammals in Shensi, at Yen-an Fu and Yu-lin Fu. We also collected in the mountains of Shansi, north-west of T'ai-yiian Fu. Mr. Anderson visited the Chiao-ch'6ng Shan district towards the latter part of 1907. From these 79 collections the following new species and sub-species were described by Mr. Oldfield Thomas, F.R.S., in papers read before the Zoological Society of London : — In Shansi. At T'ai-yiian Fu.* At Ning-wu Fu. I. Meriones auceps 2. Cricetulus andersoni 3- Craseomys shanseius 4- Capreolus bedfordi ... 5- Ochotona bedfordi 6. Ochotona sorella 7- Eutamias asiaticus intercessor 8. Microtus Inez 9- Microtus johamus ... 10. Cricetulus triton incams At K'e-lan Chou. At Yii-lin Fu. In South Ordos Desert. At Yen-an Fu. In Shensi. 1 . Erinaceus miodon 2. Eutamias asiaticus ordinalis .. 3. Cricetulus bedfordix ... 4. Dipus sowerbyi 5. Lepus swinhoei subluteus 6. Mus confucianus luticolor Previous to these explorations the mammalogy of Shansi, Shensi, and the Ordos Desert had not been touched. Many of the mammals mentioned in the following pages have been described from other parts of China. For scientific descriptions of the various species of mammals mentioned in this chapter, I must refer the reader to the following sources : — 1. Recherches sur les Mammiferes, par M. Milne Edwards. 2. Papers by Mr. Oldfield Thomas, F.R.S., F.Z.S., published in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society from time to time during the years 1907 to 1909. 3. Descriptions by Mr. Gerritt S. Miller, of the United States National Museum, of five new species and sub-species discovered on the present expedition. These descriptions, which have already been • The localities here cited are those of the type-specimen only. Many of the species and sub-species were subsequently captured elsewhere, and some occur both in Shansi and Shensi. (See Froc. Zooi. Sec, 1908, pp. 635-646, 963- 983 ; also Ann. Mag Nal. Hist. (8), U., 1908. A species of Myospalax collected by Messrs. Anderson and Sowerby at Ning-wu Fu and identified in r9o8 as M. Jonlanieri. Mr. Thomas has recently discovered to bene.* and described as M. fontanus (Ann. Ma^. JVaf. Hist. Jan., 1913, p. 93). 80 PLATE 37. ■a u a 3 O ■3 •J (3 published bj' the Smithsonian Institution, have been embodied in a detailed report on the mammals collected by me, and they appear in Appendix II. I must direct the readers' attention to a paper by Paul Matschie, " Ueber Chinesische Saugethiere besonders aus den Sammlungen des Herr Wilhelm Filchner," containing many interesting photographs of the skulls of certain Chinese mammals. The birds of China are undoubtedly much better known than the mammals. Nevertheless, there seems to be no record of any work hitherto done in the districts traversed by our expedition. Mr. Anderson and I collected a few birds on the expedition referred to above, but no new species were discovered. A very complete account of the birds of China has been written by Armand David and E. Oustalet, and published under the title of " Les Oiseaux de la Chine." As far as I know, the only reptiles, batrachians, and fishes collected hitherto in these districts were those obtained by Mr. Anderson and myself. Here again there is nothing new to report, the few species secured having been recorded from other parts of Asia. The number of new species of ticks, spiders, and fleas discovered on the present expedition shows that in this branch of zoology little had previously been done. On our leaving T'ai-yiian Fu, I began my work at once. A single woodmouse {Apodemus speciosus) trapped in the mountains immediately west of T'ai-yiian Fu, and a few chipmunks (Eutamias asiaticus senescens) shot en route were the only specimens secured till we reached the Chiao-ch'Sng Shan district. This country has already been described as consisting of high, rugged and heavily forested mountains. It is excellent from the collector's point of view, and during our stay a good collection of rodents was made. I soon had out a long line of traps, which were visited daily. The woodmouse was again secured, besides Anderson's hamster {Cricetulus andersoni) and two species of voles {Craseomys shanseius and Microtus pullus). The last has been described as a new species by Mr. Miller; while Craseomys shanseius and Cricetulus andersoni were first discovered by Mr. Anderson in this district. The woodmouse and Anderson's hamster were common almost everywhere. Craseomys shanseius was found in or near the heavy forests, which commenced at an altitude of about 8000 feet. One specimen was secured on the summit of Mo-6rh Shan, the highest peak in the district. Microtus pullus is closely related to M. johannus, a species first found by me in the K'6-lan Shan, about sixty miles north of the present locality. Both species are found on open hill p 81 sides, where their burrows are made conspicuous by the quantity of new earth thrown up at the mouths. A single specimen of the molerat (Myospalax census) was bought from a native (Plate 48). This specimen presents some peculiarities of its own, and, further, is the only one of the species hitherto recorded from Shansi. The type locality of this species is in Kansu. I noticed evidences of the existence of some form of pika, a small rabbit- like rodent, on the rocky summit of Mo-6rh Shan ; but although I climbed this peak three times, in my endeavour to secure specimens, I failed to do so. I have always found members of this genus {Ochotom) most difficult to trap. Some more chipmunks were shot in the mountains and valleys. The only other mammal secured in the district was a much decomposed shrew (probably Crocidura coreas). The specimen was too far gone to identify properly. Other mammals seen in the district were the roedeer {Capreolus bedfordi), the wild pig (Sus moupinensis), the wolf {Canis lupus), the fox {Vulpes wipes), and the hare (Lepus suinhoei subluteus). The country is known to contain musk- deer, and many musk-hunters live in the district. Leopards have frequently been shot in these mountains, and the natives say that tigers also exist. There are quite a number of birds in the vicinity. Those noticed were eagles, vultures, hawks, nutcrackers, timelines, accentors, woodpeckers, tits, and finches. I was too busy with the mammals to spend time on these. We found pheasants and partridges very common, while I noticed the feathers of the Manchurian eared pheasant lying about. The season was too far advanced for collecting reptiles, but Captain Douglas secured a few flies and spiders. The forests consisted mainly of spruce, larch, and pine, whilst some of the slopes and ravines were thickly overgrown with scrub-oak, birch, and hazel. Close to the summit of Mo-6rh Shan I found some red-currant bushes, with the half-dried fruit still hanging. In the valleys there were a very thorny variety of gooseberry and also some raspberry canes. Along the banks of the streams, numerous late flowering herbs were noticed, including several varieties of anemones and gentians. Some of the unwooded slopes were covered with low bushes of a thorny leguminus shrub, whilst elsewhere rich grass was abundant. On the journey between this rich and fertile district, and the sandy country round Yii-lin Fu, in North Shensi, very little collecting was done. I shot a few more chipmunks, and also secured a few specimens of a small species of frog. The latter were found in the little streams, which ran along the ravine-bottoms in the loess country near the Yellow River. At one place a magnificent golden eagle was shot, and some ibis-billed curlews were secured near the Chiao-ch'6ng Shan. 82 In company with Mr. Cobb, I left the main expedition at Kan-tsao-k'ou and hurried on to Yii-lin Fu, reaching that place on October 26th. Knowing from previous experience that trapping would be useless in this sandj' region, I at once set the natives to work digging up specimens ; and a comparatively good collection was thus made. The lateness of the season, however, interfered considerably with my work: many species of small mammals were already hibernating, and in this way we missed the Ordos hedgehog (Erinaceus miodon), and the common suslik or ground-squirrel [Citellus mongolicus), (Plate 51). The first specimens brought in were some little sand- hamsters (Phodopus bedfordiz), (Plate 49). This species was first secured in this district in the spring of the same year by Mr. Anderson and myself. It was placed in the genus Cricetulus by Mr. Thomas, and named after Her Grace the Duchess of Bedford. Mr. Miller has, however, since made for this species a new genus, Phodopus, based upon some unique peculiarities in the foot of this little creature. A large series of specimens of this little rodent was obtained, and a photograph was secured as well. A single specimen of Cricetulus griseus was collected. This hamster closely resembles Anderson's hamster in shape, size and appearance. It differs, however, in being of a lighter, more buffy colour, and also in having a black line down the middle of the back. The tail is considerably shorter, and the feet are more hairy in C. griseus than in C. andersoni. The latter is an inhabitant of the hilly or mountainous districts of Shansi, Shensi, and at least the eastern part of Kansu. C. griseus, on the other hand, is usually met with on the grassy or sandy plains on the borders of Mongolia. Both species differ greatly in appearance from Phodopus bedfordix, though all three forms are characterised by the possession of large cheek-pouches opening into the mouth. A good series of the three-toed jerboa (Dipus sowerbyi) was secured, (Plate 50). This jerboa, the only three-toed species hitherto recorded from China, was discovered by me in this region on my previous visit. A purely sand-loving animal, this jerboa inhabits the dunes which exist in, and on the borders of, the Ordos Desert. Like those of the sand hamster, its burrows are almost impossible to find. It is a question whether this species fills up the mouth of its burrows purposely, as do the American Dipodidse, or whether this is done naturally by the loose sand. It was too late in the year for me to investigate this problem, as the jerboa was hibernating. On my previous visit I often saw the tracks of this lively little creature in the sand. From these I gathered that the animal is capable of jumping eight feet. Two living 83 specimens which were placed in a jar some three feet deep jumped out without touching the sides. When asleep, they lie on their sides for the better accommodation of their long hind legs. If proceeding slowly, they hop rabbit- fashion on all four feet. It is only when progressing at some speed that they use their hind legs alone. When hopping, one foot precedes the other, instead of both being kept together. Many of the specimens caught were torpid, but they soon became active in a warm room. Their bodies were loaded with thick layers of fat. Some molerats belonging to the Shensi species, Myospalax cansus. were brought in (Plate 48). This rodent is an extremely interesting animal: it combines, as the name suggests, the attributes of the mole and the rat. The different species vary in size, the present one being roughly about seven inches long, not including the tail. In appearance the molerat also bears some resemblance to the American pocket gopher. It is covered with a soft, grey fur. The fore feet are large, being armed with powerful claws for burrowing. The tail is short, and, like the feet, of a pink colour. Both are naked, except for a few stray hairs. The head is flattened above and resembles a spade in shape; it is used for shovelling loose earth, when the powerful muscles of the neck are brought into play with great effect. The eyes are small and almost hidden, whilst the ear is little more than a small round hole. The jaws are armed with thick and powerful incisor teeth, which suggest that the animal feeds on roots. The molerat seldom comes above ground, but that it does so occasionally may be gathered from the fact that I have found its remains in owl pellets. The Chinese peasants declare that by watching the mouth of a molerat's burrow they can foretell the weather. The burrows, they say, are left open when fine weather may be expected, and closed before the advent of rain. A single mole (Scaptochirus gilliesei) was bought from a native. This mole resembles the Peking species, but is much smaller. At that time it was unknown to science, but it was described from a specimen from south Shensi by Mr. Thomas, before my specimen could be identified as belonging to a new species. Two skins of a new and interesting polecat {Vormela negans) were secured. Resembling the common polecat in shape, this species is characterised by a peculiarly marked and brightly coloured pelt. The face is black and white, whilst the throat, legs and belly are of a shiny black. The nape of the neck is of a pale cream colour, which becomes a bright yellow on the back shading into a rich orange on the sides, and towards the base of the tail. From the 84 PLATE 38. T 03 3 r a i> c shoulders backwards there are spots and motthngs of a deep brown colour. In this respect it differs from the western form, Vormela peregusna. In this species the ground colour is brown, while the mottlings are of yellow. For this reason Mr. Miller gave this new species the specific name of negans. The Chinese call this animal Ma-nai-ho. I could not get the meaning of the first two words, local authorities disagreeing as to the proper characters to apply. All were agreed that the last syllable ho is that for monkey. This, doubtless, indicates a semi-arboreal life at least. Yii-lin Fu marks, as far as is at present known, the extreme eastern limit of the range of vormela. A couple of specimens of Meriones auceps were trapped by me amongst the sand-hills. This beautiful gerbil was first described by Mr. Thomas from specimens taken by Mr. Anderson in T'ai-yiian Fu. Another form also e.xists in the Ordos Desert and other parts of Mongolia, and is known as M. mguiculatus. The two species differ in colour and skull measurements, and also in their habits. M. auceps is strictly nocturnal, while M. mguiculatus is as purely diurnal. During my previous travels in the Ordos, I saw great numbers of the latter animal playing about the mouths of their burrows. These gerbils do not hibernate, and may be trapped even in the coldest weather. The pale desert chipmunk (Eutamias asiaticus ordinalis), originally described from this locality, was secured. In size and form this chipmunk does not differ from the ordinary North China form, but it is paler and decidedly more yellow in colour. Fo.xes, wolves, badgers, and wild cats I knew to be in the district, but none were secured. Some antelopes were seen by two members of the expedition. The skins of these animals were very common in the fur shops in the city. The poor people use them in the manufacture of clothes. Not many species of birds were seen, but a heron, an eagle-owl, a woodpecker, and some pheasants were secured. On the sandy flats of the river there were large flocks of cranes, mallards, teal, and ruddy sheldrake. The last would allow of a close approach, so that an opportunity of tasting their coarse and oily flesh was afforded. A few small flocks of geese were seen on our arrival, but a few days later these had gone south. Black storks were also seen during the first part of our stay in the district. Magpies, crows, kites, pigeons, shrikes, and larks were the only land birds remaining as the severe North China winter closed down upon us. Before the streams which feed the river at this point froze over, I secured some specimens of fish and frogs. In all there were some five species, four of 6S the former and one of the latter. Some httle sand-inhabiting lizards {Phyno- cephalus frontalis) were secured, and also two varieties of non-poisonous snakes. These were Tropidonotus tigrinus, a green water snake, and Coluber dione, a brown species which inhabits the sand-hills and loess country. Some interesting insects were also secured, amongst others being a new flea and a new tick, both from one of the molerats. There was very little to record in the way of plant life. Elms and willows were the only trees noticed, while small patches of a sort of sage bush were scattered over the sand dunes. I found one sprig of parsley, whilst a very coarse and straggly grass existed in some parts. Yen-an Fu was the next place where I made collections. Between Yu-lin Fu and this city the country was very desolate and void of animal life. Not far from Yii-lin Fu a flock of bustards was observed. Elsewhere the common rock dove and stock dove were seen in large flocks. A few coveys of partridges were also noticed, whilst here and there a lonely golden eagle would be sighted. In the ravine bottoms some dippers were visible, and one was secured. A specimen of the peculiar wagtail-like bird called Henicurus sinensis was obtained at Shih-ts'ui-yi. The only mammals seen were two David's squirrels (Plate 49), both of which were secured, and a few hares. The latter were not observed till we were in the valley of the Yen Shui, close to Yen-an Fu. Here pheasants were very plentiful. At Yen-an Fu I again took to trapping with good results. I soon secured some more specimens of Cn'cetulus andersoni and Meriones auceps, both of which species were very common in the locality. Besides these I caught some specimens of the sulphur-bellied rat {Mus or Epimys confucianus luticolor), which was described from the locality. This rat seems to be a purely rock-inhabiting species, and is caught in the same places as David's squirrel. It somewhat resembles the common brown rat, but is not quite so large, is of a conspicuous tawny tinge, and has much longer ears and tail. The latter is white towards the end, and on the under surface. The fur of the belly varies from a rich cream to a pale sulphur-yellow. The latter colour soon fades, however, in preserved specimens. This new subspecies was first discovered by me earlier in the same year. A field mouse {Apodemus agrarius pallidior) was also trapped. This mouse has a dark stripe down the middle of the back. It is usually to be caught in open bushy fields, either in the valleys or upon the hill-tops. Two or three specimens can usually be trapped at the same hole. 66 The large grey hamster {Cricetulus triton) was caught. This rat resembles C. andersoni in colour, but is considerably larger. It is a pugnacious and predatory animal, storing up large quantities of beans and millet in its deep burrows. Many of the poor people dig up these stores of grain in the districts where this rat is abundant. In Shansi a still larger form, C. triton incanus, is found. It is particu^rly abundant on the T'ai-yiian plain. I secured a couple of good specimens of the local hare {Lepus swinhoei subluteus), which was first described from a specimen shot by me in the Ordos Desert. This hare is considerably paler than its cousin {Lepus swinhoei) from the Shantung Peninsula. I tried trapping for wolves and fo.xes, but without success. The only traps I had were some native-made ones from Yii-lin Fu. These were excessively clumsy and difficult to conceal. Not being very well satisfied with the country immediately around Yen-an Fu I decided to go further afield. Taking a few stores and necessaries with me, I visited a valley about twelve miles south of the city, putting up at a small inn. The country here was much more to my liking, and I was able to secure a few more species. Roedeer were plentiful, and I soon managed to shoot a good specimen. Mr. Grant also secured one, and later on some more were shot in the same locality. The North China roedeer differs from the European forms in being larger, with a much yellower coat. This tendency to yellow in the fauna of Shansi, Shensi, and Kansu, is doubtless due to the uniform yellowness of the loess country which composes the greater part of the three provinces. The roedeer is extremely common in suitable country, and not much hunted by the natives. My traps here yielded poorly, a result no doubt of the excessive cold. I secured a specimen of the pika {Ochofona bedfordi). It was at Yen-an Fu that I first discovered this interesting species, which was subsequently described as new from specimens obtained in Shansi at Ning-wu Fu. The burrows of these pikas are usually deep and intricate, and are situated where the thorn scrub grows thickest, or up the sides of the deep loess gullies. I did not see any stores of hay like those made by the Siberian and American species, neither did I hear any sound from these interesting little creatures. They live in little communities like rabbits, the ground surrounding their burrows being covered with a network of little paths. A single specimen of the little vole Microtus inez, was trapped in one of the ravines. This interesting little vole was discovered by Mr. Anderson in the mountains near K'6-lan Chou, North Shansi. This is, as far as I know, the 87 only vole hitherto recorded in North Shensi. It differs from the other voles already mentioned in being smaller and of a rich reddish brown colour. It is trapped usually amongst the dead leaves, or on mossy banks at the bottom of loess ravines in well vegetated country. Some more wood-mice and David's squirrels were also secured here, besides a fine specimen of the hare. David's squirrel {Sciurotamias dauidiamis), (Plate 49), is a rock-inhabiting species. It is about the size of the common European red squirrel. Its fur is of a dull earth-brown colour above and creamy beneath. The ears are not tufted, though the tail is very bushy. Like the chipmunk it possesses cheek pouches. It also resembles the chipmunk in its habits and mode of life, except that it does not hibernate. This squirrel enjoys a very wide range being recorded from the mountains near Peking, from various places in Shansi, Shensi and Kansu and also from Ssuch'uan. Birds were more plentiful in this district. Some specimens of the beautiful blue magpie {Urocissa sinensis) were secured and Azure -winged magpies {Cyanopolius cyanus) were also plentiful, springing my traps and making themselves generally disagreeable. A pretty timeline (Pomatorhinus graviuox) was also very common. The country was teeming with pheasants and I saw the tracks of wild pigs, wolves and leopards. This country had not been under cultivation since the great famine of 1877-79 when parts of North China were terribly depopulated. As a result in this and many other localities the mountains, hills and valleys have become scrub-covered and even well wooded. Good cover for game and wild animals of all kinds is thus afforded. It is possible that many species owe their existence in North China to-day to these periodical famines, which check the ever increasing human population. Where conditions are favourable to cultivation in North China, it is extremely difficult for the naturalist to find suitable collecting grounds. Every foot of land is utilised. It is only in such spots as these whence man has been driven out, and which have lain fallow for a generation or so, or in places like the Chiao-ch'^ng Shan, precipitous, rocky and cold, that one finds animals at all plentiful. After a week's stay in this country I returned to Yen-an Fu. Here I secured a nice specimen of the spotted wild-cat {Felis chinensis) and another of the large marten {Maries flavigula borealis). Both of these animals were said to be fairly common in the district though very hard to secure. Nothing in the way of reptiles, batrachians or fishes was secured, but a new and interesting flea was taken from one of the roedeer. The female of this flea was found in large numbers in the nostrils of the deer. The insects were 88 PLATE 39. u > much swollen, and were at first taken for maggots. Detailed descriptions of this and two other fleas discovered appear elsewhere* in this volume. On the same deer a new species of tick was also secured. This completed the zoological work done in this district. Mr. Clark and I left Yen-an Fu on January 28th, 1909, on our way south to Hsi-an Fu. The journey was accomplished as rapidly as possible, so that no collecting could be done. About five days journey south of Yen-an Fu we passed through a belt of uncultivated country, also a result of the famine. Here again game was abundant. Roedeer were seen close to the road, and a wild boar was chased across in front of our mule-train by a hunter and his dogs. Pheasants were so numerous that we amused ourselves by taking shots at them with our revolvers as we rode along. As we neared Hsi-an Fu we came down upon some great loess steps. Here we saw large flocks of bustards. I managed to secure one of these handsome birds with a rifle shot. It weighed 16 lbs. At last we reached the great Hsi-an Fu plain and shortly found ourselves in a veritable fowler's paradise. The banks and flats of the rivers we crossed were black with wild fowl, while great flocks of geese were seen feeding on the fields of early wheat. They were easily shot from horseback. Here and there were small flocks of stately cranes, whilst in the irrigation canals and marshy rice fields were feeding numbers of Chinese ibises {Nipponia nippon), pink, white, or grey. We spent two days in Hsi-an Fu, and then went to a small town called Lin-t'ung, where there are some famous hot springs. Here Mr. Clark left me, hurrying on eastward to Ho-nan Fu in Honan, and thence to Shanghai. I spent a few days trapping round Lin-t'ung but secured nothing more than a specimen of the common mouse {Mus wagneri mongolium). On the plain I shot geese, duck, hare, snipe, and bustard. In the course of a single morning's shooting I was able to make the respectable bag of five geese, three mallard, a fifteen pound bustard, and a hare. I next tried a place at the foot of the high mountains about fifteen miles due south of Hsi-an Fu, finding quarters in a temple in a little village named Liu-ts'un, at the mouth of a long ravine, and began trapping again, this time with more success. The sulphur-bellied rat, the field-mouse, the wood-mouse, and David's squirrel, were the only rodents secured. Two minks (Lutreola sibirica) were caught in the temple, after repeatedly stealing game from my larder. These animals displayed the utmost ferocity when caught. I have never witnessed such fury incarnate even in much larger animals of more sinister repute. • Appi^ndix IV. 89 Just before I left the locality the old priest of the temple showed me the horns of a goral {Urofragns galeanus), and told me that this animal was to be found on a high peak some five miles away. I could not leave without making an effort to secure a specimen, so decided to postpone my departure and visit the peak in question. I was successful in my hunt. Taking a native with me to carry my shot-gun, in case some small animal presented itself, I went up the ravine, and after a hard climb reached the summit of the peak, where, perched at an altitude of about 4000 ft. we found a quaint Buddhist temple. The top of the peak was conical in shape, and covered with cypress and other conifers. A long and steep flight of stone steps led up to the temple. The priests told me that there were several gorals living on the peak free from persecution ; they themselves as Buddhists, not being allowed to take life. However, they had no objection to my killing these animals, which habitually fed upon the little patches of wheat and maize kept by the priests half-way down the mountain slope. In a scramble through the woods round the sides of the peak we soon put up a handsome goral, which bounded up the steep slope with wonderful agility, and made its escape round the top of the peak. Its tracks after rounding the peak vanished over the edge of a precipitous peak, which fell away almost perpendicularly for hundreds of feet. Carefully I climbed down making use of the little cypress trees that sprang from the cracks in the rocks. When about half way down I heard something scrambling above and to the left of my position. I looked up and once more caught sight of the goral climbing towards the top of the precipice. Balancing myself with one foot on a ledge, the other on the trunk of cypress, empty space beneath me, I took a rapid aim, and fired just as he gained the top of the cliff. I missed, but the animal passed within twenty yards of my bearer, who was lying exhausted from the severity of the climb and chase. He heard my shot, and looking up saw the goral. He let drive with a dose of buckshot, killing the animal on the spot. The goral, of which there are many species, is a goat-like animal that inhabits, in China, the highest and rockiest mountain-ranges of the central and western provinces. It is a daring climber, bounding up precipitous cliffs that a man would hesitate to attempt. The present species differs but little from the Yang-tzu form. In appearance this goral is something between a goat and an antelope. It has thick heavy legs, with large hoofs, a slight crest down the neck, and small, sharply sloping, and very pointed horns. It is of a dark-grey colour, with cream-coloured legs, and a creamy patch on the throat. 90 PLATE 40. I • 9^ r • I A\aiKliu Lady. There were some interesting birds in the vicinity. I collected some prettily coloured timelines, including a large dusky one named Dryonastes perspicillatus. A beautiful Chinese representative of the common jay {Garrulus sinensis) was also secured, besides the graceful blue magpie (Urocissa sinensis), the tiny wren (Anorfhura fumigata), the green woodpecker (Gecinus canus), and the redstart {Phoenicurus auroreus). The beautiful sweet-voiced wall-creeper (Tichodroma muralis) was also seen, but I failed to secure a specimen. The golden eagle, pheasant, and partridge were again met with. In the mountain-stream that flowed down the ravine I caught an interesting freshwater crab (Potamon sp.) and some small fish too young to identify. In the ravine were numerous varieties of ferns, mosses, and rock plants, while here and there in sheltered nooks were small clumps of dwarf- bamboo. After leaving this locality my collecting work was discontinued till the beginning of May. I hastened to Ho-nan Fu, where I received word to go to Hankow to meet Mr. Clark. On the road between Hsi-an Fu and Ho-nan Fu I saw great numbers of geese and ducks. At Ho-nan Fu I was told of great forests in the mountains a few miles southward where, the natives said, flying squirrels, monkeys, and bears were abundant. Mr. Clark and I returned from Hankow with all speed, and early in May left Hsi-an Fu for Lan-chou Fu. Along the road I shot some ground squirrels (Citellus mongolicus), (Plate 51), and a single chipmunk, which resembled that from Yii-lin Fu in the pale colour of its pelt. Travelling at the rate we were, there was no opportunity of trapping. Such specimens as were obtained were shot near the road. As the greater part of the country in Kansu was suffering from a protracted drought, there was little to be seen, hares, squirrels, chipmunks, fo.xes, and some roedeer being the only mammals noticed. Pheasants, partridges, snipe, and a few small waders were seen from time to time. We reached Lan-chou Fu, in Kansu, on May 24th. While here I tried to induce the natives to bring in specimens, but without success. Five specimens of Citellus mongolicus were the only things obtained. The country had been suffering from a severe drought for three years, and no doubt this had much to do with the scarcity of animal hfe. About the middle of June I went south to some mountains where conditions were a little better. Though I trapped and shot on several days, the only specimen secured was one of Apodemus speciosus. I might here draw attention to the great range of this species. On the present expedition 8t it was the most easterly species obtained, as well as the most westerly. It was trapped at Liu-ts'un, our most southerly point, and also in the Chiao- ch'eng Shan, almost our most northerly point. It is recorded from Ning-wu Fu, in North Shansi, and from the Imperial tombs, sixty miles east of Peking, in Chihli. Whilst in the country south of Lan-chou I saw a large wolf one morning, and in our daily excursions we came across fresh tracks of pigs and musk-deer. There were quite a number of pheasants, but little else. The reasons for the termination of the expedition at Lan-chou have already been mentioned. I was forced to return to that city, and my work ceased till, on July 15th, Grant and I started on our homeward journey with the main division of the expedition. We travelled almost continuously till we reached T'ai-yiian Fu on September 8th, with a few short halts en route to take astronomical observations, or when we were held up by rains. We took the unfrequented route which runs in an easterly direction from Lan-chou, collecting what material we could along the road. For the first few days our path lay through utterly barren and sun-scorched mountains, so that a few ground-squirrels only were seen. At Ching-ning Chou, where we stayed two days, I secured two specimens of an interesting eastern polecat (Mustela larvata), (Plate 51), which is superficially like the European animal, but with larger teeth. A new pika [Ochotona amedens), (Plate 52), was shot close to this place by one of our men. This species is similar to Ochotona bedfordi, but is smaller and with differences in the skull. Several chipmunks (Eutamias asiaticus senescens), (Plate 48), were also obtained. The type of this chipmunk was described from specimens from near Peking by Mr. G. S. Miller, and like Apodemus speciosus, it seems to enjoy a very wide range. On July 25th we left Ching-ning Chou and reached a small place to the north-east called Chang-t'ai-pu. That night rain fell in such torrents that we were unable to proceed next day. Accordingly I enlisted the villagers into my service, sending them out to catch or dig up specimens. All that day and the next I was inundated with specimens, the following species being well represented : — Myospalax cansus, Allactaga mongolica longior (new to science, Plate 52), Eutamias asiaticus senescens and Ochotona annectens (new to science, Plate 52). A single specimen of Cricetulus andersoni and another polecat were also amongst the animals brought in. I refused to take any more specimens of Citellus, having my hands full of more important material. The " allactaga " which has been described by Mr. Miller as a new form is a species of jerboa. It differs from Dipus sowerbyi in having five toes on the hind foot instead of only three, while its ears are considerably longer. 82 In colour it is greyer than the three-toed jerboa, and it is a larger animal. The " allactaga " is not so essentially a sand-inhabiting animal as the jerboa. The present species differs from Allactaga mongolica in having appreciably longer ears, longer feet, and a slightly different skull. After leaving this locality, bats were seen for the first time on the expedi- tions, and between here and Yen-an Fu in Shensi several specimens of a large brown bat (Eptesicus serotinus pollens) and a single specimen of a very small bat [Pipistrellus sp.) were shot. The large bat has been described by Mr. Miller as a new subspecies. From Ching-ning Chou eastward the country was much more favourable for collecting. There were plenty of vegetation and water so that we were able to do good work considering the rate at which we were travelling. Grant and I devoted our attention to entomology as we travelled, and made large collections of butterflies and dragon-flies. Frogs were also secured from the streams, besides some more fresh-water crabs and some snakes. Two varieties of kingfisher were shot. One was a large handsome bird named Halycon pileatus and the other a small brilliant little fellow named Alcedo ispida. This species resembles the British form but is smaller. We saw more roedeer ; and specimens, in their red summer pelts, were obtained. Two day's journey south of Yen-an Fu a mud turtle (Trionyx sinensis), (Plate 54), was shot. As we travelled along beside the river we saw great numbers of these ugly creatures basking in the sun on the mud flats. On our approach they made for the water and were lost to view before we were in shot-gun range. Looking at them through a powerful pair of field-glasses, we could see every head pointed in our direction. On August the 21st we reached the spot, south of Yen-an Fu, where I had collected the previous winter. Here some more roedeer were obtained and I was fortunate enough to put up and shoot a large wild boar (Sus moupinensis) . (Plate 53). Rising early in the morning I made my way up a long loess ridge where I had seen pig-rootings the previous evenings. I was accompanied by a native and we tramped a long way without seeing anything. Just as I was about to return to camp, there was a hoarse roar in some dense scrub on the left, and a huge pig broke cover and scampered off tossing his head in a vindictive manner. I caught a glimpse of his wicked little eye glaring at us as he tore his way through the dense scrub. I tried to draw a bead on him, but his course was too erratic and the abrupt way in which he had appeared upon the scene had somewhat disconcerted me. Presently however he stopped to 93 listen and I could see his round back showing above the tall gently waving grass. Aiming low I fired, hitting the pig, as I afterwards found, in the flank, More grunts followed and he plunged away apparently unhurt. We followed in hot pursuit and presently the native spied our quarry standing in the shade of some young poplars about 200 yards away. Taking careful aim I fired and when the smoke cleared away we saw the boar spinning round like a terrier after his tail. As I rushed up he plunged about wildly, but I managed to put a bullet into his shoulder as he vanished into a small ravine, from which now began to issue a deafening noise. The ravine opened abruptly into a hugh chasm the sides of which were perpendicular for about 200 ft. Towards this chasm the badly wounded animal struggled, and reaching the edge rolled over. He would have disappeared into a deep water tunnel yawning below, but for some stout birches which caught and held him. From my position above the madly struggling brute I fired a final shot into his chest, and soon he lay quiet. A long tramp back to camp for breakfast and to secure men to help me carry home my prize was necessary, (Plate 47). The day was far spent before we finally laid the huge animal on the grass outside the tent. He looked very peculiar in his short summer coat. He was a fine specimen measuring 6 ft. 2 in. from the tip of the snout to the end of the tail, and weighed 240 catties. One catty is supposed to be equal to a pound and a third, which would bring the weight of the pig up to 320 lbs. But I have since had reason to doubt the accuracy of the native scales used, and believe that the weight above stated is somewhat over the mark. The range of the wild pig in North China is considerable. It is very plentiful in the mountains of Shansi, where of late years it has been hunted by European residents. Nothing very striking in the way of records have been obtained, however, 350 lbs. being probably the outside weight of the largest animal shot up-to-date. The largest tusk that I have seen measured 9J inches along the curve and i inch in thickness. The average length of tusks secured in Shansi up to the present would be about 8 inches. The nocturnal and destructive habits of this pig agree with those of the European and Indian species, to which it is closely related. It does great damage to crops, and we frequently saw little booths beside the fields, wherein the farmers kept watch against this troublesome pest. Sus moupinensis was first discovered by the indefatiguable P^re David, in the principality of Moupin in Eastern Thibet, from whence it derives its name. It is of some economic value. The flesh of a good fat female will fetch a fair price, but that of the male is coarse and of a strong flavour. The thick hide is used in the 94 PLATE 41. manufacture of large drums, and also of the better class of saddles. The guns used by native hunters are so inferior that little is done in the way of hunting this formidable beast, which when only slightly wounded seriously menaces the life of its assailant. It seldom attacks unless provoked, but I have more than once heard of a pig charging some harmless woodcutter and inflicting serious wounds. I have frequently come across pigs' nests in the form of great heaps of dried branches piled over a pit in the ground. In this the sow produces her large litter of prettily striped young. With a few odd roedeer skulls and a fine specimen of David's squirrel the collection was completed. The country between Yen-an Fu and T'ai-yiian Fu in Shansi presented no facilities for collecting. In all some 250 mammals were taken representing thirty-four species and sub-species, of which five have been described as new by Mr. Miller in the appended paper. (Appendix ii.). Several species in the collection, though possessing peculiari- ties, were so poorly represented that it was not deemed advisable to describe them as new. 95 CHAPTER XI. BIRDS OF NORTH CHINA — BY A. DE C. SOWERBY. "THE provinces of Shansi, Shensi, and Kansu through which the expedition passed are comparatively rich in feathered inhabitants, though there seems to be little, if any, likelihood of new discoveries being made in this line. Birds being easily collected owing to their diurnal habits and conspicuousness, are naturally the first to be studied by naturalists in a new country. For these reasons, it was decided that I should devote my energies more especially to mammals. As, however, there are many interesting features attached to the study of birds in a new country, especially during the migratory seasons, a chapter dealing with those noticed on the expeditions may not be out of place in this volume. Space will not permit of a very detailed treatment of the subject, and I shall do little more than give the names of the birds, mention their haunts and breeding-places, and describe the general appearance of the more remarkable species. In North China, as in all other north temperate regions, birds belonging to the great order of Passeres (perching birds) predominate. Crows, larks, finches, wagtails, flycatchers, or thrushes are met at every turn. Let us take the family Corvidae (crows) as a starting point. During some years of travel in the six northern provinces of China, I have noted some twelve species belonging to this family. The raven (Coruus corax), carrion crow (Cohjus corone), white necked crow [Coruus torquatus), black crow {Coruus sinensis), Chinese jackdaw (Coloeus dauuricus), rook [Frugilegus pastinator), and chough [Graculus graculus), are common everywhere. Closely related to the black and white Chinese jackdaw (Co/oeuj dauuricus), is an entirely black variety [Coloeus neglectus) which is somewhat rare in the north. It may sometimes be seen in company with the former. In some provinces, the raven acts as scavenger in towns and villages, but usually it prefers the high mountainous districts or remote desert regions. Amongst the Chinese who live on the borders of the Ordos Desert and out in north-western Kansu, this evil-looking bird goes by the name of "The Mongol's Coffin." That it deserves this name may be gathered from the fact that the PLATE 42. Mongols do not bury their dead, but drag them out into the desert, where they leave them to be devoured by the fowls of the air or the beasts of the field. The pretty little Chinese jackdaw, whose clean white collar and breast and shiny black head, back, wings and tail give it a neat, clerical appearance, often associates in large flocks with the handsome red-billed chough. They frequent the same localities and both build their nests in crevices and holes in high loess or rocky cliffs. The white-necked crow is never seen in mountainous regions, and even on the fertile plains is not over abundant. It is a very solitary bird, and is seldom seen except singly. Its near cousins, the carrion crow and the black crow, are on the other hand more common and gregarious, being found in flocks wherever there is a chance of obtaining sustenance. The common magpie [Pica caudata) and the azure-winged magpie (Cyanopolius cyanus), a beautiful little pie with delicate mauve-grey body, white throat, black head and azure blue wings and tail, seldom fail to appear in every locality. The graceful blue magpie {Urccissa sinensis), not unlike the last mentioned species but larger, with crimson beak and legs, more blue and purple on the body, and proportionately longer tail, is less widely distributed. It is found only in central and southern Shensi, southern Shansi and parts of Kansu. In the mountains of Shansi and in southern Shensi, a handsome jay (Gamilus sinensis) is found, while in the pine forests of Shansi and Kansu the noisy nutcracker {Nucifraga caryocatactes) sends forth its rollicking, laughter-like call. All these species nest in the country, but some only are partially migratory. This is noticeable chiefly in the case of the rooks, which at the approach of winter, leave the northern parts of the provinces, where they build their nests in the trees of the towns, and villages, accepting the protection of man. They fly to the warmer plains of the south or to the flat coastal regions of Chihli. Finches in vast numbers cross these provinces during the migratory seasons, nesting in the remote mountainous regions of the north and west. Few if any remain to breed on the plains. Amongst the most noticeable of these are the crossbill [Loxia curuirostra) , hawfinch {Coccothraustes japonicus), Chinese goldfinch [Ligurinus hawarahiba) , brambling {Fringilla montifringilla) , rosefinch {Carpodacus roseus), and a beautiful scarlet-tinted finch named Propasser pulcherrimus. Three species of bunting, Emberiza ciopsis, E. rusiica and E. elegans might also be added to this group, but they are non-migratory, nesting in the C 97 mountains and winterinp in the foothills and on the plains. The Chinese capture these finches \vith the aid of bird-lime made from hempseed oil. In the spring and autumn the bird-catcher repairs to some wooded, hilly district, and having: made his preparations, he takes up his position on the top of some ridpe. He is armed with several Ions' rods, on the ends of which are fastened branchinof twigrs, carefully smeared with bird-lime. Several call-birds in capes are hungr in the leafy parts of some suitable young pine, and the rods are placed in such a position that the twigs stick out just above the highest branch of each respective tree. The protruding twig offers a tempting perch for any passing finch and many a wretched bird thus falls into the ruthless hands of the snarer, who has been quietly waiting a few yards distant. The birds are sold according to their value as songsters or trick birds. Crossbills, hawfinches, and bram- blings are readily trained to do various tricks, whilst the Chinese goldfinch and the rosefinch are valued for their vocal powers. A large and handsome grosbeak, named Eophom melamra, is also caught during the migrations and is especially valued by the Chinese as a trick bird. This bird is of a dull grey colour with shinv black head, wings and tail. It possesses a large very thick and strong beak of a bright yellow colour. We saw many larks, the exact names of which I was not able to ascertain. Soft-billed birds are very numerous. These are found throughout the summer, but most of them migrate to the south in winter. The first to appear in the spring are the starling (Stemus sinensis), and the redstarts (Phcenicurus auroreus and Ruficilla rufiventns). These are shortly followed by great numbers of other species, which scatter over the country, taking up their abodes where conditions are most congenial to their modes of life. Thus we find a variety of wheatear (Saxicola morio) repairing to the desert areas, such as exist in and on the borders of Mongolia. Here it shares the burrows of the ground-squirrel (Citellus), and brings up a lively brood of from four to six hungry squawking fledglings. The pied wagtail (Mofacilla alboides) finds a suitable nesting-place in the bushes that line the ravines and gorges of the mountains, whilst a beautiful yellow-headed variety {M. citreolides) , after swarming along the rivers and over the marshes during the spring, travels north to the rich Siberian plains. A third very common wagtail (M. alba) seems to find suitable nesting places everywhere, and many may be seen from March till October. The redstarts resort to old temples and disused buildings, making their nests in suitable holes in the masonry. The black redstart {Ruticilla rufiventris) is much rarer than the other species and nests in out-of-the-way ravines, either of loess or rock, 98 Many kinds of warblers pass through the country, the most noticeable of which are the ruby-throated warbler {Erythacus calliope) and the blue-throated warbler {Erythacus caeruleculus). The little green wren or Silver-eye (Zosterops erythropleura) is very common during the summer, while in the spring the pipit [Anthus spinoletta) abounds on the plains and in the valleys, especially where marshy ground exists. The nuthatch {Sitfa amurensis) keeps mainly to the pine forests of the mountains, where it scrambles like a woodpecker up and down the great tree- trunks, or hangs upside down from the cones. Tits are very common in the same districts, the chief of these being the tomtit {Parus minor), the coletit (P. hensom), the bluetit {P. venustulus), the crested tit {Lophophanes dichrous), and the long-tailed titmouse [Acredula glaucogularis) . The foregoing species, together with the larks, timeline birds and hedgesparrows, are non-migratory. The timelines are thrush-like birds, all more or less gifted with song, and many a sweet note rising above the countless pleasant sounds of the wilderness mav be attributed to these birds. The commonest member of this family is a graceful though sombre-coloured bird called Pterorhinus davidi, sometimes known as the " seven sisters bird." This peculiar name is derived from the fact that birds of this species are frequently found in little groups of five, six or seven playing about in the underbrush. A much smaller species, with proportionately longer tail, goes by the name of Rhopophilus pekinensis, and, like the foregoing species, is very common in the mountains of the north, where it builds a compact, deep nest in the low bushes of the valleys. Pomatorhinus graiAvox, a very handsome species, is found in wooded districts, further south. It has a particularly sweet song. In the mountains south of Hsi-an Fu in Shensi, I came across two other species, one of which, called Dryonastes perspicillatus, is a large dusky coloured bird. The other, Trochalopteron prjeoalsh'i, resembles Pterorhinus davidi in size and form but is characterised by having the wing and tail feathers of a peculiar metallic lustre which show either a brassy yellow or steely blue colour according to the way the light falls on them. Two species of thrush, namely Turdus ruficollis and T. naumanni are winter visitors only. Both are characterised by having reddy brown tails and breasts, but the breast of the latter is spotted with black. Their heads, backs and wings are of a grey-brown, whilst their bellies and rumps are white. These birds are seen throughout the winter in large flocks. During the spring, however, ere they betake themselves northward, they split up into smaller groups of three and four. 99 A third species, the beautiful rock thrush {Monffcola erythrogastra) inhabits the deep loess gullies during the summer. The head, back and wings of this bird are of a light slaty blue colour, while the tail and breast are of a deep brick-red. The dipper, an entirely brown species named Cinclus pallasi, is very common along the clear streams that flow at the bottom of every ravine in the loess countrj- of Northern Shensi, which localities it shares with the pretty little brown wren (Amrthura fumigata) and a large wagtail named Henicurus sinensis. This handsome bird is pied somewhat after the fashion of the pied wagtail but is larger and has a long widely-forked black tail, and also long flesh-coloured legs. The high cliffs of loess, shale, or granite in all three provinces form the home of the beautiful wall-creeper [Tichodroma muralis), a small grey bird with crimson spotted wings, long slender cur\'ed beak, and long sharp claws, which enable it to climb about the flat surfaces of the rocks with the utmost ease. The wall-creeper has a long, sweet, vibrant song, which it utters as it flits butterfly-like across the valleys. The accentor [Accentor nipalensis), a pretty little soft-billed bird, somewhat smaller than the starling, inhabits the stony cairns and rocky summits of the highest mountains ; while its near relation, a smaller, though as prettily marked, hedge sparrow {Tharrhaleus montanellus) frequents the valleys. The graceful waxwing (Ampelis garrulus) may be seen during the migrations in large flocks, when it subsists chiefly upon the glutinous mistletoe berries, yellow and red, that abound in the poplar and elm trees. Three species of shrikes, or butcher-birds, namely, Lxinius sphenocercus, L. bucephalus, and L. superciliosus, are found throughout the three provinces. Of these, only the first, commonly known as the great grey shrike, is at all plentiful. This somewhat striking bird may be seen in winter on any large plain, where it loves to perch upon the top of some spare and solitary shrub, sorghum stem, or giant reed. From this coign of vantage it pounces upon any unsuspecting insect that may have been tempted above ground by the warmth of the brilliant winter sun. The beautiful golden oriole [Oriolus indicus) inhabits during the summer the groves of the plains and foothills, not fearing to take up its abode in temple-grounds close to the habitations of man. Its hanging nest, built high up in the tree and at the end of some yielding branch, is free from the attacks of small boys and cats. On the plains also, the jet black drongo [Dicrurus cathoBcus) is very 100 PLATE 43. 3 Q. u c u common. It may frequently be seen dashing out from the willows lining the roads or river banks, to seize some passing insect, when its long black deeply forked tail give it a most graceful appearance. Amongst the first arrivals in spring are the swallows and martins. The former belong to the species Hirundo striolata, and are characterised by having spotted breasts. They are welcomed wherever they choose to build their nest, both by the Chinese and the Mongols, who consider them to be birds of good omen. The martin (Cotyle sinensis) resorts to the high rocky cliffs of the foothills, where it builds its nest well out of reach of the passer by. Leaving the perching birds, we will next turn our attention to the birds of prey, such as eagles, hawks, and owls. These groups are fairly well represented m the ornithology of Shansi, Shensi, and Kansu. One's mind naturally turns first to the golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetus) whose regal poise and fierce far-seeing eye have won for their owner the name of King of Birds. Alas for romance, this powerful bird, though a first class hunter, often descends to the useful, but disgusting, level of scavenger, and many are the times it robs the ignoble kite or the croaking raven of their lawful food, and gorges to repletion on the remains of some leprous beggar considered unworthy of decent burial. In fact, its taste for food, other than that of its own killing, is so marked, that I have known native hunters turn it to their advantage in an ingenious way. A beast or bird having been shot and lost in dense scrub, the hunter at once makes his way to a neighbouring eminence. Immediately, as if from nowhere, a golden eagle appears and commences to circle round and round above a spot in the scrub. Noting the spot, the hunter makes for it, and — the eagle has made no mistake about that anyway — the game is there. The speed of the golden eagle is prodigious, and it is with a keen thrill of pleasure that I recall to mind an exhibition of feathered speed witnessed by me on the present expedition. I was out on a hillside collecting my rodent traps, when a golden eagle sailing overhead disturbed several pheasants that had been feeding a few yards up the slope. All the birds sought cover in a small copse of stunted cypress, except one, which broke away towards a wood some two hundred yards distant on the level ground below. Like lightning the eagle swooped down upon his prey. The pheasant had, however, gained a high speed on her downward course, and now frantically struggled to reach the friendly wood. The pace was terrific, but the great marauder was slowly gaining upon his 101 intended victim. The flight of the fastest duck would have been slow compared with such speed, for the birds were not only gaining impetus from their rapidly descending course, but adding to their motive power by a vigorous use of their powerful wings. The chase must have ended disastrously for the pheasant, but for the wood which suddenly loomed up in front of the terrified bird. Without wavering she dashed into the wood, crashed through some hindering branches and fetched up with a sickening thud against a stout trunk, coming to the ground like a stone mid showers of twigs, leaves and feathers. The eagle, with a supreme effort shot upwards, narrowly missing the tops of the trees, and rose high into the air before the momentum generated by the headlong downward swoop gave out. Hurrying to the spot where the pheasant had fallen I was surprised not to find her, but there were several souvenirs of her devastating journey through the upper branches of the stately pines. A bald-headed eagle [Haliaetus leucocephalus) and a white-tailed eagle (//. pelagicus) also inhabit North China, though the former is rather rare, two only being seen on the present expedition. The latter is found along the rivers of the large plains, generally as the ice is breaking up in the spring. Two vultures are found in the highest mountain ranges. One of these, the lammergeier [Gypaetus barbatus) is comparatively common, while the other, the cinereous vulture {VuHur monachus), a large black species, is very rare. One specimen measured by me was gj feet across the wings. The kite {Miluus melanotis) is very common, not only in the country, but also in the large cities, where, together with pigs and dogs, it renders valuable services to yellow humanity, as a scavenger of undoubted efficiency. These birds may frequently be seen in large flocks circling continuously at great altitudes and at the same time moving steadily in one direction till they disappear from view. This is suggestive of a migration, but is in no way connected with the regular spring and autumn migrations of other birds. The North China kite also seems to migrate in sandstorms. This act may, however, be involuntary, the birds overtaken when at a considerable height above the earth, being driven helplessly by the fury of the gale till they succeed in reaching the ground. Whatever the explanation, the fact remains that the traveller overtaken by one of these sandstorms — which come down from Mongolia with the appearance of mighty walls thousands of feet high, and blotting out the landscape as they approach — will shortly see the dark forms of innumerable kites in every direction. The sacred falcon [Falco sacer), the peregrine {Falco peregrinus), and the 102 sparrow hawk (Accipifer m'sus), all comparatively common, are trapped by the natives of the country and trained to the ancient and noble sport of falconry. The kestrel {Cerchneis timunculus), and the red-footed falcon {Erythropus vespertinus) are abundant on every plain, whilst the fierce but somewhat clumsy buzzard (Buteo hemilasius) takes heavy toll of the hares, partridges, and ground squirrels of the broad valleys. Over the marshes the elegantly shaped hen harrier {Circus cyaneus) glides in its search for small aquatic fauna of all kinds, whilst occasionally the osprey [Pandion haliaetus), king of fishing hawks, visits the larger ponds and lakes. Here he may be seen circling high in the air, till some large fish coming to the surface, catches the marauder's eye. Down he comes like a bolt from the blue, cleaves the surface of the placid waters, scattering wide the shimmering spray, and, burying his talons deep into the quivering flesh of his prey, carries it off to the nearest pinnacle of rock or lofty tree. Owls are represented by the five following species. The great eagle-owl {Bubo maximus), the long-eared owl {Otus vulgaris), the short-eared owl {Otus brachyotus), the little owl {Athene plumipes), and the scops owl {Scops stictomt us). The last mentioned is somewhat rare and is found usually round old temples. The little owl may frequently be seen in the loess gullies and ravines of the foothills, or out on the plains, where some lofty hollow tree affords adequate shelter. The long-eared and short-eared owls are inhabitants of the plains, while the great eagle-owl frequents the highest and wildest mountains. Following the owls, I might mention the night-jar {Caprimulgus jotaka), a bird that is not often seen, but which inhabits the bush-covered slopes of the lower mountain ranges. At dusk on warm summer evenings it flits on noiseless wings over the hazel scrub and waving oatfields, chasing the large pink-winged grasshopper, which always seems more active and noisy at this time of the day. The nearest relative to the night-jar in North China is the white tumped swift (Cypselus pacificus) which appears rather late in the spring, rears it young in the hollow eaves of temples and gate-towers, and is away again long before the cold sets in. We may now take a rapid survey of the game birds of the country, and ornithologists must forgive me if I place pheasants, bustards, ducks, pigeons and snipe in one large category. Belonging to the phasianidae are some half dozen species, any of which may give the traveller welcome relief from the monotony of the long 103 journey, and a diet of tinned food, by appearing within easy and tempting range of the road. From the sides of the loess ravines or the bare shale foothills, the rowdy cackling chukar, or red legged partridge [Caccabis chukar) sends forth its taunting call to the passer by, who, if he be a sportsman, fails not to take up the challenge. Rapidly climbing the steep cliff, he is hkely to find himself in the centre of a large covey of birds, which break cover with terriffic whirr and whistling of wings, and rocket away in every direction. The novice frantically swings the muzzle of his gun first in one direction and then in another, and usually ends by making a double miss. In the broad valleys out on the plains or again upon the great grassy slopes of the high mountains, the little bearded partridge [Perdix daurica), a bird not unlike the common partridge in size and appearance, but characterised by having a peculiar beard of ochreous feathers, may often be found in large flocks. The migratory quail {Cotumx cotumix) seeks refuge in the stubble of the plains and valleys, whence it is easily ' walked up,' affording a good mark for the quick gun. The common pheasant {Phasianus torquatus) abounds wherever there is any cover at all, whilst in the great pine forests of the highest and most inaccessible mountain ranges the handsome eared pheasant {Crossoptilon) wanders in large flocks of from twenty to forty birds. There are two varieties of the latter, one being found in Shansi and the other away out in western Kansu. The Shansi variety {C. manchuricum) , is a large gamy bird, with black breast, head and wings, greyish white back and tail, the long curved feathers of which end in black. There is a white patch on the throat which is con- tinued on either side of the head in the form of ear-like tufts. These give the bird a sinister and bellicose appearance. The Kansu variety {C. auritum), commonly known as Pallas' eared pheasant, differs from its Shansi cousin in being almost uniformly of a slate blue colour, there being but little white in the tail, though the white throat and ear tufts are present. In both species the face is naked and scarlet as in the common pheasant, while the legs are of a dull crimson. The eared pheasant runs with considerable speed, taking to its wings with great reluctance. Dogs only succeed in treeing this handsome game, whilst it is almost impossible to shoot them in the dense dark woods that they frequent. If, however, a flock can be induced to break cover, the sportsman may enjoy the time of his life, as the large birds after fluttering clear of the trees, spread their wings and sail up and down the valley, crossing and re-crossing each other in their mad endeavour to find safety. They seem to lose their 104 PLATE 44. Guard House on Msi-an to Lan-chou Road, Kansu. Peculiar Head dress. Only worn in the vicinity of Chen yiian Hsien, Kansu. See ftp, 70 ant/ 7J. heads completely at the first shot and will often fly straight towards the guns, discovering their mistake in time, only to swerve to right or left, offering the while an excellent mark. On alighting, the frightened birds scurry up through the woods with wonderful agility and gaining the summits of the ridges once more break cover and sail away across to the opposite ridge. In this way they very soon outdistance the sportsman, who will shortly lose all traces of them. There seems to be but one representative of the grouse family in these provinces. Pallas' three-toed sand grouse {Syrrhaptes paradoxus) is found on the great plains during the winter months. This bird is really an inhabitant of the great Mongolian Desert and Southern Siberia, but in severe winters it frequently seeks the slightly less bitter weather of the Chihii and Shansi plains. Its flight is very swift and is accompanied with a shrill whistling, caused by the rapid beating of the long pointed wings. The feet of this pretty little bird look ver}' much like those of a rabbit, the toes being short, padded and covered with hairlike feathers, which are continued up the leg. Two varieties of pigeons may be classed with the game birds, but one of these, the stock dove (Columba intermedia) is practically a domesticated breed frequenting the habitations of man. The other, a variety of rock dove (C rupestris) differing from the European form in having a broad white band across the tail, inhabits the loess gullies and rocky ravines of the foothills. These two species may often be seen in vast flocks feeding together by hundreds on the cultivated fields, along the roads, or in the boulder-strewn mountain valleys. Two other members of the dove family also frequent the woods and groves, one [Turtur decaocta) inhabiting the plains, and the other, a turtle dove {Turtur chinensis) , preferring mountainous regions. In certain localities the lordly bustard (Otis dyboivskii) is very common. Wherever large level tracts exist, be they uplands or lowlands, plateau or plain, there this, the prince of game birds, is to be found. The sandy stretches of the Ordos, the watery plain of Hsi-an Fu, the loess plateaux of central Shensi, and the Shansi tableland — all are equally favoured by this handsome bird. It does not, however, breed in these localities, but at the approach of summer flies northward to the solitudes of the Gobi Desert or Southern Siberia, where the female raises a large brood. We now come to the geese and ducks, a group so large that justice cannot be done to them in the limited space at my disposal. During the spring and autumn the bean goose [Anser segetum) appears in vast flocks. Spreading over the plains in their hundreds and thousands they resemble an 105 invading army. In squadrons and battalions they march over the fields of winter wheat, uprooting and devouring the tender seedlings, till the ground is left bare and brown behind them. Whether taken with rifle or shot gun, stalked, or shot as they pass in long chains overhead, they afford excellent sport. Closely allied to the bean goose is the grey lag goose {Anser ferus). The latter is a much rarer bird in North China, and is only met with in the more out of the way places, such as the lonely marshes of the Ordos Desert. The ruddy sheldrake {Casarca ferruginea) is extremely common in some places. We found this duck most numerous on the Hsi-an Fu plain in South Shensi and in Honan. Here they were seen in pairs in every field, but at Yii-lin Fu they occurred in large flocks. We seldom paid any attention to these birds as they were easy to shoot and their flesh was coarse and oily. The common sheldrake {Tadorm cormfa) is only occasionally met with. The wild swan {Cygnus Jerus) is also an occasional visitor. Coming to the ducks we find that the commonst species are the mallard {Anas boscas), the teal {Nettion crecca), the pochard (Nyroca ferina), the shoveller (Spatula clypeata), the golden eye {Clangula glauciori) and the pin-tail {Dafila acuta). There are other less common species such as the exquisite mandarin duck {Aex galericulata) and Swinhoe's duck {Anas zonorhyncha). Of all the foregoing the only species that remain north of Hsi-an Fu throughout the winter are the mallard and teal. The mallard and Swinhoe's duck not infrequently breed in the marshes of Shansi. The Baikal teal (Nettion formosum) may sometimes be seen during the migratory season together with the smew (Mergus albellus), the red-breasted merganser (Merganser serrator) , and the goosander (Merganser castor). The red- breasted merganser often remains for the winter, when it may be found in the valleys of the high mountain ranges where open streams not infrequently exist even in the dead of winter. It is but a step from ducks to waders and aquatic birds in general, in which branch of bird life the provinces of North China are particularly rich. A small species of gull (Larus crassirostris) follows up the course of the Yellow River and many of its larger tributaries. It may be seen flitting over ponds and marshes wherever these exist. On the present expedition these birds were noted in Shansi, on the T'ai-yiian plain, again on the Hsi-an Fu plain in Shensi, and also near Lanchou, in Kansu. The tern is a summer visitor only. The bittern {Botaurus stellaris), the heron (Ardea cinerea), the black stork 106 PLATE 45. c u a > a u u « U Q (Ciconia nigra), the night-heron {Nyctkoiax nyctkorax), tht spoonbill {Platalae leucorodia), and the curlew {Nimenius arquatus), together with lesser waders, such as red shanks, sandpipers, turnstones, sanderlings, stints, and sand plovers*, congregate in little flocks, or disperse in pairs over the sandy flats of the large rivers, along the shores of ponds and lakes, or even upon the cultivated fields of the plains. The black stork (Ciconia nigra) is found along the rivers. It builds its nest on crags of high precipitous cliffs. On the waters of the lakes and marshes the cormorant [Phalacrocorax carbo), the coot [Fulica atra), the moorhen [GaUinula chloropus) , the great crested grebe (Podiceps cornutus), the little grebe (Colymbus ru/icollis), disport throughout the summer, building their nests in the rushes, where skulks the water-rail [Ralius indicus) . Snipe are very common and many a good bag can be made in the rice- fields and reed-beds. There are two species of snipe in North China, the little jacksnipe (Limnocryptes gallinu/a) , a.nd the pin-tailed snipe (Gallinago stenura). The latter is frequently found along the banks of streams in mountainous districts. One must not forget to mention the common crane {Grus grus) which passes north or south during the spring and autumn respectively in immense flocks containing from twenty to two hundred birds. They are usually very shy, and the hunter finds great difficulty in approaching them, but as they get further north they seem to lose their fear of man and can easily be brought down with a shot gun. The demoiselle crane {Anthropoides virgo) may also be seen occasionally. In the boulder strewn valleys of the high mountains may be heard the plaintive cry of the remarkable ibis-billed curlew {Ibidorhynchus struthersi), as it flits along the stream beds, while the pretty little ringed plover {y^gialitis alexandrinus) deposits its clutch of eggs amongst the pebbles that they so exactly resemble. The crested plover (Vanellus uanellus) and the grey-headed plover (Micro- sarcops cinereus) may be seen during the spring and autumn. The Chinese ibis {Nipponia nippon) builds its nest in the large trees that grow on the margins of the rice-fields, seeking sustenance for itself and young in the muddy waters of the latter. Its chief food is a large water-snail, together with mussels, frogs and aquatic insects. Before drawing to a close, it will be well to mention various other families represented throughout the mountains, plains, hills and valleys of the provinces by not more than one or two species. Here, where the mountain stream plunges into deep defile, or stays to * Tbc species to which these be'-ong I ban u yet been aaable to determine, 107 wander in rich meadow, we may mark the little emerald-hued kingfisher {Alcedo ispida) ; or there, watching for his prey from some branch over the glassy pool, the larger long-tailed variety {Halcyon pileatus), easily distinguishable by his black head and purple back. The handsome hoopoe (Upupa epops), with its golden crown, pied wings and long curved bill, abounds in Shansi. It is found in the other provinces, but is less common. Its peculiarly characteristic call, " ho poo poo," uttered at short intervals with three nods of the head, announces to the worthy celestial the approach of spring, but it is not till the voice of the cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) resounds o'er hill and dale that he commences to sow his seeds. The Chinese call the cuckoo " chung-ku " (pronounced ' joong goo '), which means "plant (your) millet." These syllables, they aver, form the notes of the bird's call, which is intended for a direct message to the husband- man. Almost simultaneously with the cuckoo comes the wryneck (lynx torquilla), but it is a comparatively rare bird, keeping away from the beaten tracks of man. Three or four species of woodpecker arc found in the country, and of these the great spotted woodpecker {Dendrocopus major) is decidedly the most common. The green woodpecker (Gecinus canus) comes next, while the little spotted woodpecker (lyngipicus doerriessi) may also be seen from time to time. A bird which would appear to be the great black woodpecker [Picus martius) was described to me by some of the mountain people of Shansi, but it must be very rare indeed. 108 PLATE 46. Isolated column of Sandstone. Hai-shui-ssu, Kansu and Shensi border. Sire /». /.v. CHAPTER XII. REPTILES, BATRACHIANS AND FISHES — BY A. DE C. SOWERBY. TN these branches of the Biological work of the Expedition comparatively little was done chiefly because there was so little to collect. North China is very poor in cold-blooded vertebrates and the whole collection included not more than sixteen species, which were presented by Mr. Clark to the U.S. National Museum. The explanation for this can be expressed in three words : unfavourable climatic conditions. In the first place the excessive cold of the North China winter tells very severely against snakes and lizards. For three months the thermometer nightly registers from twenty to forty degrees of frost. The ground is frozen hard as a rock to a depth of several feet. Rivers and lakes are covered with layers of ice from two to four feet thick, whilst marshes and mountain streams become solid. Following the severe winter frosts, comes a long period of drought lasting through the spring into early summer. Sometimes this drought is prolonged through the whole of the latter season. This terrible dryness is very hard on batrachians, especially as it usually occurs during the spawning season, when they need water most. Apart from one or two small varieties, fish do not exist, except in permanent streams, rivers or lakes. There is little wonder then, that North China boasts so few species belonging to these classes of vertebrates. As was shrewdly remarked about them, they have to hibernate in winter and aestivate in summer. Reptiles. On the present expedition three species of snakes only were secured. The commonest of these was the olive water-snake ( Tropidomtus tigrinus), a beautiful reptile of a bright sap-green colour. On the throat are patches of orange red which extend down either side of the body, growing smaller till 109 they vanish somewhere near the tail. Alternating with these are patches of black, which commence just behind the jaw, two being larger than the rest. The sides of the head are striped with black, while the lower jaw and throat are white. In the shape of the head and general appearance, this snake resembles the common British grass snake. Specimens of this species were taken in all three provinces. One was caught in the temple 3'ard at Yu-lin Fu, but usually they were found along the banks of streams and rivers. The second species fCoIuber—or Elaphis—dioneJ was secured only at Yii-lin Fu. This is a prettily-marked variety, which varies in colour from a rich orange-brown to a dull grey-brown according to the time since the skin was shed. The markings commencing in the shape of a U, behind the head, extend in transverse bars down the back. The edge of each bar is darker than the rest. On either side of the body occur rows of dots, also with darkened edges. These alternate with the ends of the transverse bars. Besides these markings, two broad lines of a slightly darker shade than the ground colour extend from the head along either side of the back to the tail. This species is very common in the Ordos Desert and in the loess country of the adjacent provinces. It may frequently be found in the houses of towns and villages, to which it is probably attracted by the abundance of rats, mice and sparrows (see coloured plate) . The third species (Zamem's spinalis) was secured only in Kansu. Here a single specimen was caught on the bank of a large stream. This species somewhat resembles Coluber dione in colour, but is more whip-like in shape and is differently marked. It has three white stripes down the back, and there are white markings on the head. Though the specimen in question was caught on the side of a stream in a valley, the snake cannot be said to frequent such places. I have seen it in mountainous country in Shansi, on the top of rocky ridges far removed from any water. It is, however, rather a rare species. All these three species are non-poisonous. There seems to be only one poisonous snake in North China, namely, a species of viper {Ancisircdon intermedius) . This is the common Central Asiatic form. Fortunately for the inhabitants it is very rare in these provinces. No specimens were met with on the present expedition. Three species of lizards were added to the collection. The dullard lizard [Eremias argus) was noticed in all three provinces, though very few specimens were taken. A very common species, it is particularly abundant in the Ordos. It is frequently seen along the sides of the road in the loess country. The species is very widely distributed. no Brown Snake [Coluber dione). Toad-headed Lizard (Phrynocephalus frontalis). In the country round Yil-lin Fu a good series of the little sand- inhabiting lizard (Phrynocephalus frontalis) was secured. I have not met this little lizard anj'where but in, and on the borders of, the Ordos Desert. Here it may be seen in great numbers during the warmer months of the year. These little creatures are very pugnacious, and indulge in desperate battles with one another. They have a peculiar habit of rapidly curling and uncurling their tails over their backs. This action looks very venomoup, and is strongly suggestive of the vicious swishing of the scorpion's deadly caudal weapon. This lizard is of a general sandy colour above, with creamy under- parts. Blotches of a darker shade occur over the body, and extending along the tail grow darker, finally ending in a series of black rings. The last half inch of the tail is black. The under surface of the tail is pale vermilion, while a crimson-mauve patch occurs behind each fore-limb. The head is shaped like that of a toad, the eyes being black with white eyelids. It makes holes in the sand in which it shelters at night, or when threatened with dangjer. The remaining species of lizard is the little gecko {Gecko japonicus), which frequents buildings, temples, and caves. It may also be found in crevices in loess or rocky cliffs. It is perfectly smooth-skinned, and is free from frills of any sort. In colour it is a dull mottled grey, admirably adapted to protect it from discovery, as it clings to the surface of brick wall or rocky cliff. Some eggs of this species were found in a temple. Several of these were hatched out in the course of a few weeks. The Chinese greatly fear this little creature, crediting it with being venomous. In reality it is a great boon, as it keeps the houses clear of all kinds of vermin. It is nocturnal in its habits. The Chinese name is " Hsieh-hu," meaning " scorpion tiger." This name is given because the gecko is supposed to eat scorpions. The only other reptile secured on the expedition was a species of mud-tortoise (Trionyx sinensis). This species abounds in some of the tributaries of the Yellow River in Shensi. Here it may be seen floating in the quiet waters below rapids, or basking in the sun on the muddy banks. It also exists in the Yellow River itself. Some were secured in the fish market in Ho-nan Fu, in Honan. Others were taken in the rivers near Yen-an Fu, in Shensi. The Chinese esteem these ugly creatures a great delicacy ; and certainly, when properly cooked, they are quite palatable. At the same time, it is considered a foul beast, and is emblematic of all that is vile. These mud tortoises are extremely vicious, snapping angrily at the hand when disturbed. They are capable of making a noise, and I have heard them scream when being killed for the table. in Batrachians. In this branch of cold-blooded vertebrates, the provinces passed through are very poor. Only two species of frogs and two of toads were secured. The large edible frog (Rana esculenta) was common in places where there was a good supply of water. In the small streams joining the Yii-lin Ho, at Yii-lin Fu, these frogs were very common. They were also met with in great numbers in the few fertile valleys of Eastern Kansu and West Central Shensi. This handsome frog is not unlike the common British form {^Ram temporarid), but is somewhat larger and of a beautiful green colour, either dark or light. It possesses a bladder on the side of the head, which distends and contracts as the frog emits its loud, hoarse croaks. It is very agile and difficult to catch. The flesh of the legs is edible and is a great delicacy. The small brown frog (Rana japonica) was frequently met with in the ravines of the loess country of North Shensi. It is capable of with- standing long periods of drought, burying itself deep down in the beds of the streams and pools. In colour this frog varies considerably in different places. Some were of a deep brown colour above, yellowish-pink beneath, shading into red on the under surfaces of the legs. Others were of a light fawn colour, and cream or yellow beneath. The former was secured at Yu-lin Fu, while the latter were found in the streams of the loess country in all three provinces. All specimens agreed, however, in having a black or dark brown band crossing the eye on either side of the head. Of the two toads met with Radde's toad (Bufo raddei) is characteristic of the country. This amphibian does not attain any great size. The female is verj' prettily marked, somewhat resembling the natterjack toad of Europe ; the male is of a dull greenish-brown colour, and does not possess the beautiful marking of the female. There can be no doubt of this animal's powers to withstand drought. I have found it amongst the sand-dunes of the Ordos, as well as in the loess hills of other parts. Specimens were secured in Kansu, within the famine area near Lan-chou Fu. Here, the natives said, there had been no rain for three years. In spite of its frequenting such dry places, it thoroughly appreciates an abundant supply of water, as I have found them in the ponds and back- waters of rivers, not only while spawning but at all times of the year, excepting winter. The spawning season is regulated by the rains, and in a dry year I have known it to be postponed till July. The other toad obtained is identical with the common European species (Bufo vulgaris). It is much less common than B. raddei. Only very young specimens were secured on the present e.xpedition. 112 PLATE -t7. - . * \ w.i -■■..A ! mM ^'. 1 •'■♦• *.-ff I'M, •■•:#••-■ \ « 3 c C3 O s: UkiUiSHE ""'^^' ^-""' J Nothing in the way of salamanders or newts were seen, and I do not believe that they exist in these provinces north of the 35th parallel of latitude. Fishes. On the expedition very few fish were secured. Constant watch was kept for anything in this line in the mountain streams but with poor success. No doubt the Yellow River would have yielded a fair number of species if we had had the means and opportunity of exploring its muddy depths. However, its commonest denizens are undoubtedly the cat-fish (Silurus asotus) and the carp (Cyprims carpio). Both these species attain a large size, and are eagerly fished for by the natives who transport them to various large centres. The cat-fish is usually transported alive. The carp on the other hand are not transported till winter, when they are frozen and covered with a layer of ice to preserve them. Cyprinus carassius is the species from which the Chinese and Japanese have bred the gold fish. Specimens (young) were obtained from the streams at Yfl-Hn Fu. This is a comparatively common fish, being found in most lakes, ponds and rivers. It often finds its way to the tables of Chinese gentlemen, but has a muddy taste and is excessively bony. The serving of such a fish at a feast, where such expensive luxuries as bird's nest soup and white fungus are on the menu, speaks volumes for the scarcity of fish in North China. In the fish-markets of Hsi-an Fu and Ho-nan Fu I noticed one or two other species of fish, but as I could get no satisfactory statement as to where they came from, I did not consider it worth while to secure specimens. Monoptenis javanensis, a species of eel, was secured at Hsi-an Fu where it was commonly found in the black oozy mud of the rice-fields and irrigation ditches. It is remarkable for the total absence of fins. Its gills are verj' small and inconspicuous. It might thus be easily mistaken for a snake. It is of a dark olive-brown colour, with mottling of a darker shade closely dotted all over it. The head is very snake-like. Large specimens were for sale in the market at Hsi-an Fu. Misgvrnus anguillicaudatus is an eel-like loach, specimens of which were secured at YU-lin Fu. I noticed larger specimens for sale in the fish-market in Ho-nan Fu and round Hsi-an Fu. As far as I could gather, it is an inhabitant of large rivers and their affluents, and occurs in flat country, but is never seen in mountain streams. Cobitis tinia is the only species of fish which is really abundant in the K 113 the northern parts of the three provinces of Shansi, Shensi, and Kansu. It is found in most streams, whether in the high rocky mountains or in the loess hills. This loach was secured in large numbers at Yii-lin Fu. Specimens were also captured in Kansu, and at other places, but these unfortunately were spoiled. It is highly probable that this species can survive the drying up of the streams in which it lives, as I have found it in places where such conditions must frequently prevail. Specimens of a minnow {Phroxims Sp.) were caught at Yii-lin Fu and again in the mountain streams south of Hsi-an Fu ; but I have been unable to identify the species. IM PLATE 48. Chipmunk. iEutamias asiaticus senesceus). .SV<- //v. t^2 and lyd. Mole rat. iMyoapalax cansus). See />fi. S4 anti 182. CHAPTER XIII. GEOLOGICAL NOTES — BY A. DE C. SOWERBY. TT is with some hesitation that I set forth the following notes and remarks •^ on the Geology of the country traversed by the Expedition. With but a mere smattering of knowledge, picked up from text-books whilst on the march, I realise my unfitness for the task of giving anything like a Geological description of the Provinces passed through. Nevertheless it would seem to be a pity were I to shelve even such meagre notes as I have been able to gather about a country so little known. Eminent authorities on Geology have travelled in North China, but the route taken by the present Expedition seems to have been almost altogether through districts entirely new, so far as this science is concerned. That part of Shansi west of T'ai-yiian Fu, and the whole of Shensi north of the Wei Ho were out of Richthofen's path. This interesting countrj' was missed too by the members of the Carnegie Expedition 1903-4. It seems, however, to present features not found elsewhere in China, a proper study of which would throw light upon many problems in connection with the great loess deposits of North China. Throughout this Chapter I adopt the momenclature used by the authors of " Research in China." This book (published by the Carnegie Institution of Washington) deals with the results of the Carnegie Expedition already mentioned, and in it, where dealing with this subject, Mr. Bailey Willis calls the whole of the Yellow Aeolian deposits, so extensively found in all the northern provinces, the Huang-fn formation. In Chinese, the word Huaiig-t'u means literally " yellow earth." It refers to the true wind-deposited loess, as well as to the fluvial deposits of the Chihli plain and elsewhere. Bailey Willis took the name, which is a very happy one, from Huang-t'u-tsai, a village situated about ten miles north of T'ai-yOan Fu. Another substance containing a large percentage of clay, and occurring in many places with the loess, is called Sliao-t'u which means literally "baking earth." It derives this name from the fact that it is suitable for mixing with coal-dust to form a good burning substance. The mixture is either dried into cakes, or is put on the kang-hre wet. It burns well, but slowly, forming a very economical fuel. Throughout this Chapter I shall use the word Shao-t'tt in its real Chinese sense, and the word Huang-t'u in the sense given to it by Bailey Willis. I shall thus have three terms to use in connection with yellow deposits : — 113 (i) Huang-t'u referring; to all deposits, whether Aeolian or fluvial. (2) Loesp, the pure seolian or sub-aerial deposit. (3) Shao-t'u, that substance, which resembles Loess, but contains a certain proportion of clay. The last usually contains more carbonate of lime than the second,* and generally occurs at the bottom of the deep ravines in the Huang-fu formations. So far as I have been able to gather, the lime nodules mentioned by various writers occur in the Shao-Vii. The orig^in of the latter is difficult to determine.^ but it is believed by some to be the result of decomposed Felspathic rock. For want of any other name, I call the sedimentary beds of Shensi "the Shensi formation," but the exact relationship between this and the Shansi formation I cannot define, thousrh it certainly resembles the formation between Chiao-ch'eng Shan and the Huang Ho. The country in the immediate vicinity of T'ai-yuan Fu, our startinp- point, has been investigated by the members of the Carnegie Expedition, so that I will commence drawing on my note book at the western bank of the F^n Ho. In the preparation of this Chapter I have had frequent recourse to "Research in China"; the line of march followed by the authors of that work was from Pao- ting Fu in Chihli westward to Wu-t'ai Shan in Shansi; thence southward through the middle of Shansi as far as T'ung-kuan Hsien, just beyond its south-western border ; and from this point westward again in exploration of the Ch'in-ling range and the country south of the Wei Ho in Shensi. After continuing westward from T'ai-yiian Fu, in Shansi, to Yu-lin Fu, in Northern Shensi, our own route lay in a direction roughly parallel to that of the Carnegie Expedition, extending as it did from North to South down the middle of Shensi. The Carnegie Expedition did not enter Kansu at all, and the country we traversed seems to have been visited by no geologist. We thus had the opportunity of seeing a mountainous country, namely the Chiao- ch'eng Shan, dividing the F^n Ho from the Yellow River, the existence of which seems to have been unsuspected by Richthofen, and only guessed at by the members of the Carnegie Expedition. Both parties apparently confined themselves to the valley of the F6n Ho, and formed their opinions of what lay to the westward from what they saw of the small range of mountains forming the north-western boundary of that valley. Richthofen speaks of the country between the Fdn Ho and the Yellow • The lows bas a luge pioportioD ofcUy, bttl dissFininaled and not separated as appeus to be the case with the SMao-t'ti. t The CaOjCOj of ihe calcareous norules U p'f.V-pbh derived fr(>Di the upper beds by water action. 116 River as a plateau of nearly horizontal coal-bearing strata ; whilst Bailey Willis suspects that the rock below the Sinian Limestone, together with the Sinian Limestone itself, forms the mass of the mountains west of the small range already mentioned. Neither of these observers mentions the great divide of Igneous and Metamorphic rock, which extends in a more or less complete line from Ning-wu Fu, five days journey (about lOO miles) north- west of T'ai-yiian Fu, to Yung-ning Chou, four days journey south-west. Having penetrated these mountains at five different points I can vouch for its existence. Professor Lyman of the Shansi University discovered Granite and Gneiss in the mountains west of W6n-shui Hsien, a town about fifty miles south-west of T'ai-yiian Fu. From my notes it will be seen that Richthofen was not altogether wrong when he discussed the country west of the Fen Ho as a plateau of horizontal coal-bearing strata. There are undoubtedly great stretches of country marked by beds of this nature ; but on the other hand there are large areas where, but for the Loess, the Sinian Limestone would form the surface. I have found this to be the case in the mountains west of K'6-lan Chou a town about sixty miles north-west of T'ai-yuan Fu, and again at Wu-ch'eng a village half-way between Yung-ning Chou and Fen-chou Fu. It also forms certain high peaks situated physiographically between the Shansi formation and the pre-Cambrian rocks in the Ning-wu district. Of course the outcrops of Pre-Cambrian (Igneous and Metamorphic) rock, already referred to, form a large area. The folding and vertical dips mentioned by Bailey Willis occur, as far as I can make out, only in the small range — not more than twenty miles wide— which extends from north-east to south-west along the north-western edge of the T'ai-yuan Fu plain. Westwards from this range till the Chiao-ch'Sng Shan are reached the strata are horizontal. Further north, as the Ning-wu district is approached, these strata are arranged in a series of ridges having a north-east to south-west trend and formed by dip-slopes on the south-eastern and scarps on the north-western side. The dip-slopes vary generally from 30° to 80°, some being almost perpendicular. As already stated, between these ridges of Shansi formation and the great outcrop of pre-Cambrian rock, occur very high and precipitous ridges of Sinian limestone. These form very pointed peaks, varying in altitude from 7,000 to 8000 feet above the sea-level. Their dips slope to the south-east at angles of from 45° to 60", becoming almost perpendicular as the crests of the ndges are reached. The escarpments are due, doubtless, to erosion on the eastern side of an immense fold ; the softer rocks on the anti-cline of this fold have been carried away by denudation, 117 leaving exposed the Plutonic rocks, which now form the crest of the great divide between the F^n and Yellow Rivers. There is plenty of good coal in the district, as well as a certain amount of silver ore. The former is mined, but the mining of the latter is prohibited by the local officials, who fear the imposition of heavy taxes by the central Government. In the Ning-wu district I discovered a series of small lakes situated at an altitude of about 7,000 feet above sea-level along the summits of the shale ridges of the Shansi formation. They occur in hollows formed by scarps on the one side, and dip-slopes on the other : their existence bearing testimony to the impervious nature of the shale. The accompanying sketch shows one of these lakes, and other physiographical features of the district. The lakes are very deep and contain clear, sweet water. Their overflows join the F6n Ho, in spite of the fact that they are much closer to the Huai Ho, which flows northward, and ultimately joins one of the rivers traversing Chihli. (An account of the discovery of these lakes was published in " Travel and Exploration," October, igio). The foregoing remarks refer chiefly to those parts of the mountains west of the F6n Ho which lie outside the path of the present Expedition. I will now take in more detail the rocks and formations noticed along our own line of march. On entering the mountains west of T'ai-yiian Fu, the first rock encountered was the dark limestone (Cambro-Ordovician) dipping slightly to the west. This is deeply cut through by water-courses which enter the plain from the west. At Lan-ts'un, a village about fifteen miles north-west of T'ai-yiian Fu, the Fen Ho cuts through this formation. The height of the limestone cliffs here must be between 300 and 400 feet. A similar formation occurs again about three miles north-east of the same village. Here a narrow winding gorge cuts deeply through the limestone for a distance of about fifteen miles. The limestone, in places, exhibits a pale creamy colour. This outcrop appears to form the eastern edge of a great, but shallow synclinal fold. The western outcrop appears along the eastern side of the great divide of igneous rock, already mentioned. At a level of about 300 feet above the plain, the Limestone formation gives place to the Sandstone and Shale formations typical of Shansi. These continue the crest of the range to an altitude of 2,500 feet above the level of the plain. The shale deposits in this small range are horizontal and free from faults, and are inter-stratified with beds of Pyrites, Conglomerates, and thick seams of coal. The colours of these shales vary considerably, being blue-grey, dark madder, yellow ochre, greenish yellow, or green. 119 The Conglomerates, formed of well-worn and rounded pebbles, occur at an altitude of about 500 feet. The Pyrites, a grey and friable variety, occurs at an altitude of between 300 and 400 feet. The sulphur is extracted by the natives, who roast the pyrites in perforated clay vessels, the residue being a soft, earthy substance the colour of yellow ochre. When roasted again, this turns into a bright red powder, largely used in the manufacture of paint for houses and furniture. In places, where the second roasting is carried on, the whole of the surrounding ground, for a considerable distance, becomes stained a bright red. Many such patches mark the slopes of these mountains, and might at first sight be mistaken for outcrops of Red Haematite. The coal from this district is also very sulphurous, and unpleasant to use in open grates, being very smoky and giving a large percentage of ash. In places, where the seams were exposed to the air, we often noticed an efflorescence of pure sulphur. There is also a considerable amount of iron-ore in these mountains ; and some of the streams in the range are strongly alkaline : a fact especially noticeable when they are frozen. After crossing this ridge, we descended first through loess and then through shale to the bed of the Fen Ho at Ku-chao. Here, a little way up the ravines, which join the river, iron-smelting is carried on ; brown iron- ore being easily mined. Iron, coal and clay occur together in these spots ; otherwise, there would be no smelting done. The price of pig-iron is too low to allow of any one of these materials being transported for use from a distance. Baron von Richthofen has described the native method of smelting so well that any further remarks would be superfluous. The formations, from Ku-chao westward for a distance of twenty miles, are entirely of Sandstone, Shale and Huang-t'u. As already stated, the strata of these sedimentary rocks were found to be horizontal, and free from foldings and faults. At Ts'a-k'ou, about forty-five miles west of T'ai-yuan Fu, Sinian Lime- stone again makes its appearance, and a little further on the Pre-Cambrian rocks, which form the Chiao-ch'eng Shan district, commence. We first travelled up a long valley leading westward, the sides of which were composed of precipitous limestone peaks. As we ascended the pass at the head of this valley, we crossed a dyke of Pegmatite exposed in the cutting of the bridle- path, the rest of the slopes being composed of Mica Schists. On the western slope of the pass, masses of white Felspar with large pieces of embedded Muscovite were noticed. Large stones of both fine and coarse-grained Gran ite , 120 PLATE A<). V. V^ *' H ^. ^ ' - ^V Sand Hamster. [Phodopus bedfordise). Sec pp. Sj ami /So. David's Squirrel. iSciurotamias davidianus). Sit pp^ as and /70. besides Pegmatite, Felspathicand Micaceous rocks, and Gneisses were plentiful in the valley-bottoms on either side of the pass. With my limited knowledge, it would be hopeless to attempt a full description of the complicated structural formation of the Chiao-ch'^ng Shan district : the most I can do is to mention the names and the positions of the rocks which I noticed. So far as I could gather, these mountains, like those in the Ning-wu district, are formed by a great fold, the softer rocks of which have been denuded, thus laying bare the Plutonic rocks. The tops of the peaks and ridges are undoubtely of granite, which varies in colour from grey to pink, and in texture from a fine to a coarse grain. The summit of Mo-erh Shan (9,200 feet), the highest peak in the district, is in the form of a hugh cone of grey granite, slowly breaking up into large blocks — roughly cubical — many of which lie scattered down the mountain's side. Slightly curved joints — very noticeable in our illustration (Plate 55) — cut across the summit, and appear to form an anticline. On the next highest peak YOn-t'ing Shan, red granite appears, as well as the grey. To the north, the peaks and ridges seem to be composed of gneiss and other metamorphic rocks, with ribs of granite here and there. 'The valley-bottoms are strewn with boulders, and stones of all kinds of crystalline rock ; the minerals quartz, mica, and felspar predominating. On descending the western slope of this great ridge, which divides the basin of the Fen Ho from the Yellow River, we soon reached again the beds of shale and sandstone. They present here features similar to those east of Chiao-ch'eng Shan. Huang-t'ti is very widely distributed, and in many places hides all other formations by extending right down to the valley-bottoms. At a distance of about fifteen miles from the Chiao-ch'dng Shan range, we crossed another small divide, the summit of which was composed of shale protruding through the Huang-t'u. Between here and the next pass — about twenty miles further west — lies the river valley, in which the town of Lin Hsien is situated. The valleys between these three divides run from north- east to south-west, eventually joining the Yellow River. The Lin Hsien valley is filled with vast deposits of Huang-t'u so that only at the ravine-bottoms is the substratum of sandstone exposed. One might consider the chain of mountains, which divides the F6n Ho from the Yellow River, as forming the eastern boundary of a vast flat basin, which takes in the whole of Northern Shensi, and the adjacent parts of Shansi, and Kansu. This basin is underlain by the Sinian Limestone, upon which lie Sandstone and Shale formations, which in turn are covered by a thick layer 121 of loess. Except at the edges, these successive layers are practically horizontal. I will refer to this as the North Shensi basin, and will deal with it more closely in my remarks on the Huang-fu formation. About fifteen miles west of Lin Hsien a very peculiar formation occurs. Three peaks, composed chiefly of granite, pierce through the Htiang-t'u mantle, and rise to an altitude of from 6000 to 7000 feet. The peaks, which go by the name of Ch'ing-ting Shan (" clear summit moun- tains ") run roughly in a line, north and south, their bases covering a square of five miles to the side. All round are loess hills. So far as could be gathered, these isolated peaks are the result of folding ; but on this point I would not care to offer a positive opinion. Westward, to the Yellow River, the country consists of loess lying upon a thick layer of sandstone. Through the latter, streams flowing towards the Yellow River in a general westerly direction have cut down to a depth commencing at from 20 to 30 feet and gradually increasing to about 300 feet in its bed. This sandstone doubtless belongs to the Shansi formation ; it is perfectly horizontal in stratification, and nowhere were any faults noticed. It is in the form of freestone, and is admirably illustrated in the accompanying photograph (Plate 9). On the western bank of the Yellow River, the same formation extends to the borders of the Ordos, though the depth of the sections exposed along the sides of the river-valleys becomes less and less till only along the largest rivers is there any outcrop. At Yii-lin Fu the loess formations give place to a peculiar, hard, purplish rock containing a certain percentage of sand. Though not nearly so hard, it closely resembles shale, and doubtless only requires pressure to be converted into it. This hardened, sandy mud, or mudstone, protrudes through the thick layer of loose sand in the form of low rounded hills ; one of which appears in the photograph of the sand-dunes (Plate 10). The sand that exists in this district, is of the same yellowish fawn tint as the loess, and is from fifty to one hundred feet deep. It is very soft and loose, and in the river-beds and damp ravine-bottoms forms dangerous quick- sands. About Yii-lin Fu itself the sandstone, where visible, is of a pale greenish colour ; but further to the south-west along the Ordos border it is of a brick-red. A deep bed of this red sandstone occurs at the head of the Yen Shui valley, a few miles south of Ching-pien. Here the cliffs rise to the height of some 200 feet, whilst the waters of the Yen Shui are stained a deep red. Red sand is deposited along the valley near Yen-an Fu. 122 PLATE 50. § •« e « ^ e K in a O o Travelling southward from Yu-lin Fu to Yen-an Ku we encountered Huaitg-t'u formation upon horizontal strata of sandstone and shale. The sandstone in places shows very marked bedding, and, owing to the deposition of mica between the layers, can be split without difficulty. This strongly- bedded sandstone occurs chiefly between Sui-t^ Chou and Ma-chia-k'ou. A good illustration of this may be seen in the photograph of icicles, taken about three miles south of Ch'ing-chien Hsien (Plate 17). The photograph shows too a typical source of the plentiful water-supply to be found in every ravine of North Shensi. At Yen-an Fu, the sandstone, still of a pale greenish colour, continues to show marked bedding. At low levels a pink and green cross-bedded sandstone was noted. In the region of Yen-an, the sandstone contains many crystals of Iron Pyrites. These, of course, where exposed, are very much oxidised, but some fine unoxidised specimens were secured at Lao-shan. There is little to say about the Huang-Vu of this vicinity, except that at the ravine-bottoms it is inclined to be clayey, resembling Shao-Vu rather than loess. In the wooded area — which extends in a great belt, east and west, some twelve miles south of Yen-an Fu — there is an even greater predominance of Shao-t'u. Here also finely-laminated, dark blue-grey shale occurs just above the sandstone. Coal is mined at various places along the route from Yii-lin Fu to Yen-an Fu. Seams, reached by rather deep vertical shafts and showing no outcrops, occur within a mile of the former place. These mines produce a good- burning, but rather smoky, bituminous coal. At Sui-te Chou, a peculiar coal was secured : it was said to have been transported from Ning-hsia, on the western border of the Ordos. It is very heavy and dirty, but absolutely smokeless, and smoulders like charcoal. Once ignited, it will continue to burn with a dull glow till the mass is reduced to soft white ash. The substance is certainly not charcoal, and those who sold it said that it was mined like coal. It has neither the appearance, nor the lustre of graphite. At Ch'ing- chien a fine quality of lignite is obtainable. This comes from mines at An- ting Hsien, a town situated some twenty miles to the north-west of Ch'ing- chien. At Ma-chia-k'ou a very poor quality of coal occurs. This ignites only with the greatest difficulty, and leaves an enormous percentage of ash. Yen-ch'ang Hsien, a town situated about forty miles east of Yen-an Fu, is famous for its petroleum wells ; which are worked with European machinery, and produce a high grade of oil. We bought a supply of the oil, and found it burn well. It is sold at the rate of 2jd. per catty (i catty=i| lbs.) and finds 123 a ready market. The poor people use the crude oil, which they purchase at half the price of the refined. There was no evidence of any other useful minerals in this district. The coal-beds however must be very extensive and valuable. Working southward from Yen-an Fu, the same horizontal sandstone bed- rock without faults is encountered, whilst the loess deposits are in the form of great plateaux, all uniform in height (Plate 22). These continue from Fu Chou to near Chung-pu Hsien, a distance of about seventy miles. South of the latter town the rock-beds, in the form of shale, rise considerably above their normal level, and the loess mantle is very much reduced in thickness, being in some places entirely denuded. Continuing southward, we found the shale strata very much contorted. Still further south again, at Yao Chou, we passed through a great outcrop of grey limestone, dipping sharply to the north. This seems to mark the southern boundary of the great North Shensi basin. From here the coQntry gradually slopes down to the Hsi-an plain. The loess on the southern side of the limestone ridge is very thick, completely hiding the under-lying rock, and extending right over the plain. The country south of the Wei Ho was visited by the Carnegie Expedition, and a good account of its geology appears in the book subsequently published by the Carnegie Institution. I will not do more than draw attention to the variable temperature of the hot springs at Lin-t'ung Hsien. Bailey Willis found them to be 40° Centigrade (104° F.). Kockhill records their temperature at 106° F. When we visited them they were at 108° F. whilst Dr. Jenkins, a resident missionary of Hsi-an Fu says that he has known them to reach 112° F. In the mountains immediately south of Hsi-an Fu I found granite occuring at very low levels. Viewing the mountains southward from the top of the peak, about 5000 feet in altitude, I could make out nothing but igneous rock masses. Leaving this vicinity we will now follow the westward course of the main division of our Expedition on its way to Lan-chou Fu in Kansu, and for this we must return to Fu Chou. From that point westwards for about thirty-four miles the same loess plateaux as lie to the south and east were encountered. Then a stretch of very moist country : deep and clear streams in every valley and ravine : the hills clothed with luxuriant vegetation. Denudation must have been at one time very extensive, for not only is the loess low and well rounded- off, but the sandstone and shale substrata also show marked wearing. At Hai-shui-ssu, a peculiar column of sandstone — all that is left of a 124 great bluff cutting across the valley — rises to a height of about 200 feet above the stream-beci (Plate 46). At Ho-shui Hsien the bed-rock is chiefly in the form of dark-maroon or grey shale, finely laminated. This gives place at Ch'ing-yang Fu to grey sandstone with marked bedding. Immediately west of this city the loess plateaux commence again. The country is noticeably drier than that to the east, and the plateaux continue for about sixty miles, ending abruptly at Ch^n-yiJan Hsien. From here westward, the loess formations become much deeper and less regular. The bed-rock rises gradually and is no longer perfectly horizontal. Immediately west of Ch^n-yiian Hsien, the sections exposed on the side of the valley show a red sandstone with marked bedding. It dips towards the west at an angle of 20°. This is very clearly shown in the accompanying photograph (Plate 57) of a view looking westward about five miles west of Ch^n-yiian Hsien. The sedimentary formations from Chdn-yuan westward rise steadily in altitude till the Liu-p'an Shan are reached. This great range of mountains (8000 to 10,000 feet high), composed of crj-stalline rocks, and extending from north-west to south-east, lies to the west of Ku-yiian Chou and Wa-t'ing and may be considered as the western rim of the great North Shensi basin. The highest peaks are very precipitous, and resemble the Chiao-ch'eng Shan of Western Shansi in their formation. The lower peaks are composed of lime- stone, through which run many deep ravines. Ku-yiian Chou is situated in an immense loess basin, bounded north, east and south by hills of sedimentary origin, and on the west and south-west by the Liu-p'an Shan. On the western side of this range the formation is chiefly of limestone, at a higher level than the sedimentary rocks to the east of the range. From Ku-yiian the path lies in a general south-westerly direction till Ching-ning Chou is reached. Immediately north of this city the limestone formations are deeply cut through by a stream coming down from Liu-p'an Shan. Westward from Ching-ning Chou the loess deposits increase enormously in depth. High loess-covered mountains occur, divided by deep ravines, and the substratum appears in only a few places. A photograph of one of the deep canons is given (Plate 39). This was taken at Ying-t'ao-ho immediately east of a high loess pass, and about sixty miles west of Ching- ning. It is typical of the formations that occur throughout this area as far as Hsiao-shui-tzQ, near Lan-chou Fu. In places the loess is replaced by a dark, 125 alluvial clay strongly impregnated with alkali, through which run deep caiions : an especially large one occuring to the east of Hui-ning Hsien (Plate 38). As Hsiao-shui-tzu is approached, a system of high mountains makes its appearance to the south and south-west. From these mountains thestreams bring down great quantities of pebbles and boulders of limestone and crystalline rocks. At Hsiao-shui-tzu (or Shao-shui-tzu) itself the Yellow River is again reached, at this point cutting through a thick dyke of granite to a depth of 200 feet (Plate 33). On this granite lies a layer of green sandstone and on this again a deep deposit of loess. The loess here seems to contain a certain amount of whitish clay, and becomes extremely hard under the influence of the hot sun. The formations round Lan-chou Fu are very complex. There is a good deal of felspathic rock, especially north of the river, which here flows through a long valley, from two to three miles wide. To the south of the city, sedimentary rocks are first encountered, but these give way to crystalline rocks, which rise to a height of from 10,000 to 11,000 feet. Westward, the mountains to all appearance are formed of igneous rocks, and very complicated. Gold, silver-ore, jade and precious stones are obtained in this range. The sedimentary strata, which occur some ten miles south of Lan-chou Fu, namely at Wa-kang-ch'^ng, are coal bearing ; whilst a plentiful supply of clay — derived probably by decomposition from igneous rocks — allows of extensive pottery-works being carried on. There is a good deal of grey cr3'stalline limestone in the mountains south of the city. These are more or less rounded, no very prominent peaks existing. Loess occurs at an altitude of over 7000 feet. The next stretch of country to be discussed is that along the road taken by the Expedition on its return journey from Sui-t6 Chou, in North Shensi, eastward to Fen-chou Fu, in Shansi, and thence north-eastward to T'ai-yiian Fu. Between Sui-te and the Yellow River very deep deposits of loess and Shao-fn occur. The latter is found usually at the bottoms of the deep ravines and is of a deep brick-red colour. In places the ravine-bottoms are formed of the usual sedimentary strata (Shensi formation) with marked horizontal bedding. Within five miles of the Yellow River the loess gets very shallow, and in many places the sandstone substrata are exposed in the form of rounded hills with precipitous ravines. The depth (500 to 600 feet), to which the river has cut through the sedimentary formation, is much greater here than at the spot further north where the Expedition crossed on its journey westward. 126 PLATE 51. Suslik. {Citellus mongolicus). Si:i: />p, qt ami l-jy. Polecat. (Mustela larvata). ■Set /. Qj and t8l. been formed since the Wall was built. The city of San-yuan Hsien, situated twenty miles north of Hsi-an Fu, has been cut in two, since it was built, by a ravine 200 feet deep and over 200 feet wide. Again, in the Loess country of North Shansi one may often notice the remains of a succession of old roads, one below the other, along the side of a ravine. The ravine in these instances marks the original trace of the road. This was washed away, so that it became necessary to form a new road along the margin of the first. This in turn became dangerous or unfit for use, owing to the continual falling-away of great masses of loess, and again a new road had to be made. To-day a yawning chasm remains, which has swallowed up each successive road, leaving perhaps remnants of the last two or three. The whole process has taken place within the memory of the older iuhabitants of the district, who can testify to the facts. Places like this occur along the roads from T'ai-yuan Fu to Shou-yang Hsien, and Hsin Chou. Of course the practice of the inhabitants, who each winter root up or cut down every trace of vegetation, greatly accelerates the denudation of the loess deposits ; but even taking this into consideration, we must conclude that the rainfall, during the time when the loess plain was forming, was far less than it is now. It may be suggested that these loess deposits were laid down at the bottom of a lake, but there is no proof of this ; nor is there any reason to suppose that it is a fluvial deposit such as the Chihli plains. The north Shensi basin is open to the north, and there can be no doubt that the loess was originally brought down from the Gobi Desert, of which the Ordos is but an arm. During our stay in Yu-Hn Fu we had excellent opportunities of noting how the wind, which we found to prevail from the north, carries southward the material of which the Loess is composed. The inhabitants of North China are familiar with terrible dust-storms, which sweep down from the Gobi Desert at all times of the year. The Loess sometimes shows stratification. A good example of this appears in the accompanying photograph (Plate 56)*, which was taken a few miles west of the Chiao-ch'eng Shan in Shansi. The strata occur in alternate layers of brick-red, and light-coloured loess ; the former having rather the constitution of Shao-t'n. In many places we noticed, embedded in the loess, shells of a little snail inhabiting the country at the present time ; whilst bones of the Mole-rat — a rodent with an underground mode of life like the mole's — were also found. No fossils of any kind were discovered in the Loess. • cf. Plate 55. I 129 CHAPTER XIV. SURVEY WORK OF THE EXPEDITION — BY R. S. CLARK. T^HE Map* accompanying this volume is based on the plane-table work carried out by Hazrat Ali, of the Survey of India, the ill-fated member of our party, whose death at the hands of the Chinese near Lan-chou brought the expedition to an untimely close. A short description of the means and methods employed on the survey will, we trust, be found of interest. Commencing with a list of the instruments used, and remarking where necessary as to their pattern etc., we give a few notes to indicate briefly the methods employed for fixing our base, for carrying out the whole survey and for determining certain check-measurements ; finally connecting up the results of our work with such records of previous surveys as are available. For the benefit of future travellers itineraries of the routes traversed are given in Appendix I., together with a table containing Latitude, Longitude, and — in most cases — Altitude of every important place visited. Instruments, etc. The instruments and appliances used were : — 1 3-inch Astronomical Field Telescope. (Cary London) 2 5-inch Micrometer Theodolites. ( ,, ,, ) 3 Half-Chronometer Watches. (Blockley, Kew certificated) I Half-Chronometer Watch with Chronograph. 3 Aneroid Barometers. (Cary) I Boiling-point Thermometer. ( ,, ) I Georges Mercurial Barometer. ( ,, ) I loo-foot Invar Tape. I Plane-table. I Road-wheel. Base-lines. (A) As described in Chapter I, the party went into camp a few miles out of T'ai-yiian Fu to measure a base-line, the site chosen for • In a pocket at the eod of volume. 130 Sunset on the Ordos Border. .isbioH ?.obiO 9riJ no J9enu actual measurement being about two miles north of the town. The base was 2400 feet long and was measured twice by means of the Invar Tape ; the probable error being 1/50,000. The longitude of one end of the base was assumed, and the latitude calculated from astronomical observations. This was subsequently corrected by the telegraphic longitude reduced to the South East Gate of the City. (b) On our arrival at Yen-an Fu, the surveyor found himself at fault, and it was considered advisable to measure a new topographical base. This base was 8 miles long and connected with the longitude by occultation. Datum Lei ""•^^0^^ '^ t Saiia.sluiic Beds, west of the Chiao.ch'enK Shan, Shansi. .Siv p. tig. January, 1000. Yen-an Fu. Alt. 2769 ft. January again was a month of extremely cold, but on the whole fine weather. The proportion of cloudless days was not quite so great as in the last twelve days of December, while light falls of snow, usually following stratus clouds, were recorded on the loth, nth, 12th, 13th, i6th, and 30th, Hoar-frosts were recorded daily from the 23rd to the 27th inclusive. In cloud formations there was a decided predominance of cumulus, or cirro-cumulus clouds, over anything else. Cirrus also occurred with comparative frequency, whilst stratus were also recorded more frequently than usual, being generally followed, as already stated, by snow. Again the light variable wind was the rule, though from time to time it freshened, when its general direction was at once discernible. It was then recorded from the north-west, west, and south. Wind was not once recorded from an easterly direction. From the 19th to the 22nd some very low temperatures were experienced. The minimum temperature for the month was — 3*5'^ F. on the 19th, while the average minimum was I2"2° F. The maximum reading for the month was 39.0" F., which temperature occurred on the 4th, 5th, and 28th. The average maximum was 32* 1° F. The highest, lowest, and average barometrical readings were 2j'i6 inches. 26'64 inches, and 26"86 inches respectively. Yen-an Fti to Lan-chou Fti. On January 30th the expedition left Yen-an Fu for Lan-chou Fu, in Kansu. The journey, including many stoppages, was accomplished in a little over two months. Observations were regularly taken at altitudes, ranging from 2769 ft., the altitude of Yen-an Fu to 7468 ft. in the high loess country of Kansu. Temperatures remained comparatively low till the commencement of March, when the weather began to get distinctly warmer. On April 3rd, just before Lan-chou Fu was reached, the maximum thermometer registered 680^ F., and the minimum 32.0° F., and on the morning of April 5th, the day on which the expedition entered Lan-chou Fu, the minimum temperature was 4i"o^ F. This was the highest minimum temperature recorded since November 4th, 1908. Twice in the early half of February the minimum thermometer registered 2*0° F., but no temperature lower than that was experienced. Owing to the various altitudes of which observations were taken, nothing K 145 much can be remarked about the barometrical readings, except that when a number of readings were taken at one place, owing to a longer stay than usual being made at that place, considerable fluctuations were noticeable. Thus at Ch'ing-yang Fu, on February 17th, the barometer stood at 26"i3 inches. On February 19th, it stood at 26'55, giving a difference of forty-two points. Again at Ku-yiian Chou, the barometer varied from 24-05 on March gth to 24*47 O'^ the i6th, also a difference of forty-two points. No atmospheric disturbance, or changes followed these fluctuations. Wind was recorded every day. During most of the time it was but a light wind, but on nineteen occasions it freshened up, being recorded as moderate, whilst on eight occasions it was noted as strong. On sixteen days the wind blew from a north-westerly direction. It was from this direction that it generally blew when it was of more than usual strength. On nine days it blew from the north, and it freshened up usually when in this quarter. When the wind was in the south-west or west, as it was on eight and seven days respectively, it was never very strong, whilst a southerly wind was generally fresh. The prevailing wind during this time of the year maybe considered to have been from a general northerly direction, though it frequently shifted to other points of the compass. An analysis of the weather notes leads roughly to the following deduc- tion : — North winds usually meant fine weather with cloudless skies, while north-westerly winds brought decidedly more clouds. West wind brought snow or rain, and was invariably cloudy. South-west winds brought snow, clouds, or fog, while south winds again invariably brought up clouds. Any thing might be expected if the wind was in the south-east, east, or north-east, but it was so seldom in these quarters that no certain deductions could be drawn. Clouds were recorded very frequently during these months of travel, every variety being noticed. Cumulus clouds predominated, being recorded thirty-two times, and were brought up from the north-west, and south-west most frequently. Cirrus clouds were also very frequently recorded, being brought up by north-westerly or southerly winds. Cumulus and cirrus were almost always noted when the wind was variable. Stratus clouds occurred on sixteen occasions, most frequently when the wind was from some westerly quarter, whilst nimbus clouds were noted seven times from all directions. Hygrometer readings were commenced on February 14th, as soon as the temperature was high enough, and were kept up with increasing regularity. Usually no very great difference between the two bulbs was recorded, but on 146 PLATE 56. Loess Plateaux, east of Fu chou, ShensL rt^ »li^ & -^ Loess shewing stratafication, Shansi. March the gth when an east wind was blowing, the difference between the bulbs was 34'2° F. Snow was recorded eleven times and rain three times during the journey. As already stated, both were proportionately more frequent when the wind was in the west, in which direction lies Kokonor, the great lake of Eastern Thibet. It may be that the snow clouds originate in this district. Hoar-frost was recorded from time to time. ^^/, 1909. Lan-chou Fu. Alt. 5106 Jt. When the expedition reached Lan-chou Fu on April 5th, that city, and the district generally were suffering from a protracted period of drought. According to native reports there had been no rain to speak of for three years. Judging from the extreme bareness of the country with its parched sun-baked hills and valleys this might well be the case. It seems as if the desert were slowly creeping in from the north and north-west. It was stated by more than one of the Europeans, long resident in the district, that ten years ago the countrj' immediately north and north- west of the city for ten or more miles was fertile. Year by year this fertile area has decreased till the whole of the country north of the Yellow River, which flows under the northern wall of Lan-chou, has become a howling wilderness, without a vestige of green anywhere. The expedition found the country south of the river for some twelve miles in a condition scarcely better than that of the country to the north and north-west. During the months that the expedition spent at Lan-chou the drought broke up, and towards the end of June and in the beginning of July rain fell in great quantities. Thus the season cannot be considered as a normal one, its commencement being towards the end of a three years' drought and its termination coinciding with that of the drought, and with general atmospheric disturbances. During April the weather was dry, and generally speaking fine. Wind was recorded daily, whilst clouds were noted most of the time. The prevailing wind was from the east, which blew with more or less strength on fourteen days. Once it shifted to the south-east but at other times it was either from the west or north-west. Cumulus and cirro-cumulus clouds prevailed throughout the whole month, cirrus and stratus clouds being recorded but once each. Dust hazes were frequent and on the 13th a dust-storm was recorded. Towards the end of the month a little rain fell. 147 Again the barometer showed considerable fluctuations, the highest readings being 25-27 inches, and the lowest 2472 inches. The average of all readings was 25"oo inches. The highest temperature during the month was 83*0° F. on the 25th, and the lowest was 30*0° F. on the 7th. The averages were 68'6° F. for the maxima and 4i'2° F. for the minima. The temperature steadily increased throughout the month, though one or two cold days were experienced towards the end. Mai/, 1909. Lan-chou Fu. Alt. 5106 ft. With the exception of six days, which were spent in the mountains to the south of Lan-chou, a very complete set of observations was made during the month of May. The observations differed but little from those made in April. The temperature was increasingly warmer, the barometer averaged a little higher, but was perhaps a trifle more unsteady ; whilst there was more rain, more strong winds, and slightly greater variety in cloud formation, stratus clouds appearing more frequently. The prevailing wind was again in the east, though winds from the north- east and north-west were recorded with some frequency. Rain fell on eight occasions ; the rainfall, which was recorded on four days only, being o'og of an inch. Late in the afternoon of the nth a remarkable phenomenon was noticed. Two strong winds, blowing from the west and east respectively met over Lan-chou, when hail and rain fell for about an hour. This was followed by rain during the night, fog next day, and snow upon the surrounding hills, and it may be noted that a wind from the west was largely responsible for the latter. Most of the rain that was recorded fell during these few days of atmospheric disturbance. The temperature fell to considerably below the average, whilst the barometer ran up to the highest level recorded during the three and a half months' stay in Lan-chou. It may here be noted that whenever the temperature was unusally low the barometer was high, and vice-versa. The average maximum temperature was 75'5° F., and the average minimum was 487° F., the highest and lowest temperatures being respectively 88-o° F. on the 30th and 35-0° F. on the 13th. The barometrical readings averaged 25'07 inches, a slight increase on that of the April readings, while the highest point reached was 25*30 on the 13th and the lowest, 2478 inches, on the 28th. 148 The relative humiditj- of the atmosphere was usually very small, the difference between the wet and dry bulbs generally exceeding ten degrees, and not infrequently exceeding fifteen degrees. Jwne. 1909. Lan-chou Fit. Alt. 5106 Ji. June was decidedly hotter than May, and the rainfall was greater. The prevailing wind was no longer in the east, but blew from the north-east. On the gth, at 3.30 p.m., a fierce gale swept up from the west, tearing branches off the trees and carrj'ing them for considerable distances. No serious damage was done, however. A strong wind and a dust storm were recorded on the loth ; a strong wind on the nth ; and another on the 12th. During these three days of disturbance the barometer fell from 24*90 inches to 24-68 inches, rising once more to 25.06 inches. On the 12th rain fell, and continued intermittently till the 17th. Heavy rain was also reported by two members of the party at work in the mountains to the south of Lan-chou on the i2th and 13th ; whilst a heavy deluge, preceded by a violent wind, was recorded by one of them on the 14th. Rain was again recorded on the 15th in the same district, while a little to the east of this position heavy rain was recorded on the 20th. On the 22nd a west wind was noted, followed by rain, and again on the 26th a west wind brought up rain clouds, when 72 of an inch of rain was recorded in sixteen hours. The wind continued to blow from the west for two days, then, shifting right round to the east, seemed to bring back the rain clouds. It must here be noted that rain was frequently brought up by a north- easterly wind. The fact that the Yellow River flows in a north-easterly direction from Lan-chou Fu may account for this. It cannot be doubted that the Kokonor has some effect upon this district, but it is equally certain that it is not the only agency at work, and an analysis of the wind direction and corresponding periods of rain leads to the idea that the large volume of water flowing down the bed of the Yellow River is another powerful element in the meteorology' of the district. Only on very rare occasions (in April) was rain recorded from any quarter but north-east and west. The total rainfall for the month was i"i4 inches, notwithstanding the fact that on five occasions the fall was not measured. Clouds appeared every day of the month. Cumulus formations pre- dominated, though stratus clouds were not infrequent, cirrus clouds occurred more often than in May. The maximum temperature was 90*0° F. on the 26th and 29th. The minimum was 43"o° F. on the 13th. This temperature, it will be noted, occurred on the night after the highest barometrical reading, 25'o6 inches was taken. The lowest barometrical reading occurred on the 28th, between the two maximum temperatures for the month. This seems to bear out the rule regarding the inverse relationship between the thermometer and barometer. The average maximum and minimum readings were 8i*i° F., and 57*9° F. respectively, whilst the average barometrical reading was z^'Sy inches. The psychrometer showed differences between the two bulbs of io'o° or more, more frequently than not ; but only once on the 25th, did the difference reach i5'o°. This was followed on the 26th by absolute saturation in the air, no difference between the bulbs being discernible. The rainfall on the 26th, as already stated, was "72 of an inch. July, 1909. Lan-chou Fu. Alt. 5106 ft. Observations were made at Lan-chou Fu from the ist to the 15th of this month, when the expedition left the district. During these fifteen days the average temperatures were slightly higher than those of June. The barometer remained correspondingly low, never once reaching 25*00 inches. The humidity of the air varied from saturation to a dryness showing a difference between the bulbs of ig'5°. Rain fell on six of the fifteen days, making a total fall of i'2g inches, considerably more than that of the previous month. The direction from which the rain came was not properly recorded this month, but the last wind recorded before each period of rain was from the north-east. Wind was of less frequent occurence than during the preceding months, calm being recorded on seven days, whilst no reference whatever was made to the subject on three others. What wind there was came usually from the north-east. Cumulus and stratus clouds were prevalent till the 15th, when cirrus clouds were recorded. Nimbus clouds appeared on the 2nd. The maximum temperature for the fifteen days occurred on the gth when 87-8° F. was registered. The minimum was 53"o° F. on the 2nd. The highest barometer reading occurred on the ist close to the date on which the minimum temperature was recorded, whilst the lowest barometrical readings occurred on the same date as the maximum temperature for the month. The highest and lowest barometrical readings were 24*98 inches, 2470 150 PLATE 57 •a u c 5 a ■5 E :3 e inches, whilst the averages for maximum temperatures, minimum temperatures and barometrical records were 82*0° F., 6i"2°F., and 24'8i inches respectively. During the three and a half months spent at Lan-chou the barometer varied from 24"6o inches to 2530, an extreme variation of o"j inch. The barometer at T'ai-yiian during the three months ending July 31st shewed an outside variation of only 0*42 inches. On July 15th the expedition left Lan-chou Fu on its way back to T'ai- yiian Fu, by the same road which it had travelled in the spring. The journey occupied nearly two months, during the whole of which time careful observations were kept. No long stoppages were made. On the 17th the party was held up for two days at Ch'eng-kou-yi by very heavy rains, which rendered the roads through the soft loess country impassable. The rainfall recorded on this occasion was i'32 inches in ten hours. Unfortunately the rain gauge overflowed during the night so that it was impossible to estimate the exact amount that fell. The head native of the expedition said that it was the heaviest rain he could remember since the time (about 1888) when the Fen Ho overflowed. It then flooded the T'ai-yuan plain, and, entering that city, demolished the Tartar quarter in the south- western corner. At Ch'ang-t'ai-p'u the expedition was again held up by rains from the evening of the 25th to the 28th. During this time a total of i"45 inches fell. Altogether the total rainfall for the month was 4*33 inches. The weather was usually bright and calm, though frequently very hot. August found the expedition once more at Ku-yiian Chou, and for some days the weather was fine and calm. Rain fell on the 4th, after which the party experienced intermittent rain, overcast skies, heavy dews and mists till the 25th. The total rainfall for the month was 1*63 inches. From the 25th to the 31st the weather was again clear and calm. During the whole month there was scarcely any wind. On the 5th the thermometer registered a maximum temperature of 102.2° F. at Ching-yuan Hsien, and 99-0° F. was recorded at Ch'ing-yang Fu. four days later. From this date the temperature seemed to fall steadily though some very hot days were experienced in the loess ravines of the country between Yen-an Fu and Sui-t6 Chou, which place was reached on the 29th. The first three days of September were wet, the rainfall being '52 inches. From then onwards the weather was clear, with but little wind. The 151 temperature was distinctl}' cooler than that which had been experienced for some months. On the 8th, T'ai-jiian Fu was reached, but observations were kept up till the I2th, when the expedition officially came to an end. SUMMARY OF METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS. May, 1908. Maximum 98-2°, 27th Highest Bar. 27'05 inches, 23rd and Average max. 85"6° 30th Minimum 47*0°, 31st Lowest Bar. 26-84 inches, 26th Average min. 56-5° Average Bar. 26-95 inches Jiine, 1908. Maximum 98*0°, loth Average max. 90*0° Minimum 42*9°, 7th Average min. 53*4° July, 1908. Maximum ioo'o°, 5th Average max. 88-6° Minimum 55-4°, 15th Average min. 65-8° August, 1908. Maximum 100-4°, 8th Average max. 83*2° Minimum 61-3°, 28th Average min. 71-4° Septemher, 1908. Maximum 86-0°, 6th Average max. 77-5° Minimum 46*5°, 23rd Average min. 58-1° Highest Bar. 27-08 inches, 20th Lowest Bar. 26-67 inches, 24th Average Bar. 26-84 inches Highest Bar. 27-09 inches, 7th Lowest Bar. 26-67 inches, 19th and 22nd Average Bar. 26-92 inches Rainfall over 6-29 inches Heaviest fall, i8th, 3-66 inches Highest Bar. 27-17 inches, 30th Lowest Bar. 26-82 inches, 6th Average Bar. 26-97 inches Rainfall 1-94 inches Heaviest fall, 15th, -6 inch Highest Bar. 27-22 inches, 23rd Lowest Bar. 26-79 inches, loth Average Bar. 27-05 inches Rainfall 2-02 inches Heaviest fall, 15th, -94 inches 152 Xovemher 5th, 1908 to December 5th. Maximum 57"0^ 7th and loth Highest Bar. 2688 inches, 30th November November Average max. 46*8° Lowest Bar. 26*28 inches, 4th Minimum i2*5°, 27th November December Average min. 20'5^ Average Bar. 26"6i inches Wind recorded 30 days: — 15 from N., 3 from N.E., 4 from N.W., 5 from S., 2 from W., one variable. Strong wind, 3 times, N.W. i., N. 2, moderate once N. December I9th to 3lst, I'JOS. Yen-nn Fa. Alt. 2709 ft. Maximum 40"o°, 2gth Highest Bar. 27*26 inches, 31st Average max. 34*3° Lowest Bar. 2672 inches, 20th Minimum y^°, 20th Average Bar. 26*90 inches o Average min. 12*2 January, 1909. Yen-an Fu. Alt. 2769 ft. Maximum 39*0°, 4th, 5th and 28th Highest Bar. 27*16 inches, 19th Average max. 32*1° Lowest Bar. 26*64 inches, 3rd Minimum —3*5°, 19th Average Bar. 2686 inches Average min. 12*2° Apnl,\9m. Lan-chou Fu. Alt. 5X00, ft. Maximum 83*0°, 25th Highest Bar. 25*27 inches, 5th Average max. 68*6° Lowest Bar. 24*72 inches, 15th Minimum 30*0°, 7th Average Bar. 25*00 inches Average min. 41*2° il/«j/, 1909. Lan-chou Fu. Alt. 5106 ft. Maximum 88*0°, 30th Highest Bar. 25*30 inches, 13th Average max. 75*5° Lowest Bar. 24*78 inches, 28th Minimum 36*5'', 15th Average Bar. 25*07 inches Average min. 48*7' 133 June, 1909. Lan-chou Fu. Max. go'o°, 26th and 29th Average max. 8i'i° Min. 43"0°, 13th Average min. 57*9° Alt. 5106/(5. Highest Bar. 25.06 inches, 12th Lowest Bar. 24.60 inches, 28th Average Bar. 24-87 inches July, 1909, 15 days. Maximum 87'8°, gth Average max. 82'0° Minimum 53"0°, 2nd Average min. 61*2° Lan-Chou Fu. Alt. 5106 ft. Highest Bar. 24*98 inches, ist Lowest Bar. 2470 inches, 9th Average Bar. 24*8 1 inches 154 PLATE 38 Sandstone strata at Suite Chou, Shensi. See pp. 2b and 123. Canon in Limestone i'ormatiun west of Fen-chou h'u, Shansi. ,/,./.7. APPENDIX I. (A). ITINERARIES. No. From To Distance IN Miles Remarks. I T'ai-yuan Fu Yii-lin Fu - 220 via Lin Hsien. 2 Yu-lin Fu - Yen-an Fu 176 via Sui-te Chou. 3 Yen-an Fu Fu Chou - 48 via Kan-ch'uan Hsien. 4 Fu Chou - Ch'ing-yang Fu - 112 via Ho-shui Hsien. 5 Ch'ing-yang Fu - Ku-yuan Chou - 129 via Chen-yiian Hsien. 6 Ku-yiian Chou - Ching-ningChou 58 via the Hai-tzii Pass. 7 Ching-ningChou Lan-chou Fu 154 via Hui-ning Hsien and An-ting Hsien. ITINERARY No. i. T'ai-yiian Fu to Yii-hn Fu (via Lin Hsien). Distance 220 miles ; 17 stages. Communication between rail-head at T'ai-yiian Fu and Yii-lin Fu, on the northern borders of Shensi. Generally speaking, the road is a fair mule track, with some steep gradients and for the most part stony. The Yellow River is crossed by ferry in Stage 13. From T'ai-yuan there is telegraphic communication with Peking via the Railway and S. to T'ung-kuan Hsien (Shensi). There is also a Head Post Office (Taiyiianfu).* • The place-name in bracket* is the spelling adopted by the Postal Serrice and does not agree with the "Wade" sy0, and there is a trestle bridge at the village. Stage 4. Fu Chou (11 miles). General Direction: S. A good cart-road continues down the left bank of the Lo Shui, passing the following villages :— Ts'ui-chia-kou (3^ miles), Yu-lin- ch'iao (5 miles). Ma-fang (7 miles), and Ts'a-feng (gj miles). At Ts'a-f6ng a road goes E. to Yi-ch'uan Hsien, up the valley of a small tributary of the Lo Shui. This road is in places too steep for carts. Fu Chou is a clean, prosperous town of about 500 families. I, 161 ITINERARY No. 4. Fu Chou to Ch'ing-yang Fu (via Ho-shui Hsien). Distance, 112 miles ; 7 stages. Good mule-road, except in stage i, where there are some steep, rough gradients. Stage I. Ch'ang-ts'un-yi (17 miles). General Direction: S.W. After skirting the right bank of the Lo Ho for about a mile, the road bends W. and becomes steep and rough. It ascends, winding round the hillside, with several steep descents to streamlets, until at 6 miles a plateau is reached. The road then descends the hillside, skirting the Ch'ing-shui Ho, a tributary of the Lo Ho, the gradients being steep in places. Ch'ang-ts'un-yi is a prosperous village, situated on the right bank of the Ch'ing-shui Ho. The following villages are passed en route: Sha-hsi-kou (2 miles), T'ai-ch'i (4 miles), T'u-ling (5 miles), Yang-chiian (7 miles), Shan-huo (9 miles), Yao-shang-wan (15 miles), and Hsin-ch'eng (16 miles). Stage 2. Hai-shui-ssu (17 miles). General Direction: N.W. The road ascends the right bank of the Ch'ing Shui and is in good condition. Passing Chih-fang-kou (2 miles) and T'ang-fang (4J miles), the road at the village of Tai-shih-tien (6 miles) crosses a small steep spur, and again descends to the river at Ch'ih-1^ (loj miles), and, crossing to the left bank, passes An-chia-shan (15 miles) and reaches Hai-shui-ssu, a village of about 250, surrounded by ruined walls. Stage 3. T'ai-pei-ch'^ng (20 miles). General Direction : W.N.W. A good mule-road skirts the left bank of the Ch'ing Shui through a well-wooded but sparsely-populated valley, which has suffered greatly from famine and is poorly cultivated. The following villages are passed : Hsiao-shan (2J miles), Ch'iu-shu-lin (4J miles), Wang-chia {5 miles), Ch'uan-chuang (7 miles), Chang-chia-wan {9 miles), Ma-chia (10 miles), and Ho-shang-yuan (12^ miles). T'ai-pei-ch'eng is a ruined village of 100 souls, on the right bank of the Ch'ing Shui, just below its junction with a small tributary— the Miao Ho. The boundary between Shensi and Kansu is crossed about a mile to the east of the village. Stage 4. Miao-ts'un (17 miles). General Direction : W. The road, which is in good condition, ascends the left bank of the Miao Ho through densely-wooded and poorly populated country. The 162 following villages are passed : Wang-mao-chuang (3 miles), Ning-huan- kou (4 miles), Yang-chia-pien (9 miles), Chang-chia-p'u (iij ipiles), T'u-p'o (13J miles), and Ta-6rh-wan (15 miles). Stages. Pai-chia-lao (II miles). General Direction : W. by S. The road ascends to the summit of the Miao Ho valley, and at 4 miles descends through a pass to the valley of the Ma-lien Ho and descends the right bank past Chien-shui-p'u (7 miles) and Chia-chia- kou (8 miles) to Pai-chia-lao. Stage 6. Ho-shui Hsien (12 miles). General Direction : S.W. A good mule-road descends the right bank of the Ma-lien Ho through sparsely-cultivated country to Ho-shui Hsien, passing the following villages: Ch'6n-chia-ho (i mile), Chang-chia-lao (3 miles), Hao-hsii-p'u (6 miles), Shih-ch'iao (8f miles), Chiu-chan (10 miles), and Chiian-chia (11 miles). Stage 7. Ch'ing-yang Fu (18 miles). General Direction : W. The road continues to ascend the right bank of the Ma-lien Ho, passing Pai-chia-kou (2 miles) and Hsii-chia-yiian (5 miles) and at Yao-tzu-t'ou (10 miles) crosses a small ridge and descends to the Huan Ho at M6ng-chia-ch'iao (13 miles). Thence it ascends the left bank of the Huan Ho past Kan-kuo-tien (14 miles) and Wu-li-p'u (17 miles) to Ch'ing-yang Fu, formerly a prosperous commercial town. There is a R.C. mission here. ITINERARY No. 5. Ch'ing-yang Fu to Ku-yuan Chou (via Chen-yuan Hsien). Distance, 129 miles; 8 stages. General Directions: W. by S. A good mule road with some steep gradients and in stage 2 a good cart-road. Stage I. Pai-ma-p'u (14J miles). General Direction : S.W. Crossing from the town to the right bank of the Huan Ho, the road ascends the left bank of a small tributary, passing Ch'i-li-p'u at 2i miles, and Shih-li-p'u at 4 miles. At 6 miles, the stream is left and the road ascends S.S.W. up a steep ridge passing Hsii-chia-yiian at 10 miles. At 11 miles, at San-chia-tien, the road reaches the summit of a loess plateau and turning W., runs easily to Pai-ma-p'u, a poor village of 25 families. 163 Stage 2. Hsi-f^ng-ch^n (20 miles). General Direction : W. for 8 miles then S. A good, much-used cart-road with easy gradients, passing through a prosperous and well-cultivated countrj'. The road ascends easily up the plateau, passing Miao-ling at 3 miles, Hsiao-lo-p'u at 4 miles, Hsia-chia at 5 miles, and Tang-chia at 7 miles, and at 8 miles turns S. and runs over a level plain, passing Yi-ma-kuan (9 miles), Ts'ao-fan-p'u (12 miles), Hua-chia-k'eng {14 miles), Li-chia (15 miles), and Yen-ssu- miao (18 miles). Hsi-feng-chen is a prosperous, walled village, peopled chiefly by immigrants from Ssiich'uan and Shensi. From the village, roads run N. to Huan Hsien, S. to FSng-hsiang Fu, and E. to Ning Chou and Pin Chou (Shensi). Stage 3. T'ai-pei-ch'6ng (15 miles). General Direction : W. A good cart-road runs W. along the plateau passing Ma-chia at 2J miles, and at 5 miles becomes an ordinary mule-track, descending, fairly steeply in places, to the valley of the P'u Ho and crossing by a foot- bridge to the right bank at Ts'ai-yiian (10 miles). Thence the road ascends fairly easily up a loess ridge to T'ai-pei-ch'6ng (70 families), passing en route through Yang-ts'un (11 miles), and Liu-chia-kou (13 miles). All the country passed through is well cultivated. Stage 4. Ch^n-yiian Hsien (14J miles). General Direction : W. by S. From camp the road ascends by a mule-track to a small stream — the Chiao-ko Ho — which is crossed at Pao-chia (3 miles). Thence the road ascends fairly easily up a plateau, passing T'ang-chia-wan (5 miles), and reaching the summit at Mao-chia-p'u (8 miles). After running level along the plateau for 3 miles, the road descends to the valley of the Chien-tsai Ho, on the left bank of which stands Chdn-yiian, a prosperous walled town, containing a Protestant Mission Station. Carpets are woven here on a small scale. Stage 5. Yang-shu-wan (19 miles). General Direction : W. by N. The road ascends the left bank of the Chien-tsai Ho, through fairly well-cultivated country, passing Wu-li-kou (3 miles) and Chiu-lnng (6 miles). Just after passing K'ai-pien (12 miles), the road bends S.W. and passing Chi-chia (13 miles) and Ch'6n-chia-p'ing (16 miles), reaches Yang-shu-wan (80 families). Stage 6. Liu-chia-hua (17I miles). General Direction : W. A good mule-road continues to ascend the left bank of the Chien-tsai 164 Ho, with considerable windings. The country is well cultivated, and the following villages are passed en route : — Wang-chia-p'ing (3 miles), Han-chia-chai (5 miles), Yii-chia-kou (9 miles), J6n-chia-wan (12 miles), and Wang-chia-wan (16 miles). Stage 7. j6n-sa-ho (15 miles). General Direction : W. by N. A good mule-road continues to skirt the left bank of the Chien-tsai Ho for ij miles, and then strikes W. up the valley of the Hsien Ho, a small tributary. Many small villages are passed en route, including : — Kao-chia-wa (4 miles), Ta-shih-kou (7 miles), Ts'ao-chia-p'o (10 miles), and Huang-chia (13 miles). J6n-sa-ho contains about 25 families. Stage 8. Ku-yiian Chou (13J miles). General Direction : N.W. A good mule-road still ascends the left bank of the Chien-tsai Ho to the head of the valley at 8 miles, and, traversing the Hua-mao Pass, descends the valley of a small tributary of the Ku-yiian Ho, reaching the main river a mile below Ku-yiian Chou. The following villages are passed: — Liu-chia-wa (2 miles), Ta-ho-tien (3 miles), Liu-chia-yao (6 miles), Wang-chia-hsin (7 miles), and Ching-shih-hsiang (12 miles). Ku-yiian Chou is a prosperous commercial town of about 5000 inhabitants. There is a telegraph office here, and lines run N. to Ning- hsia Fu, S.E. to Hsi-an Fu, with offices en route at P'ing-hang Fu and Chin Chou, and W. to Lan-chou Fu. There is also a Postal Agency (Kuyiian). ITINERARY No. 6. Ku-yiian Chou to Ching-ning Chou (via the Hai-tzii Pass). Distance, 58 miles ; 3 stages. A good cart-road throughout with easy gradients. The telegraph line from Ku-yiian to Lan-chou follows this road. Stage I. Hsiao-ch'6ng (17 miles). General Direction : S.W. A good mule-road, fit for carts, ascends S.W. easily over a plain, passing Yang-fang (3 miles) and Mao-chia-lao (5 miles), and reaching the edge of the plain at K'ou-chia (8 miles) crosses a small ridge and descends to the valley of a streamlet, up which it ascends fairly easily in a S. direction. Passing Hai-tzii-ho (11 miles), and Ta-wa-tien (14 miles), the road just beyond the latter village traverses the Hai-tziS Pass, 1700 feet above Ku-yiian, penetrating the Liu-p'an Shan range at 165 this point. Thence it descends to a tributary of the Ku Shui and passes through Sung-chia-\va {15 miles) to Hsiao-ch'eng. Stage 2. Ch'ang-t'ai-p'u (17^ miles). General Direction : W. A good mule-road, practicable for carts, continues to descend the valley, which is grassy and well-cultivated, passing Ch'ang-yi-p'u at 3 miles. Here it bends W., and skirting the right bank of the stream, past Hsi-lien-p'u (5 miles), Ch'i-chia (8 miles), and Ma-lien (13 miles), to Ch'ang-t'ai-p'u, a small walled village on the left bank of the Ku Shui. The village contains about 30 families and a small military post. Stage 3. Ching-ning Chou (23 miles). General Direction : S. by W. A good level cart-road descends the Ku Shui valley, which is well- cultivated (wheat chiefly) and dotted with prosperous villages, mostly inhabited by Mahommedans. Passing Wang-chia-p'u at 7 miles, and Shan-chia at 10 miles, the road at ni miles crosses to the right bank, and traversing Kao-chia-ch'eng (12 miles), T'uan-chuang (14 miles), and Hsia-p'u (20 miles), reaches Ching-ning Chou, a prosperous town of about 5000 inhabitants. ITINERARY No. 7. Ching-ning Chou to Lan-chou Fu (via Hui-ning Hsien and An-ting Hsien). Distance, 154 miles; 11 stages. A good mule-road, but rough in places. The telegraph line from Ku-yiian to Lan-chou follows this road. Stage I. Chieh-shih-p'u (13 miles). General Direction : W.N.W. A rough mule-road with steep gradients in the first six miles. From Ching-ning the road goes N., skirting the left bank of a tributary of the Ku Shui, and at zi miles crosses to the right bank and ascends a steep spur to the summit at Teng-chia-p'u (3^ miles). Crossing a narrow pass, the road then descends steeply to the Hei-lung Ho, which is reached at the village of Sung-chia-kou (6 miles). The road now ascends the left bank of the stream, passing Ch'i-li-p'u at 8 miles, and Hsia-chia-p'u at 10 miles. Stage 2. Ch'ing-chia-yi (11 miles). General Direction : N.W. A rough mule-track continues to ascend the left bank of the Hei- lung Ho, the loess hills bounding the valley being fairly well cultivated. At 4 miles the road branches N.W. up the valley of a small tributary, 166 passing Kuan-chih-hsiang (5 miles), Han-chia (6 miles), and Wu-li- ch'iao (9 miles). Ch'ing-chia-yi is a small village in bad repair, but contains numerous inns. Stage 3. Kao-chuang (13 miles). General Direction : W. A rough mule-track, much cut up in places, ascends to the head of the valley, passing Pai-chia-chi at 2 miles, and reaching the summit at the village of Ta-shan-ch'uan at 4 miles. Traversing a pass in the mountain-range, the road descends into a narrow valley, flanked by loess hills, and skirts the stream, which it crosses and re-crosses several times. T'ai-p'ing-chen is passed at 7 miles, T'ai-p'ing-tien at 8 miles, and Man-yang-chuang at 9 miles. Kao-chuang is a fair-sized walled village. Stage 4. Hui-ning Hsien (13 miles). General Direction : W. The road continues to descend the valley, which now opens out, and passing Wu-li-p'u (3 miles), Chang-ts'un-p'u (5 miles), San-li-p'u (6 miles), and W6n-chia-chuang (7 miles), reaches Hui-ning Hsien, a busy town on the right bank of the Lan Ho, with one long main street containing many shops. There is a Postal Agency here (Hweining). Stage 5. Hsi-kung-yi (15J miles). General Direction : W. by S. A fair cart-road, but rough in places. Descending the valley of the Lan Ho in a N.W. direction, the road at 2^ miles crosses to the left bank and passes Yang-chia-ts'ai (3 miles), Chang-chia-ho (4 miles), and Tung-erh (5 miles). At Chi-erh-ts'ai (6 miles) the road reaches the junction of the Lan Ho with a tributary stream, and, skirting a small fort, turns S.W. up the valley of the tributary and skirts the left bank of the stream, which is bounded by high loess cliffs. The road passes Ts'ao-chia-p'u (7 miles), Ts'ao-chia-ho-p'ang (9 miles), Hsia- chia-ying (11 miles), and Liang-chia-hua (14 miles), and reaches Hsi-kung-yi, a village of about 70 families, surrounded by a ruined wall. Stage 6. An-ting Hsien (14 miles). General Direction : W.S.W. A good mule-road ascends the valley, passing Ma-chia {2 miles), and thence begins to ascend the loess slopes of the Ching-liang Shan, passing Shan-t'ou-shang at 4 miles and Ching-liang-shan at 9 miles. The summit of the pass is reached at Ssu-fang-p'u (11 miles), and the road then winds easily down the hillside, passing Ch'en-chia-chuang (iij miles) and Chia-ho-kou (15 miles). An-ting Hsien is a busy town 167 of about 3000 inhabitants, on the left bank of the An-ting Ho. There is a telegraph office here and a Postal Agency (Anting Kan). Stage 7. Ch'eng-k'ou-yi (16J miles). General Direction : N.N.W. Crossing by a bridge to the right bank of the An-ting Ho, a good level mule-road descends the river northwards, passing Wu-li-p'u (2 miles), Shih-pa-li-p'u (4 miles), and several other prosperous villages. At 12 miles the road leaves the main stream and strikes W. up a small tributary, passing Ch'a-k'ou (13 miles), and Liao-chia-p'ing (15^ miles), Ch'^ng-k'ou-yi has a population of about 200 and an official rest-house, but the inns are poor. Stage 8. Kan-tsao-tien (14 miles). General Direction : N.W. The road, which is rough in places, ascends the stream for i^ miles, and then strikes N.W. up the hillside for 4 miles, passing Tuan-chia-yao (2 miles), Fa-niu-p'o (3 J miles), Chin-chia-chuan (5 miles), and Hsien- tzu-shang (7 miles). Just beyond the last-named, it traverses a low pass (8050 ft.), and runs level along the ridge to a mile beyond Ta-wan- lou (8 miles), where it begins to descend to the well-cultivated valley of a tributary of the Yellow River, and passing Pai-t'u-yao at ii|^ miles, reaches Kan-tsao-tien, a prosperous village on the left bank of the stream, containing many inns, and enjoying a considerable trade with Lan-chou Fu. Stage 9. Ta'i-ya-p'u (16 miles). General Direction : N.N.W. A good mule-road continues to descend the left bank of the stream, through a well-cultivated valley, passing Shan-tung-ying at li miles, and Ch'ing-shui-yi at 6i miles. At Hsu-chia-t'ai (10 miles) a road goes S.W. to Chin Hsien, 8 miles distant, via Shuang-tien. The route continues to descend the left bank, crossing a small spur and tributary at n miles, and passing Hsia-kuan-ying at 15 miles, crosses to the right bank of the stream at T'ai-ya-p'u. Stage ID. Sang-yiian (15 miles). General Direction : N.W. A good mule-road continues to descend the right bank of the stream, passing Yueh-chia-lao at 4 J miles, and Chin-chia-yai at 6 miles, and crossing to the left bank of the stream at 8J miles. Passing Hsiao-shui-tzu at 13 miles, the road at 14 miles reaches the Yellow River where it joins a route coming in from the N.E. from Ching-yiian Hsien. The road now skirts the right bank of the river to the village. 168 Stage II. Lan-chou Fu (lo miles). General Direction : W. The road continues to ascend the right bank of the Yellow River, passing Tung-kuang at 5 miles, and K'uei-hsing-t'un at 6 miles, and crosses a sandy, poorly-cultivated plain to the town. Lan-chou Fu is the capital of Kansu, and the seat of the Viceroy of Shenkan. It has a population of about half-a-million. It is a busy commercial centre, and a considerable amount of cloth is manufactured in the neighbourhood. There is a telegraph office at Lan-chou, and communication eastwards with Hsi-an Fu, via Ku-yuan Chou, and north-westwards with Kuldja and Kashgar, via Liang-chou Fu, Yung- chang Hsien, Kan-chou Fu, Kao-t'ai Hsien, Su Chou, and An-hsi Chou, at all of which towns there are telegraph offices. There is also a Branch Post Office (Lanchowfu). The Yellow River is crossed N. the town by an iron bridge. 169 APPENDIX I (B). TABLE OF LATITUDES AND LONGITUDES. Place. SHANSI— T'ai-sman Fu . . Yiin-t'ing Shan Lin Hsien . . . . Ch'eng-wu Miao (In Ch'ing-ting Shan Range) Fen-chou Fu SHENSI— Yii-lin Fu Sui-te Chou Yen-an Fu . . . . Hsi-an Fu KANSU— Ch'ing-yang Fu Ku-jriian Chou Ching-ning Chou Lan-chou Fu . . Observation Point. (Altitude in ft.) S. East Gate (2600) . . Camp at foot of (6950) East Gate (3269) (7201 of Peak to N) . . East Gate S. Gate (3170) S. Gate (2330) S. Gate (2769) Ku-lu (Drum Tower) East Gate (3080) .... S. Gate (6610) West Gate (6700) S. Gate of S. Suburb . . (5106) Latitude N. By theodolite observations. Longitude E. 37 1 51 363 112 33 5573 37 54 00 III 33 48 37 57 32 110 58 51 38 7 31 no 50 16 37 15 42 III 48 2 38 16 54 109 44 59 37 29 51 no 13 49 36 35 33 109 26 49 34 15 5 108 53 7 35 59 40 107 45 56 36 00 23 106 6 28 35 31 55 105 28 41 36 3 6 103 40 54 Long, obtained by Telegraph with Tientsin Three chronometers with T'ai-yiian Fu *f *i ff If Three chronometers with T'ai-yiian Fu and Yen-an Fu Occultation Three chronometers with Yen-an Fu Occultation 170 APPENDIX II. MAMMALS COLLECTED IN SHANSI, SHENSI AND KANSU — BY A. DE C. SOWERBY. •THE Mammals collected during the expedition, and presented by Mr. Clark to the United States National Museum, number 220 specimens. Follow- ing are details of the 33 species represented, besides the number, sex and locality of each specimen. A series of these, representing all the species taken, was brought to London in the summer of igio by Mr. Gerrit S. Miller, in whose company I compared them with the Chinese material in the British Museum. Complete facilities for this work were courteously granted by Mr. Oldfield Thomas, F.R.S., Curator of Mammals at South Kensington. The new forms which the collection contained have already been described by Mr. Miller in two papers issued August, 1910 and February, 1911. The first of these is entitled " A New Carnivore from China " (from the proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. .xxxviii., pages 385-386), and it deals with the new species Vormela ncgans from the Ordos Desert. The second paper is entitled " Four New Chinese Mammals " (from the Proceedings of the Biological Society, Washington, vol. xxiv., pages 53-55). This deals with the four new species and sub-species Eptesicus serotinus pallens, Microtus pullus, Allactaga mongolica longior, and Ocholona annectens, from Shansi and Kansu. The descriptions are embodied in this report. The determinations and names of the other species dealt with in this paper have been kindly verified and revised for me by Mr. Miller. The new species or subspecies are underlined. I. Eptesicus serotinus pallens, Miller. igii. Proc. Biol. Soc, Washington, xxiv., page 58. 3 244. 18 miles east of Ku-yiian Chou, Kansu. Alt. 530 ft. August 1st, 1909. nd V. 186 In the Araneae, five species — 1. Lycosa clarki. 2. Lycosa ordosa. 3. Evippa douglasi. 4. Pardosa shansia. 5. Pardosa sowerbyi. In the Siphonaptera, three species — 1. Ceratophyllus subcEecatus. 2. Neopsylla anoma. 3. Vermipsylla dorcadia. In the case of the two new species of Acari, Mr. Hirst has been unable to pubhsh descriptions, but he hopes to do so later. The chief interest attached to the collection is the locality in which it was made. No previous collections have been made in the same district. Most of the species are representative of very widely distributed genera. On the return journey from Lan-chou Fu to T'ai-yuan Fu, Mr. Grant and I made a collection of butterflies and dragonflies. This was forwarded, with the mammals, to the Smithsonian Institution. A description of this journey and the country where these insects were most prevalent appears in another chapter so it need take up no space here. At the end of the present chapter appears a list of the butterflies. I received no report on the collection from the Smithsonian Institution, and have been forced to make up the list myself, trusting largely to memory, and to the coloured plates and descriptions in Leech's " Butterflies of China." In northern Shensi where the climate is dry and vegetation scarce, butterflies and dragonflies are comparatively rare, while scarcely any were seen west of Ching-ning Chou in Kansu. In the mountains of Shansi butterflies are plentiful and the marshes and rivers of the plains in the same province support many species of dragonflies. Nowhere however, on the line of march, were either of these orders seen in such quantities as in the loess valleys of eastern Kansu and central Shensi. Whether any of the species collected in these localities are new I cannot say. Specimens of a fresh water crab were obtained by me in the mountain streams south of Hsi-an Fu in Shensi and also near T'ai-pei-ch'eng in eastern Kansu. They belong to the genus Potamon. 187 List of Insects, etc.. collected in N. China By Captain H. E. M. Douglas, V.C, D.S.O., R.A.M.C. DiPTERA. By E. E. Austen, F.E.S. Fam. Mycetophilidae (Fungus Midges). Sciophila sp. incert. (a fragment). Yun-t'ing Shan : in open ground 6,974 ft., 5-X-igo8. Fam. Bibionidae. Bibio sp. incert. {Nea.T B. johannis h.) i ? Yiin-t'ing Shan : in village 6,974 ft., 5-X-1908. Fam. Chironomidae (Midges). Chironomus sp incert. i J T'ai-yiian : in grass, near pond (no date mentioned). Fam. Culicidae (Mosquitoes). Culex fatigms Wied i 2 T'ai-yiian Fu : in Chinese courtyard, 9-VIII-1908. Grabhamia sp. incert. i J 6 $ J T'ai-yiian : feeding on horse, 28, 29-VIII-1908 ; in grass, near pond, 30-VIII-1908. Some 9 or 10 other mosquitoes, including i Anopheles {sensu stricto) ■ were brought back, but the condition of these specimens is such as to render definite determination impossible. Fam. Stratiomyidae. Stratiomys sp. incert. 2 larvae. Yii-lin Fu : 14-XI-1908. The larvae of species belonging to the genus Stratiomys are aquatic. Fam. Asilidae (Robber-flies). Gems et sp. incert. allied to Cyrtopogon. Lw. i 3 Kan-ts'ao-kou : caught in open ground, 4,226 ft., 20-X-igo8. Fam. Syrphidae (Hover-flies, etc.). Catabomba pyrastri L. i 2 Yii-lin Fu : on sand, 3,169 ft., 11-XI-1908. A common and very widely distributed palaearctic hover-fly, which also occurs in N. America. Sphaerophoria sp. incert. 2 V are short, the femoral joint curved inwards and widening anteriorly, the tibial joint is as long as the patellar. The Abdomen is oval and is thickly covered with short downlying hair, the Spinnerets are two jointed and of moderate length. The male and female are coloured alike. The measurements in millimetres are as follows: — Long. Broad. 3 4 H Fern. Pat. Legs I I 2j 2 3 Palpi i li A few specimens from Yii-lin Fu on the borders of the Ordos desert. Lycosa, ordosa sp. n. The Cephalothorax is dark yellow brown, black on the eye area, thickly covered with downlying white hair on the slightly lighter median stripe, reddish on the side slopes, and white again on the marginal border. The Mandibles are brighter yellow brown with upstanding white bristles on the basal half, brown bristles on the lower half, and black fangs. The Lip is dark yellow brown, paler at the front margin, the Maxillae brighter yellow, both with long upstanding hairs and bristles. The Sternum is black brown, with a short wedge shaped longitudinal, yellow patch in front, and long upstanding bristly hairs. Legs bright orange, thickly covered with downlying white hair, grey rings on the femoral joints and brown spines. The Abdomen both on upper and under surfaces is darkish yellow thickly covered with flat white pointed hairs. The Spinnerets rather darker yellow brown. The Cephalothorax is convex rounded at the sides square in front with a short narrow longitudinal fovea at the top of the rear slope. The front row of Eyes are slightly procurved, the median larger than the side — rather more than half their diameter apart, and less than half of the same from the laterals. The Clypeus is three fourths the diameter of the front median and they are the same distance from the eyes of the second row. These are nearly twice the diameter of the front median and slightly more than their own diameter 210 apart. The eyes of the rear row are the same distance away, a little smaller and twice as far apart as their distance from the second row. The Mandibles are kneed at the base, have stout moderately long fangs, and two equal sized teeth on the inner side of the falx sheath. The Lip is as broad as it is long, hollowed in front, and half as long as the Maxillae which are upright, broad in front, and have a few upstanding hairs on the outer side. The Sternmn is broad, truncate in front and pointed at the rear, where the coxae are contiguous. The Legs are moderately thick at the base, tapering to the tarsal joint, the femora bent to the side of the body, no scopula but numerous upstanding bristles on the tarsi of III. and IV., a scopula on tarsus I. and II., and spines on all legs. There are two spines above on the femur of all legs, two single and two pairs above on tibia III. and IV., one inside the patella of III. and IV. The A bdomen is oval, the Spinnerets two jointed, the first cylindrical the second hemispherical. Measurements in millimetres as follows : — Broad. 2^ (i| in front). rib. Metat. & Tars. Legs I I iJ 3i 3i -= "i 3 3i = II 2i 3 -= 9i 4 5J = M\ Palpi I ij ij li = 4l Three males not quite adult and several females doubtfully so from Yii-lin Fu, N. Shensi. Group Pardoseae, Genus Pardosa. P. shansia sp. n. The Cephalothorax is black brown with a grey haired marginal stripe, a median grey longitudinal stripe on the thoracic part only, and grey haired side stripes radiating from the thoracic fovea. The Mandibles are black brown with reddish hairs on the basal half, dark brown on the anterior, fangs black. The 211 Long Ceph. 3i Abd. 4 Mand. If Coxae. Tr. & Fem. Pat I I il 2 I 3i 3 I 3 4 li 4 I ij Lip and Maxillae are black brown. The Sternum and inner part of the Coxae intensely black with long dark brown hairs, but at the anterior end of the Coxae pale yellow grey hair. The Abdomen is without pattern above, the skin dark brown, the hairs sandy yellow. Underneath, a broad black area extends from the epigyne to just in front of the spinnerets. The sides and rear are yellowish grey. The Legs and Palpi have the femoral joint red brown with yellowish grey hair, the other joints black brown with the same coloured hair over the main portions, but a black haired spot on the inside of the patella, at the anterior end underneath the tibia, and a black bare streak along the inner side of the Metatarsus. The Scopula on the Tarsus and Metatarsus of the front two pairs is grey, that on the rear tarsi black, spines black. The Cephahihorax, 2mm. longer than broad, is convex, rounded at the sides, the cephalic part raised. At the Clypeus it is nearly two thirds the greatest breadth of the thoracic part but only half that width at the upper eye space which is the same height above the clypeus margin. The front row of Eyes is straight, the median larger than the side, half their diameter from one another and rather more from the second row pair, slightly less from the laterals. The Clypeus is the breadth of a front median eye. The diameter of the eyes of the second row is equal to the breadth of one of the front median eyes together with its distance from its lateral. They are not quite their diameter apart, and the whole row is shorter than the front row. They are their diameter distant from the third row pair, which are oval when viewed from above, as broad as the front median, and 3J times that distance apart. The Mandibles are stout and broad, rather flat at the base and clothed with long shaggy bristly hair. The fangs are stout and blunt. Low down on the inner margin of the falx sheath are three large blunt equal size teeth, and on the outer margin one smaller and then one larger also low down. The Lip is rather cup shaped, broader than long, hollowed in front and less than half the height of the Maxillae which are upright, convex, rounded at the upper and outer margins and thickly covered with long stout bristles. The Sternum is a broad shield shape straight in front pointed at the rear where the Coxae are close together ; it is thickly covered with long upstanding bristly hair. The Legs are moderately long and stout, they are thickly covered with very bristly hair, more especially on the underside of the femora. There are thick scopulae on the tarsi and metatarsi of the front two pairs, and on the tarsi only of the rear two pairs. There are no spines on the upper side of any of the tibial joints, but short stout ones at the side edge. 212 The Abdomen is oval and convex, fairly thickly covered with short smooth downlying hair on the upper side, thick and coarser at the sides and underneath. The Spinnerets are two jointed, the lower joint broadly cylindrical the upper hemispherical. The Epigyne is roughly triangular the upper edge straight with a median ridge descending therefrom into a sloping hollow. The measurements in millimeters are as follows : — Long. Broad. N, Ceph. II 9 (2itO 5iin front). Abd. 14 lO Mand. 5 Coxae. Tr. & Fern. Pat. & Tib. Metat . & Tar. • 5J 4i -egs I 3* 8* 8i 10 = 30i 2 3i 8 8 9* = 29 3 3^ 8 7 9 = 27i 4 3^ lO ^ 12* = 34i ^alpi 2 5 4i 3 — I4i (Pat. shorter than Tib lia). One female from the mountainous forest country of Yiin-t' ing Shan, China. Captain Douglas, V'.C. Pardosa, sowerbyi sp. n. On the Cephalothorax is a red brown median stripe from the rear row of eyes to the rear and a similarly coloured marginal stripe, both with white downlying hair ; between these on the sides it is black brown with dark brown hair on the upper part, on the lower margin reddish, and the same at the sides of the eye space. The eye space itself is black brown. The Mandibles are red brown with short greyish yellow bristles at the base and outer margin, and longer upstanding brown hair on the remainder, the fangs are red at the base, darker at the point, but nearly black in the middle. Lip and Maxillae are orange with paler edging. Sternum rich yellow brown at the sides with a paler longitudinal median stripe thickly clothed with white, and a few brown bristly hairs. The Co.xae and Femora underneath are bright orange with white hair and grey spines ; the upper sides of the legs are dark brown with brown and white hairs. There is a grey Scopula on the tarsi and lower end of the metatarsi of the front two pairs, and brown hairs on the two rear pairs. The Abdomen is a uniform red brown above with downlying short reddish yellow hair, black brown at the sides, underneath pale 213 yellow-brown, thickly covered with downlying white hair interspersed with long upstanding brown hair. The spinnerets are brown with yellow tips. The Cephcilothorax is strongly convex, straight in front and straight along the median line ; from the second row of eyes to the rear slope there is a long deep fovea. The Eyes of the front row are slightly procurved, the median only a Httle larger than the side, they are about their diameter apart, and the row is shorter than the second row. The Clypeus is a little broader than the front median eyes, but the latter are nearly twice their diameter from the second row. The latter are more than one and a half times their diameter apart, and the same distance from the third row of eyes, which are two-thirds as broad as those of the second, and five times their diameter apart. The Mandibles are long and stout, but not much curved at the base. There are two very large teeth on the inner margin of the falx sheath. The Lip is straight but slightly hollowed in front, rounded at the sides, not quite as long as broad, and a little less than half the length of the Maxillae. The Sternum is ovate, rather pointed at the rear where the rear Coxae are contiguous. The Legs are fairly long and powerful, with very long stout spines above on Metatarsus iii. and iv., and a single long spine on the inside of the patella of same, and two above on the femur. There is a scopula on the Tarsus and lower end of the Metatarsus of the front two pairs, but none on the rear pairs. The claws are strong and well pectinated. The Abdomen is oval, only slightly rounded in front. The Spinnerets cylindrical, two jointed, the second joints being apparently protusible. The measurements in millimetres are as follows : — Female. Male. Long. Broad. Long. Broad. Legs Ceph. Al 3 (2 : in front). Ceph. 3 2j (I* in front) Abd. 5J 3 Abd. 6i 3 Mand. 2 Fema le. Mand. ij Coxae. Tr. & Fem. Pat, . & Tib. Metat. & Tar. 3 I li 4 4 4J '.- 13* 2 n 3i 3i 4 = I2i 3 I 3i 3 4 = "i 4 li 4i 4 4,2 6 = 15^ >i \ ij li I --- 4i Palpi 2M Male (not quite adult). Coxae. Tr. & Fern. Pat. & Tib. Metat. & Tar. Legs I li 3I 3j 4 = 12J 21 3 3. 3* = loj 31 3 3 3* = loi 4 li 5 4i '^'i = 16J Palpi I li ij ij = 4| I Male, I Female and three quite small from YUn-t'ing Shan, Shansi, N. China. I have named them after Mr. A. de C. Sowerby. Genus Evippa, Simon. E. DOUGLASI NOV. SP. Female. — The cephalic part of the Cephalothorax is black brown with flat downlying white or reddish hairs. The thoracic part is dark yellow brown in the median area, with two broad black patches reaching therefrom to the margin, and a thin paler streak quite at the margin, the whole covered with thick downlying reddish white hair. The Mandibles are dark yellow brown with long white bristly hair on the upper half, nearly smooth with long brown bristles on the lower, the fangs reddish yellow. The Lip and Maxillae have broad pale yellow margins, the outer and lower parts yellow brown, with thin upstanding brown hair. The Sternum is deep chocolate brown with downlying flat white hair. The Legs and Palpi are bright yellow, with a black streak on the inner side of the femur and small black spots on the other joints, on the upper surface are black spots in transverse bars. The Abdomen on the upper side is pale greyish yellow, thickly mottled with black spots, a black median scolloped pattern pointed at the rear end reaches from near the base to half-way down, at the sides of the last scollop are two pairs of black spots, and below them two pairs of transverse bars made up of smaller spots. It is thickly covered with short thick hair white and reddish white. The sides and underneath are yellow mottled with black spots, short thick downlying white hairs and upstanding brown bristles. The cephalic part of the Cephalothorax, which is square in front and straight at the sides, rises abruptly from the thoracic at an angle of 45 degrees and is separated therefrom by a deep and broad crescentic fovea. The thoracic part is convex and rounded at the sides with a deep longitudinal fovea running from the junction with the cephalic to the rear slope. The hairs are flat and wedge shaped. The front row of Eyes is procurved, the 215 median pair, their diameter apart are one and a half times the diameter of the laterals, from which they are distant the diameter of the latter. The second row pair are twice the diameter of the front median, one and a half diameters apart, they are twice their diameter from the rear pair, which are slightly smaller and four times their own diameter apart. The Clypeus is rather wider than the front median eyes. The Mandibles are longer than the breadth of the front margin of the Cephalothorax, kneed at the base and thickly covered on that portion with long upstanding thick bristly hair, the lower part is narrower and nearly smooth. On the inner margin of the falx sheath are two teeth. The Lip is nearly twice as broad as long, hollowed in front and with a rather wide sloping front margin. The Maxillae are upright, broad, rather square at the top, and the palpal trochanters rather remarkably long. The Sternum is broadly ovate, straight in front and pointed at the rear. It is thinly clothed with flat plumose bristles. The Abdomen is ovate, truncate in front, the Spinnerets remarkably short, conical, and flat at the anterior end. The Legs and Palpi are fine and only moderately long. The distal end of the tarsal joint has a sloping troncature, the superior claws being long and only slightly curved, the outer one has two or three short pectinations right at the base ; a slight compression of the sides, and a ring of bristles therefrom, conveys the impression of an onychium, which, however, seems to me to be false. Several not quite adult males are of the same colouration as the females. The measurement in millimetres are as follows : — Long. E >road. Ceph. i*)3i 3 (ij in front). Abd. 2 3 Mand. 2 Coxae. Tr. & Fern. Pat. & Tib. Metat. & Tar. Legs I li 3l 3i 4 = 121 2 li 3i 3l 3l = I2i 3 li ih 3J 3J = III 4 li 4i 4i 6 = i6J Palpi i 2 2 il -" 6 These : specimens came from Yii-lin Fu, N. Shensi, on the border of the Ordos desert. 216 This species is somewhat near Rev. O. P. Cambridge's E. benevola from Yarkand (Yarkand 2nd Mission, Pt. viii., Arach p. 95). He does not mention the size of his specimen, but this would appear to differ from it in the darker colour of the whole of the pars cephalica, the lighter median area not passing thereto, the clypeus not so broad as twice the front median eyes, paler lip and darker sternum. There are no cretaceous white spots on the abdomen, the median longitudinal marking only reaches half way, and there is no longitudinal band or other marking on the underside. I have named it after Capt. Douglas, V.C., D.S.O., R.A.M.C., the collector of all the specimens brought home. 217 J'f. EXPLANATION OF ABOVE DIAGRAMS. 1. Araneut ? «p. X 2 2 la, profile, nat, size. 2. Pardosa shansia, tp. n. nat. >ize. 9 2a, eyes. 2b, epigyne. 2c, lip and maxillae. 3. Diaea ' subdola. Cambr. 9x2. 3a, eyes. 3b, leg of 4lh pair (enlarged). 4. Pardosa sowerbyi, sp. n. ? nat. size. 4a, eyes. 4b, lip and maxillae. 4c, teeth on inner margin of falx sheath. 5. Drassodes ? lapsus. Cambr. ? X 2. 5a, eyes. 5b, epigyne. 5c, lip and maxillae. 6. Lycosa clarki, sp. n. 9 X 2. 6a, eyes. 6b. epigyne. 7. Lycosa ordosa. sp. n. 9x2. 7a, eyes. 7b, lip and maxillae. 8. Evippa douglasi. sp. n. 9x2. 8a, eyes. 8b, profile. 8c, lip and maxillae. 8d. tarsal claws. NOTE. — The original drawing of this plate having been reduced in size by Jrd linear, the sizes shown herein must be increased by one-half, to agree with above explanation. 218 APPENDIX VI. DIARY OF METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS MADE ON EXPEDITION IN NORTH CHINA IN I908 AND IQCg. PLACE. feet. tTai-yiian Fu 2600 (Shansi) Chao-chuang T'ai-yiian Fu Chao-chuang Chao-chuaug T ai-yiiau Ku Chao-chuang Tai-)'uan Fu Chao-chuang T'ai-yiian Fu Chao-chuang 3000 2600 3000 3000 2600 3000 2600 3000 2600 3000 Tai-yuan Fu Chao-chuang ... 2600 ... 3000 Dale. 1008 May 16 17 18 19 20 21 21 22 23 24 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 30 31 Jnne 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 7 8 9 9 10 10 11 11 12 13 14 16 * Time of Observation. V J: a a iDcbcs. 2.00p.m 12.00p.ni 4.00p.m U.OOp.m 26 87 27 04 2692 2695 27 03 2705 26 86 26 84 27 05 2705 26 82 .= E OF. 206 5 207 0 2073 207 1 2070 2068 207 1 2072 26-82 ... 2068 26 86 ... 26 78 ; 206 6 26 83 206'8 26 81 2069 2702 ■ ... 2683 2070 Temperature. Dry Bulb. OF. 844 87 0 769 72 0 74 0 830 852 560 78 1 Wet Bulb. OF. 600 652 652 62- 1 600 595 632 538 Max. OF. 620 820 770 914 j 890 I 518' 800 85 I 84 0 84-4 820 75 0 ' 650 760 82 7 880 900 927 920 788 840 782 857 89 1 982 864 748 860 900 920 95 3 89 7 930 930 920 930 930 98 0 87'4 870 i930 94- 1 920 833 Min. OF. 580 48'2 54- 1 622 62 1 645 59-4 53 1 58 6 I 593' 630 533 484 87 0 47 0 430 483 55-6 56 8 54 0 491 1 429 480 482 47 3 587 4"5-8 51-6 538 480 520 REMARKS. Rain and thunder at 6.00 p.m. Rain at 11.00 p.m. Thunderstorm at 5.00 p.m. Storm at 5.00 p.m. 4.00 p.m. Heavy gust of wind ; over in J hour, accompanied by dust. 7.00 a.m. Fresh wind from S.W, 11.00 a.m. Strong wind and dust from N.W. 5.00 p.m. Wind fell to fresh. 7.00 a.m. Very light wind from N.W., no clouds. 12 noon. Calm, clear sky. 1.00 p.m. Light wind from N.W. Cirro-stratus clouds, 7.00 p.m. no wind. 7.00a.m. Light N.E. wind, few cumulus clouds. 2.00 p.m. same. 3.40 p.m. Few drops rain. 7.00a.m. Light breeze N. K , cirrus clouds. 11.00 a.m. Calm. 1.00 p.m. Very light N.E. wind, cirrus clouds. 8.00 p.m. Cumulus clouds, no wind. 7.00 a.m. Light N.t;. wind, sky over- cast, cumulus clouds. 11.00 a.m. few drops rain. 8.00 p.m. Sky still over- cast. * In hours and minutes after midnight (am), or after noon (p.m.). t Latitude 37° 51' 36" N., Longitude 112° 33' 56" E. 219 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— co«/;>iw«a*. PLACE. T'ai-yiian Fu Chao-chuang Tai-yuan Ku Chao-chuang Tou-fu-ssa Station H. Tou-fu-ssa Station H. Tou-fu-ssfl << Date. feet. 1908 2600 June 16 I 3000 17 17 18 19 19 20 21 22 22 ... 23 23 23 2600 23 3000 24 ... 24 24 ... 25 25 25 26 27 4527 27 28 28 28 28 4984 28 4527 29 ... 29 4984 29 4527 30 Time of Observation. 10.00 a m 12 night 12 noon 9.00 am n.OOp.m 8.00 a. m 6.00 am 7.00 a.m. 8.00p.m. 7.00 a.m. 8.00 a.m. noon 11.00 a.m. 1.00p.m. 8.00p.m. 6.00 am 3.00p.m. midnight S.OOa.m, 12.30p.m 4.00p.m 9.00 pm lO.OOp.m S.OOa.m 3.00 p.m, 6.00 a.m. ^2 inches. 26 85 26'81 2675 26 85 2708 2700 2681 26 90 2676 26 70 26 67 2668 26 86 25 58 25-53 2551 25 11 25 46 2537 25 05 2542 Tcmperatnre. ° F. 2067 2066 2069 2070 2072 2070 206 7 206'8 206 4 206 3 206 2 206 3 206 5 206 5 206 7 204 1 204 I 204 1 2034 Dry Bulb. 74 5 653 626 87 0 720 744 71-6 640 811 795 787 768 85 3 89 7 70 1 690 720 685 882 650 755 726 653 750 750 720 680 706 820 707 62'4 Wet Bulb. 61 3 587 729 69 8 65.0 635 620 676 69 667 620 683 64 9 64 4 65 0 Max. OF. 797 920 963 747 876 859 924 915 91 0 84 0 75 7 760 Min. OF. 580 51 3 533 608 78 3 576 600 589 64-4 586 537 62 1 620 62 7 596 RKMARKS. 7.00 a.m. Very dull, and few drops rain. Calm. Gentle shower on and off all day Cleared up at 9.00 p.m. S.OOa.m Calm, clear. Noon LightN.W. wind, clear. 6 00 p m. Clouding over, light S.W. wind. 8 00 p.m. Light N.W. wind, thunderstorm to N.W. lO.OOp.m. Hea\7 wind, N.E. 12 night Clear, light W. wind. 8.00 am Calm, cirrus clouds. 12 noon Calm, cirrus clouds. 5.00 p.m. Cumu- lus, fresh S. wind, dust. 7.00 p.m. Thunderstorms to S.W. and N.W. 11.00 p.m. Still cloudy. 7.00 a.m. Calm, cumulus clouds. 10.30 a.m. Light wind and rain from S. Noon Cumulus clouds, light mnd N.E., thunderstorms along hills from S.W. toN.W. 2.00 p.m. Rain stopped, heavy stratus clouds 3.00 p.m. Rain re-commenced, continued to midnight. 6.00 a.m. Calm, overcast, stratus clouds. Noon, Cumulus, light N.W. breeze. 6.00 p.m. Strato-cumulus, light E. wind. 7.00 a.m. Very light N.W. wind, cloudless. Noon Light S. wind, cirrus clouds. 8.00 p.m. Fresh E. wind, sky overcast. 7.00 a.m. Cloudless, very light N.W. breeze. Noon Cloudless, very light N.W breeze. 8.00 p m. Cumulus clouds, E. wind. Midnight Steady rain (all night). 8.00 a.m. Steady gentle rain. Noon Rain stopped, damp, overcast 1.00p.m. Rain re-commenced. 8.00 p.m. Heavy clouds, no wind. 6.00 am. Very misty, mackerel sky Noon Cirro-cumulus, light wind N.W. 3.00 p m. Clear, fresh breeze N.W 7.00 a.m. Clear, calm. Noon Heavy stratus clouds, calm. 7.30 p.m. Fresh S. wind, 7.00 a.m. Dull, rain during night. Noon Dull, light wind from N.W. 5.00 p.m. Cumulus clouds, calm. lO.OOp.m Thunderstorm and heavy rain. 7.00 am Cumulus clouds, light N.W. wind. Noon Cirro-cumulus clouds, calm 8.00 p m Cirro-Cumulus clouds, calm. 9.45 p.m Thunderstorm since 5 00 p m. River flooded. 8.00 a.m. Stratus clouds, calm. 3.00 p.m. Strato-cumulus, light S.W. wind. 5.30 p m Thunderstorm from S.W., river risen from 3 ft. to 8 ft. between morning and afternoon. 6.00 a.m. Clear, fresh wind W. 220 M ETEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— conftm/^rf. *<~ **• hi . Min. reel. incbe>. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. ■ 9=8 Jane Tou-fu-ssfl 4527 30 11.00a.m. 2545 720 660 ... Noon Cumulus clouds, light wind W. Btation H. 4984 30 6.30 a.m. 24 98 630 ... 5.00 p.m. Strato-cumulus, light wind W. , , 30 11.00 a.m. 25 04 655 ... ... Tou-fu-ssQ 4527 30 July 3.00p.m. ... 204.05 77 3 •*• ... ... •' 4527 1 1 9.00 a.m. 1.00p.m. 2555 25 56 204 3 755 81 2 634 812 636 7.00 am Clear, very light N.W. wind Noon same. 6.00 p.m. Calm. 9.00 p.m. Same as 7.00 a.m. Chao-chuang 3000 2 2 8.00a.m. 8.00p.m. 26 83 2068 747 790 676 690 903 647 6 00 a.m. Few cirrus clouds, calm, hazy. 9 30 am. Cirro-cumulus, fresh wind S. 2 10.30p.m. 2681 2066 738 677 3 00 p m. Thunderstorm in hills to W. 6 00 p tn Cumulus increasing, strong wind N.E., thunderstorms E. and S.E. 10.30 p.m. Overcast, very light N. wind. ,, 3 10.00 a.m. 26 88 2069 700 695 74-7 672 6.00 a.m. Raining, calm. , , ... 3 1.15p.m. 2691 207 0 712 660 1.15 p.m. Rain stopped, fresh N.E. wind. T'ai-yuan Fu 2600 3 6.45 p.m. 2688 708 ... ... 1.45 p.m. Rain re-commenced, stopped at 5 00 p.m. Chao-chuang 3000 4 1.30 p.m. 26 79 2067 822 675 86-8 708 8.00 a.m. Cirrus clouds. 4 6.00p.m. 26 74 206 7 729 668 1.15 p m. Clear, fresh S. wind. Chao-chuang 3000 4 10.00p.m. 2676 206 7 687 672 6 00 p.m. Thunderstorm on N.E. hills, T'ai-yiian Fu 2600 4 10.00 a.m. 2681 725 Wind N.E. 10.00 pm. Hazy, calm. Chao-chuang 3000 5 5.00 a.m. 26 73 2066 61-4 62-2 1000 .57'7 5.00 a.m. No clouds, hazy, verj* light , , 5 11.00a.m. 2679 2066 895 737 ... S.E. wind. 11 00 am No clouds, hazy. ,, 5 3.00p.m. 2671 206 5 922 750 ... calm. 3.00 p ni. No clouds, hazy, calm. •• 5 10.00p.m. 2682 2068 722 685 ... ... 6.30 p.m. Thunderstorms. 0.07 ins. rain. 10.00 p m. Overcast, calm. ,, ... 6 8.30 a.m. 26 88 2068 809 723 91 3 61 0 8.30 a tn. No clouds, hazy, very light ,, 6 11.30a.m. 26 88 2068 860 705 wind N W. 11.30 a.m. Few cirrus. ,, .•* 6 1.10p.m. 2683 2067 879 690 hazy, light wind S.S.W. 1.10 p.m. ,, 6 7.00pm. 26 88 2069 780 67 0 More cirrus, hazy, fresh wind S.S.W. ■ 6 10.00p.m. 26 95 2069 750 676 3 00 p m. Strong wind W. 7.00 p m. Stratus, clear, calm. 10.00 p.m. Light S. wind. 11.00 p.m. Rain (Rainfall 0 02 ins.) ,, ... 9.00 a.m. 27 00 2070 719 680 860 649 8.00 am Stratus clouds, calm. 2.00p.m. 2693 2069 84-6 675 *•. 10.30 a.m. Stratus, calm, light rain. 5.00p.m. 2698 207 0 67 5 i 641 ... ... 4.00 p m. Strong wind from south fol- ,_ ... n 8.30p.m. 2703 207 1 65 3 65 5 ... lowed by rain. Rain throughout ... 10.30p.m. midnight 2709 207 1 65 0 655 night (Rainfall 0 75 ins.) __ 2702 207 1 650 67 0 ... ... ,, ... 8 9.30a. m 2694 2069 726 682 805 683 9 30 a.m. Cirrus, very clear atmosphere. ... 8 1.30p.m. 26 90 2068 780 682 ... Noon Cumulus and stratus, light wind 8 5.30p.m. 2681 206 7 76 1 680 ... S.W. 4.00 p ni. Thunderstorm S. (0 07 ■■ 8 8.45p.m. 26 88 206 9 65 0 650 ins. rain). 5 30 to 7.45 p.m. Thunder- storms all round. 8 45 p.m. Very slight rain, N.W., calm. Midnight, Stars \'isible, light cumulus, calm. ... 9 5.00a.m. 26 83 2069 608 603 84 1 60 1 5.00 a.m. Cirrus, calm (overnight rain ••* 9 11.45 a.m. 26 87 2067 789 0 01 ins.) 11 45 am Few cumulus. 9 2.30p.m 26 82 • >• .>• . >. ... very light wind S W. 2 30 p m. Same. ... 9 7.00p.m *.. 760 700 500 pm Few cumulus, calm. 8 00 pm. ... 9 lO.OOp.m 2683 2068 720 ... ... Few cumulus very light wind S W. 10.00 p m Calm, cirrus, moonlight. ... 10 ' 9 30am 687 650 77 0 60'5 1000 am Stratus and cumulus, light ... 10 10.00 am 26-94 2069 71 1 662 ... ... wind S. 2 30 p m. Cirrus, light wind ... 10 2.30p.m 2688 2067 760 688 ... vS. 8.00 p.m. Clear, very light wind •• ... 10 8 00pm 2683 1 2068 690 662 ... (Overnight rainfall 0 02 ins). 221 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— co;?//«weo. I PLACE. Chao-chuang « feet. 3000 T'ai-yuan Fu 2600 Date. tgoS July 11 11 15 15 16 16 17 17 17 17 18 18 18 18 18 19 19 19 20 20 20 21 21 21 21 Time of Gbservation. 8.30 am 2.00p.in 10.00 am I.OOp m I.SOp.m 8.00 p. m ll.OOp.m 8.00 am 10.00 am noon 2.00p.m 4.00p m 6.15p.m 8.00 p. m lOOOp.m 5.30 a.m 9.30 am 11, 30 am 1.30p.ni 8.00 p. m 7.00 am 9.15 a.m lO.OOp.m 11.00 am 2.00 p. m 5.00 pm lO.OOp.m 10.30 am l.OOp m 5.30p.m 8.30 p. m midnight 10 00 am 2.00p.m 7.00p.m 10.30 am 2.30p.m. 6.30p.m. 12.30 a.m. 10.00 a.m. 2.30p.m. 6.30p m. inches. 2690 26 86 2691 2684 26 84 2685 26 89 2683 26 84 2682 2685 2681 26 84 2687 26 89 26 85 2684 26 82 26 83 2675 2674 26 71 26 73 26 72 26 70 2667 2668 2673 26 68 2671 2677 2677 2673 2673 to u "•X OF. 2069 2067 2069 206 7 206 7 2068 2068 2069 2068 206 7 2067 2067 206 7 2069 2069 2068 206 7 206 6 2068 2067 2068 2067 2068 2068 206 75 2068 206 7 206 7 206 6 206 6 206 7 2066 2065 206 5 2064 206 7 206 5 206 7 206 7 206 7 2066 2065 Temperature. Dry Bulb. OF. 773 870 84 0 838 722 74 0 690 745 857 84 0 85 1 82 1 686 67 1 65- 1 652 753 723 637 643 626 723 Wet Bulb. Max. OF. 72 5 759 747 711 64 0 695 644 700 750 765 754 74 2 65 9 64 -2 63-5 648 71 2 655 62 1 632 605 67 8 74 0 671 725 716 71 0 67 1 66'6 688 695 682 655 700 800 74 1 789 838 75 5 702 79 1 87 0 809 70 1 687 670 65 1 650 67 0 67 5 65 3 63 7 66 1 699 692 715 736 693 668 700 750 735 OF. 906 92 5 90S 802 Min. OF. 583 587 611 61 9 860 756 74 0 83 2 865 882 554 611 700 64-8 64 6 674 666 REMARKS. 8.00a.m. Light breeze N W., few cirrus clouds. 2.00 p.m. Overcast, light wind W. Midnight, cirrus, few stars ^•isible, calm. 8.00 a.m. Clear, verj' light W. wind. 10.00 am, N.W. Noon, Cirrus, very light N.W. wind. 1.00p.m. Thunder- storm from E . , few heavy drops. 1.20p.m. Thunderstorm from W.N.W.. heavy rain. 8.00 p.m. Light cirrus, calm (Rainfall 0 25 ins.). 8.00 am. Cirrus, verj- light wind W. 10 a.m. Cirro-cumulus, light wiiid,W. Noon, Overcast, cumulus, light wind, W 2.00 p.m. cirro-cumulus, light wind N.W., thunderstorm in N. 4.00 p.m. Nimbus, overcast, heavy rain from N. ; over at 4.30 (0 45 'ins.). 5.00 p.m. Thunderstorm from S.W. over at 5.50 (0 13 ins). 6 00 p.m. Thunderstorm from N.W. 8.00 p.m. Still raining gently, thunderstorms all round (007 ins.). 9.30p.m. Overcast, calm (002 ins.). Total rainfall in 8 hours = 067 ins). 5.30 a.m. Strato-cumulus, very light wind N. 9.30 a.m. Strato-cumulus from S.W, light wind N.W. 11.00a.m. Overcast, fresh wind W., thunder in N.E. and S.E. 1.30 p.m. Heavy rain from E., over at 2.30 (0 19 inches). 6.00 p.m. Cleared, nimbus and cirrus, calm. 8 00 p.m. Clear overhead, calm. 10 p.m. Clear, calm, starry. 7.00 a.m. Cirro-stratus, overcast, verj- light wind N.E. 9.15 a.m. Cirro- cumulus, light wind N.E. 8.00 a.m. Cumulus, calm. T'ai-yiian Fu, 6 00 p.m. Clear. 10.00 p.m. Overcast. 9.00 am. Raining gently, commenced at 7.00 a.m. Noon, Raining gently. 6.30 p.m. Raining hard. Midnight, Raining gently (052 ins). 9.00 a.m. Raining hard, all night. 10.00 am. Rainfall since midnight (2.89 ins.) 1 00 p.m. to midnight still raining. Total rainfall for 24 hours = 3'66 ins. 10.00 a.m. Overcast. 2.00 p.m Same. 5.30 p.m. Rain. Total rainfall since midnight 013 inches. 7.00 p.m. Light wind N. 9.00 p.m. Calm, clear. 10.30 a.m. Clear, light N.E. wind. 2.30 p.m. Thunder in N.E. 6 30 p.m. Few cirrus clouds. 12.30 a.m. Clear, calm. 2.30 p.m. Cirrus, light wind W. 6.30 p.m. Calm, clear. Midnight, Calm, clear. 222 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con^/wco'. g-s' Time of ObservatioD. M 0 11 Temperature. PLACE. o 3 a,s Date. CLj:: BujS. Wet REMARKS. « ^ «| Bulb. Max. Mio. r«i. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. 1908 T'ai-yiian Fu .. ' 2600 July 1 22 I n.30a.m. 26 75 206 1 87 1 76 5 : 93 2 71 0 22 3.30p.m. 26 67 206-5 1 93 2 779! ... 3.30 p.m. Clear, light wind N.W. 22 7.30p.m. 26 68 2064 84 2 752 ... ... 22 11.30p.m. 2671 2065 78 5 *.. ... 23 9.00 a.m. 26 74 206 7 88 0 I 75 5 ' 935 732 9.00 a.m. Few cirrus, light wind W. ... 23 5.00p.m. 26-70 206-5 93 5 1 70 0 ... ... 5.00 p m Clear, light wind N.E. 23 midnight 26-77 206-7 74 5 ! 67 3 ... Midnight, clear, calm. 24 1.00p.m. 2679 206 7 92 8 702 950 700 24 5.30p.m. 2678 206 7 89 5 700 24 midnight 2687 206 9 76 2 66 0: ... *.* ... 25 1 11 30 a.m. 26 86 206 9 j 89 0 692 97-5 713 ... 25 11.30p.m 26 88 207 0 ! 75 5 70-4 1 ... 26 11.00 a.m. 26 88 207 0 89 0 72 4 982 71-5 11.00 a.m. Few Cirrus, light wind N.K. 26 4. 30p.m. 26-82 2067 98 2 75 3 1 ... 4.30 p.m. Overcast, light breeze S.W. 26 11.00p.m. 26 86 2068 78 0 719 1 ... ... 11.00 p.m. Clear, calm. 27 I0.00a.m.j26 86 206 9 1 86 0 754 980 729 10.00 a.m. Cirrus over stratus, calm. 27 3.00p.m.j26 80 206 7 92 0 78 1 3.00 p.m. Overcast, wind S.E. ... 27 5.00p.m.l26 79 206 6 ' 91 0 760 >•• 5.00 p.m. Cirro-cumulus, light wind S.W. 28 11.00 a.m. 26-73 206 5 1 86 2 78-5 96 1 741 11. 00 a.m. Nimbus and stratus, wind S W. ... 28 3.00p.m. 2668 206-4 87 8 765 ... ... 3.00p.m. Overcast, slight rain, wind S\V. ... 28 7.00p.m. 2678 206 5 82 8 71-2 ... ... 7.00 p.m. Nimbus, threatening rain, wind W. 10.30 p.m. Rain 0 004 ins. ... 28 10.30p,m. 26-81 206 7 78 5 67-6 ... 29 9.30 a m. 2692 207 0 77 2 699 • • * 9.30 a.m. Stratus, light wind W. 29 noon 26 92 206 9 85 5 720 ... ... Noon Few cirrus, calm. ... 29 8.00p.m. 26 90 206 9 78 5 700 8.00 p.m. Clear, calm. ... 30 ! 10.30'a.m.l26 90 206 9 i 83 1 730 93'4 710 10.30 a.m. Cirrus, light wind \V. ... 30 , 1.30p.m. 26 86 2068 : 89 5 73 0 1.30 p.m. Clear, fresh breeze. 30 7.30p.m. 2683 206 8 82 1 700 ... 7.30 p.m. Clear, calm. ... 31 10.30 a.m. 26 88 206 9 83 5 720 980 70-2 10.30a.m. Cirro-cumulus, light wind S.-W. ... 31 7.30p.m. 26 85 2068 87 7 76 1 ... 7.30 p.m. Cirro-cumulus, calm. Aog. I 9.00 a.m. 2702 2072 73 1 691 ... 703 9.00 a.m. Rain from S.E. (0 05 ins.). 1 4.00p.m. 26 92 2070 87 8 710 4.00 p.m. Cirro-cumulus, calm. 1 9.00p.m. 26 98 207- 1 800 74 5 ... 8.00 p.m. Rain (027 ins.). 9.00 p.m. Clear, calm. ... 2 9.00p.m. 26 97 ... ... 94 3 77-7 3 9.00 a.m. 27 02 2073 840 74 0 95-6 783 ... 4 9.45 a.m. 27 00 207- 1 853 753 793 4 noon 26 98 91 8 760 5 4.00p.m. 26 87 970 760 100.0 793 ... 6 10.15a.m. 26 89 928 77-7 985 81 2 6 1 12.45p.m. 26 86 902 762 ... 6 5.00p.m. 26 82 964 77-2 ... ... ... 6 10.30p.m. 2687 .. 866 75-5 ... ... 7 9.45 a.m. 26 90 893 775 811 ... 7 12.30p.m. 26'86 953 790 ... ... 8 8.00a.m. 26 89 .. 1814 760 1004 79-8 ... 9 10.00 a.m. 2691 92 0 772 960 81 4 ... 9 noon 26 88 .. 935 777 ... ... 9 6.15p.m. 2691 880 770 ... ... 10 noon 26 93 87 1 87-2 .•> Rainfall, 0 11 ins. ... 10 5.00p.m. 26-90 783 741 ... ... 11 8.00 a.m. 26 92 738 69-8 ... 73"8 Rainfall, 0 29 ins. ... 11 1.30p.m. 2691 720 680 ... ... 11 6.30p.m. 26 92 700 660 ... ... ... 12 7.30a.m. 26 92 682 660 859 67-6 ... 12 8.30p.m. 26 92 '.'. 76 5 1 ... 13 8.30 am 26 93 769 685 906 680 ... 13 5.00p.m. 26 88 81-3 710 ... 223 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con/wwerf. PLACE. T'ai-yiian Fu £ 3 << feet. 2600 Date. 1908 Aug. 13 14 14 15 IS 16 16 16 16 17 17 17 18 18 19 19 20 20 20 20 21 21 21 22 22 23 23 24 24 25 25 26 26 26 27 27 27 28 28 28 29 29 29 30 30 30 30 31 31 31 31 Sept. 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 Time of Observation. 9.30p.m 7.00 am 7.30 p. Ill 7.30 a. m 9.30 p. m 9.30 a. ni 11.30a.in S.OOp.m 9.30 p. m 9.15 a. m 1.30 p. Ill 8.45p.ni 10.15 a. m 2.15p.ii] 1.30p.m 5.30 p.m 9.30a.ni noon 2.00p.ni 4.30p.ni, 11.15 a.m. 5.25 p.m. 9.30p.m. 11.20a.m. 5.00p.m. 11.00 a.m. 7.50p.m. 11. 00 a. 11). 4.30p.m. 10.00a.m. 2.30p.m 11. 00 a.m. 6.00p.m. 1000p.m. 9.30 a m. 6.15p.m. 10 00p.m. 9 30p ni 6 00p.m. 10.00p.m. 9.30 a.m. 12.30p.m. 6.00p.m. 10.00 a.m. 12.30p.m. 6.00p.m. 9.30 p.m. 9.30 a.m. 12.30p.m. 6 00 p.m. 1030p.m. 10.00a.m. 2.10p.m. 9.30p,m. 9 00 a.m. 12.20 p.m. 5.30p.m. 10.45 a.m. 7.30p.m. 9 c inches. 26 93 26 96 2691 26 90 2687 2691 2691 2691 2695 2699 2698 2701 27 03 2697 2697 2695 27 04 27 00 2697 26 96 27 08 2707 27 12 2707 2705 27 02 26-98 27 02 2690 26 96 26 87 26 96 2691 26 98 27 03 26 97 26 99 27 12 2701 27 03 2710 27 07 27 05 27 17 27 16 27 07 27 13 27 08 2701 26 99 2701 27 13 26 99 2697 2697 2693 2688 26 93 26 93 .EE OF. Temperature. Dry Bulb. OF. 800 766 825 787 760 780 728 730 71-8 75 9 840 740 780 86 5 843 830 800 838 870 860 750 665 645 69'0 700 700 690 74 0 71 5 705 84 5 780 825 720 745 835 74-5 755 855 770 70.5 850 803 705 773 800 720 735 71-5 695 680 735 795 725 680 680 660 715 789 Wet Bulb. o F. 720 733 70-2 692 680 730 75- 1 70 7 74 -5 730 75 0 750 78 0 61 0 605 600 632 64 5 64 0 650 650 650 690 690 660 630 665 675 665 650 665 680 660 700 690 700 680 70 0 67 0 64 3 650 650 65 0 670 705 65 5 650 650 630 660 650 Max OF. 93 1 890 85 7 880 870 87'4 873 870 7i20 790 850 880 900 900 825 823 Min. o F. REMARKS. 753 73-8 708 697 74 3 723 71 8 630 650 650 640 620 690 61 3 650 660 685 670 680 630 Rainfall, 0 6 ins. Rainfall, 0 19 ins. Rainfall, 0.09 ins. Rainfall, 034 in. Rainfall. 0 91 ins. 224 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con/wi/erf ii << Date. Timeo* Observmtion. S 0 •si .rl n Temperatuie. REMARKS. PLACE. Baib. Wet Bulb. Max. Min. feeL inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. 1908 Sept. T'ai-yiian Fu 2600 4 4 6.45 a.m. 2.45p.m. 2695 26 98 63 0 850 62 5 660 ... 655 5 10.30a.m. 2707 725 658 850 6l"5 ... 5 1.30 p.m. 27 03 825 675 ... 6 9.30 a.m. 2710 760 67 5 860 670 ... 6 8.00p.m. 2704 704 680 ... 7 9.00 a.m. 2706 68-4 660 794 64 0 Rainfall, 0 16 ins. ... 7 7.00p.m. 27 06 685 600 ... 8 9.00a.m. 27 17 690 598 720 570 ... 8 7.00p.m. 2710 ... 680 580 ... ... 9 9.00a.m. 2713 620 560 78-8 570 ... 9 7.00p.m. 27 04 71-5 61 0 ... 10 9.00a.m. 27 02 650 590 610 ... 10 7.00p.m. 26 79 680 600 ... ... 11 9.00 a.m. 27 02 ... 680 555 790 570 11 8.00p.m. 2697 690 590 12 9.00 a.m. 2702 700 57 0 81 0 570 12 8.00p.m. 2696 700 600 ... 13 9.30 a.m. 27 06 ... 700 600 830 58-5 ... 13 8.00p.m. 27 02 725 640 ... 14 9.00 a.m. 27 02 715 635 830 685 Rainfall. 0 01 ins., between 5 00 and 14 7.00p.m. 2697 670 640 6.00 p.m. ... 15 9.00 a.m. 27 02 650 565 7'8"o 615 Rainfall, 0'93 ins. ... 16 9.00a.m. 27 06 595 510 75 0 51 0 ... 16 7.30p.m. 27 04 690 595 ... 17 9.00a.m. 27 09 650 560 750 550 ... 17 7.00p.m. 27 03 71 5 500 ... 18 9.00 a.m. 27 14 650 585 780 55 "5 Rain during night. 18 7.00p.m. 27 10 670 570 ... ... 19 9.00a.m. 2707 660 530 780 550 19 7.00p.m. 2704 695 630 20 9.00a.m. 2704 665 590 72"5 580 20 7.00p.m. 26-96 710 570 ... 21 10.00 a.m. 27 13 64 0 515 780 545 21 7.00p.m. 27 13 62-5 500 22 9.00 a.m. 2720 595 760 47'5 22 7.00p.m. 27 15 685 57'5 ... 23 9.00a.m. 27 22 645 54 5 754 4'6'5 ... 23 7.00p.m. 27 15 680 595 ... ... 24 9.00a.m. 27 14 630 545 7'4'2 54 5 24 27 09 705 590 ... • .. 25 9.008. m. 27 14 625 530 7'6'5 505 25 8.00p.m. 27 06 700 61 5 ... 26 9.00 a.m. 27 10 645 585 87 '5 56-5 ... 26 7.00p.m. 2706 735 665 ... 27 9.00 a.m. 27 10 .. . 650 565 81 0 560 ... 27 8.00p.m. 27 14 71 0 650 ... 28 8.00a.m. 27 16 615 560 755 525 Nan-shih... 2875 28 28 26 92 207 1 650 534 54 5 ... No clouds. • >. 29 7.00a m. 27'07 450 41 0 750 365 Hsieh-tao 3304 29 1230p.m. 25 50 590 ... ShSng-yi 5816 29 4.30p.m. 24 90 202 7 583 480 ... No clouds, light wind W. ,, 30 6 30 am 24 82 36 5 350 640 345 Ku-chao 2974 30 Oct. 6.00p.m. 26 56 ... 600 490 ... No clouds, strong wind E. ,, 1 9.30 a.m. 26 65 530 450 347 10.00 p.m Sky clear. ,, ... 1 2.00p.m. 2678 206 0. 628 __ ..* 1 6.00p.m. 26 50 630 49-0 •• ... 2 6.30a.m. 26 84 400 360 650 390 6.30 a.m. Cirro-cuuiuiu!> i.uv: <^i ..I. . 22s METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con/wuco'. §2 Date. Time of Observation. o S •■si So. Temperature. PLACE. BulS. W.t REMARKS. « {/J ^s Bulb. Max. Min. fwt. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. iqoS Oct. Tsa-k'ou 4112 2 e.SOp.m. 2572 204 1 550 470 6.30 p.m. Clear. ... 3 6.30 a.m. 25 79 370 34 0 630 370 Light wind -W. Mountain Pass ... 6022 3 noon 24 21 2008 602 Cirrus until 5.00 p.m., then cumulus. Mi-yiieh-ch'fing ... 4447 3 3 6.00 pni. 7.00p.m. 25 60 2038 53-5 51 5 4'8-5 ,, ... 4 6.30a.m. 25 64 1 203 9 386 340 620 36-6 Mountain Pass ... 7032 4 2345 44 5 ... JYiin-t'ing Shan... 6950 4 4.00p.m. 23 59 1998 422 40 0 _, ... 5 9.00a.m. 23 57 490 450 34 5 Rain since 5.00 p.m., October 4th. ... 5 6.00 p.m. 23 53 1999 440 41 5 Clouds and mist all day \\ ... 6 9.00 a.m. 23 66 510 460 57 0 360 Cumulus all day, diffused light, darkened _, 6 4 00p.m. 23 53 54 0 ... ... at 4.00 p.m. __ 6 6.00p.m. 470 ... ... II 7 9.00 a.m. 23 66 51 0 460 590 31 0 Cirro-cumulus and cumulus all day. _, ... 7 6.00p.m. 2362 380 34 0 ... ^_ 8 8.00 a.m. 2361 400 360 5'4-0 260 Cirrus and cirro-cumulus all day. ■ 1 8 7.00p.m. 2358 405 370 ... 9 10.00 a.m. 2353 44-5 410 59 0 29 5 Cumulus all day.' ^, 9 e.OOp ni. 2349 390 360 It ... 10 10. 00a. m 23 47 520 400 600 32 2 Cirrus and cirro-cumulus. 10 6.00p.m 2354 384 34 -5 3.00 p.m. Clear. ,, 11 9.00 a.m. 23 66 500 430 600 295 „ 11 7.00p.m 23 60 364 340 ^, 12 10.00a.m. 23 65 490 440 61 0 330 Cumulus all day, hea^-y snow during the ,, 12 6.00p.m. 23 62 435 390 night. 1* 13 10 00 a m 23 56 460 440 600 320 Rain and mist all day. 13 7.00p.m 2345 420 410 ,, 14 10.00 am 23 54 490 450 590 360 ^, 14 7.00p.m. 23 58 380 350 ^, 15 10.00a.m. 23 64 452 430 550 330 Cirro-cumulus. ,, 15 600p.ni. 23 56 435 400 2,00 p.m. Cumulus. ,, 16 6.30p.m, 2357 19995 422 380 590 400 Cumulus. 9.00 a.m. Few light cirrus. Ma-f6ng 4445 16 5.00p.m. 25 60 203 9 590 520 3.00 p.m. Large cumulus, light wind E. ,, 17 6.30p.m. 25 59 400 360 590 390 Few cirrus all day. ,, ... 17 ... 2039 45-5 ... ... Light wind. Mountain Pass ... 17 17 24-69 202 5 615 650 Sung-chia-k'ou ... 3906 17 5.00p.m. 2606 62-8 560 ... ,, ... 18 6.30a.m. 2606 44-5 400 630 4'2-0 Clear, light variable wind. ,1 18 2047 470 Lin Hsien 3269 18 7.00p.m. 26-79 Sl-5 460 ... ... Clear, no wind. , , 19 9.00 a.m. 26 84 485 400 67-4 320 Clear. ,, 19 7.00p.m. 2676 510 450 3.00 p.m. Cirrus. ,, 20 6.30 a.m. 2677 34 0 330 650 32 0 4.00 p.m. Cumulus. Kan-tsao-k'ou 4664 20 20 5.00p.m. 25 52 2036 582 580 520 Light wind. ,, 21 10.00 a.m. 25-52 56 0 490 65 0 390 Rain during day. ,, 21 6.00p.m. 25-41 ... 500 452 t> 22 10.00 a.m. 25 44 490 490 55 0 41 0 10.00 a.m. Rainfall for preceding 24 ,, 22 5.00p.m. 25 45 510 500 hours, 177 ins. Rain all day. (• 23 10.00 a.m. 25 58 ... 54-2 490 10.00a.m. Rainfall forpreceding24hours. ,, 23 6.00p.m. 2557 520 460 0 20 ins., cumulus over nimbus, all day. ,, ... 24 10.00a. m 25 73 ... 370 56 0 340 Three hours rain over night followed by ,, 24 6.00p.m. 2550 510 46-0 ... snow storm and gale, cumulus all day. ,, ... 25 10.00a.m. 25 64 450 400 560 260 Clear, no wind. ,, ... 25 6.00p.ni. 2547 420 380 ,, 26 10.00 a.m. 25 60 370 360 520 350 Cumulus, mist. rain. 10.00 a.m. Clear. ,, 26 6.00 p.m. 25 49 332 320 Strong wind -W, all day. ,, 27 7.00a.m. 25 57 235 52 0 210 Cloudy, light variable wind. Mountain Pass ... 5377 27 ... 24-78 295 1 } Latitude. 37" 54' N. Longitude, 111' 226 33' 48* E. Meteorological observations— continued. y •5s .rl Temperatnre. PLACE. Dale. Time of Observmtion. Dry Wet REMARKS. << Bulb. Bulb. Mu. Min. feet. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. Ts'ai-chia-wei 3396 ioo8 Oct. 27 S.OOp.ni. 26 70 2060 425 390 , , ... 28 7.30 a. tn. 2675 330 ... 490 23-5 Cimis. 9.00 a.m. Clear, light variable Huang-ho-yeh ... 2406 28 e.OOp.m. 27 68 2077 465 400 ... ... wind. (Shensi, on Yellow River) 29 8.00 a.m. 27 76 320 520 250 Clear, light variable wind. Lin-chia-mo 3103 29 29 6.00p.m. 26 96 2063 430 370 380 ... ,, ... 30 8.00 a.m. 26 82 360 ... 5'4'o 230 Hoar-frost during night. ,, 30 ... 206 3 370 ... ... Clear, light variable wind. Chin-chia-k'ou ... 3390 30 7.00p.m. 26 56 205 6 430 370 ... ... ,, ... 31 8.00a.m. 2661 325 ... 550 23-5 Hoar-frost during night, clear. Chiu-ts'ai 3328 31 31 Nov. 5.00p.m. 26 62 205-8 545 455 480 ... ... 3.00 p.m. Cirrus, light variable wind. ,, 1 8.00a.m. 26 66 ... 400 360 590 335 Heavy dew during night, haze. Yang-chia-tien ... 3634 1 6.00p.m. 26 36 445 400 ... 3.00 p.m. Clear, light variable wind. ,, ... 2 205 4 372 560 31 0 4.00 a.m. Light rain, later heavy mists ,, ... 2 10.00 a.m. 2638 412 390 ... till noon, followed by clear sky. , , 2 5.00p.m. 26 34 492 440 ... Light variable wind. ,, ... 3 8.00 am 2634 ... 340 33 0 61 0 290 Hoar-frost during night, cumulus. Liu-chien-hua ... 3418 3 6.00p.m. 460 420 10 00 a.m. Stratus. 11.00 a.m. and 3.00 p.m. Little rain, strong wind E. „ ... 4 10.00 a.m. 26 39 450 410 560 ... Cumulus all day, dust haze. ,, ... 4 6.00p.m. 26 32 440 410 ... ... Strong wind W. 4 205 4 385 ... 5 8.00 a.m. 2638 36 0 34 0 520 350 Dust haze all day, light variable wind. •Yu-lid" Fu 3169 5 S. 00p.m. 26 66 450 405 ... ... ^_ 6 10.00 a.m. 2665 ... 400 350 560 230 Clear, light wind N. __ 6 5. 00p.m. 2655 ... 444 390 ... ,, 7 10.00 a.m. 2654 365 34 0 570 23'5 Slight hoar-frost during night. ... 7 6.00p.m. 2652 ... 440 400 Clear. Noon Light wind N. __ 8 9.00a.m. 26 69 31 4 5'5"o 270 Few cirras all day. _, ... 8 6.00p.m, 26 68 382 360 ... ... 1 Light wind N. 9 10.00a.m. 2672 370 350 560 270 Slight hoar-frost during night. 9 6.00p.m. 26 68 ... 42-2 37 0 ... Clear, light wind N.E. 10 10.00 a.m. 26 74 382 360 570 2'50 Slight hoar-frost during night. _, 10 S. 30p.m. 2668 405 360 Clear, light wind N.E. • 11 10.00 a.m. 26 78 360 340 550 250 Clear, light wind N. _, 11 5.30p.m. 26 76 430 38 0| ... __ ... 12 10.00 a.m. 26 72 310 520 150 Clear, light wind S. ,_ 12 5.30p.m. 26 62 320 ... ... ... ^_ ... 13 9.30a.m. 26 66 340 490 215 Clear, light wind N. „ 13 5.00p.m. 26 59 420 380 ... ... 14 10.00a m. 2660 370 340 500 21 0 Clear, light wind S. 14 5.00p.m. 26 60 1 ... 445 400 15 10.00a.m. 26 64 1 ... 350 330 500 220 Slight hoar-frost during night. •• ... 15 5.00p.m. 26 64 ... 450 380 ... 2.30 p.m. Heavy cumulus, light wind N.E. 16 10.00a.m. 26 70 34 0 ... 460 200 Clouds disappear at 9.00 a.m. ... 16 e.OOp.m 2670 300 Light wind N. 17 9.30 a. m 2664 330 46 0 200 Slight hoar-frost during night. '" 17 5.00p.m. 2652 430 380 ... Cimis. 2.00 p.m. Clear, light wind W. 18 lO.OOa.m 2636 350 330 470 200 Clear, light wind S. 18 5.00p.m. 26 34 475 410 ... 19 lO.OOa.m. 2640 41 5 360 545 2S"0 Hoar-frost during night, clear, light •• ... 19 5.30p.m. 2648 480 400 ... wind N. 2 00 p.m. Cirrus, strong wind N., dust haie. 20 11 OOa.m. 26 58 345 • •• 54 0 23-5 Slight hoarfrost during night, clear. 20 6.00p.m. 26 58 340 ... ... ... i Evening. Few cirrus, light wind S. " ... 21 lO.OOa.m. 26 72 360 34 0 45 0 23 5 ; Cirnis and cumulus. 2.00 p.m. Clear. • Latitude 39" 16' 54' N., Longitude 109' 227 44' 69' E. Meteorological observations— cow/med'. Date. Time of Observation. n bet Temperature. REMARKS. PLACE. Bui?. Wet << ^ «:? Bulb. Max. Min. fen. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. igoB Nov. Yii-lin Fu 3169 21 6.00p.m. 26-72 300 Strong wind N. ,_ 22 10.00 a.m. 26 72 ... 320 420 I'i's Slight hoar-frost during night. 22 eoop.m 2668 325 ... Clear, light wind S. ... 23 10.00 a.m. 26 62 260 42 0 140 Slight hoar-frost during uight. 23 6.00p.m. 26 54 370 34-0 ... Clear, light wind N. ^_ 24 10.00 a.m. 2656 350 330 430 21 0 Slight hoar-frost during night. J, 24 6.00p.m. 2644 41 0 350 Clear, light wind W. ,^ 25 10.00a.m. 26-58 315 47.0 21.0 Slight hoar-frost during night. ^, ... 25 noon 26-56 325 Dust haze all day. ,, ... 25 6.00p.m. 26-64 275 Strong wind N.W. __ 26 10.00 a.m. 26-78 250 360 200 Wind till 2.00 a.m. Clear. ... 26 6.00p.m. 26 72 220 Light wind N. __ 27 9.30 a.m. 26 64 270 360 125 Clear, light wind N.W. __ ... 27 6.00p.m. 26 60 250 „ 28 10.00 a.m. 26 64 270 ./. 370 25 0 Clear, light wind N. __ 28 6.30p.m. 26 62 28 5 ,, 29 10.00 a.m. 26 60 305 360 190 3.00 p.m. Cirro-cumulus and cumulus. ^, 29 6.00p.m. 26 68 330 Light wind N. J, 30 10.00 a.m. 26 88 275 400 190 Few cirrus. Noon Clear. .. ... 30 6.00p.m. 26-76 250 ... Light wind N.W. Dec. 1 10.00 a.m. 26-74 220 380 140 Clear, light wind N. ^, • •• 1 6.00p.m. 26 66 275 ... ,, • *. 2 10.00 a.m. 26-54 290 420 170 Clear, light N.W. 1, ... 2 6.00p.m. 26 64 300 ... ,, ... 3 10.00 a.m. 26-54 290 360 170 Clear, light variable. ,, 3 6.00 p.m. 26 36 340 ... ... ,, ... 4 10.00 a.m. 26 28 350 330 230 Cnmulus. 10.00 a.m. Clear, slight dust ■• ... 4 eoop.m 26 40 400 350 haze, moderate wind N. 2.00 p.m. Calm. ,, 5 8 00 a.m. 26 38 21 0 420 185 Cirro-cumulus all day. Yu-ho-p'u 2777 5 8.00p.m. 2672 360 34 0 Light wind S. ,, 6 7.00 a m. 27 02 2067 270 ... 27 0 Cirrus all day. Mi-cbih Hsien ... 2468 6 7.00p.m. 27 40 207 3 360 Moderate wind N. ,, 7 10.00 a.m. 27 65 260 420 12-0 Cirrus all day. ,, 7 6.00 p.m. 27 50 280 .. • Light wind N. ,, ... 8 10.00 a.m. 27 53 ... 280 Heavy cumulus all day. ,, 8 6.00 p.m. 27 48 290 Light wind N. ,, ... 9 7.00a.m. 27 -38 300 400 25-0 Heavy cumulus all night, stratus and Sui-te Chou 2330 9 5.30p.m. 2751 2076 340 nimbus. 4 00 p.m. Few cirrus, moderate wind S.H. ,, 10 10.00 am 2748 280 390 17-5 Cumulus till 4.00 p.m., clear. ,, 10 6.30p.m. 2742 280 ... Light wind N.W. ■■ 11 7.00a.m. 2741 24.0 380 230 Cirro-cumulus and cumulus all day. Shih-ts'ni-p 3017 11 6.00p.m. 2674 206 2 345 ... ... Light variable wind. ,, ... 12 10.00 a.m. 26 85 36 5 330 380 180 Cirrus all day. II 12 6.00p.m. 2681 350 330 Light variable wind. •• 13 13 10.00 am e.OOp.m 2664 26 75 320 280 ... 465 180 Cirrus. 6.00 p.m. Clear Light variable wind all day. ,, 14 7.00 a.m. 26 95 190 ... 51-5 170 Cumulus. Noon Cirrus. Ch'ing-chieu Hsien 2583 14 6.00p.m. 27 26 207 3 280 ... Light variable wind. .. ... 15 lO.OOa.m. 27 05 300 ... 390 180 Clear, light variable wind. 1. ... 15 6.00p.m. 26 99 ... 300 ... ... ,, 16 7.00 a.m. 2702 190 400 160 Nimbus and cumulus all day. Ma-chia-k'ou 2369 16 e.OOp.ni. 27 30 207 4 34 0 ... Light variable wind. 1* ... 17 lO.OOa.m. 2762 320 400 240 Clear, light variable wind. t* 17 6.00 p.m. 27-58 310 ... ... ... .. 18 7.00 a.m. 2749 12-5 406 11 5 Clear. 2.00 p.m. Few cirrus. Kan-ku-jU 2527 18 6.00p.m. 27 17 207 1 190 ... ... ... Light variable wind. 228 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con/mwerf. k4 "1 n Temperature. PLACE. a Sale. Time of Observation. H Dry Wet \ \ REMARKS. << ^^ Bulb. Balb. Max. Min. feet. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. .908 Kan-ku-yii 2527 Dec. 19 1000a. Ul. 27 19 195 280 -60 Slight hoar-frost during night. •Yen-an Fu 2769 19 9 00p.m. 2694 1 2066 230 Clear, light variable wind. 20 11.00a.m. 26 78, 170 35 Clear, light variable wind. 20 6.00p.m. 26 72 | 30 5 ... 21 10 00 a.m. 2686 265 350 180 Heavy cumulus all day. ... 21 6.00 p.m. 26 94 320 ... Light variable wind. ... 22 10.00 a.m. 27 08 21 0 ... 370 120 Clear, light variable wind. 22 6.00p.m. 26 96 24-5 ... 23 10.00am. 26 90 200 320 160 Clear, light variable wind. 23 7.00p.m. 2682 27 5 24 10 00a.m. 26 90 220 330 180 Few Cirrus during afternoon. 24 6.00p.m. 26 86 300 Light variable wind. 25 10 00 am 1 26 82 260 360 105 Cirrus all day. ... 25 6.00p.m. 26 76 295 Light variable wind. 26 10.00a m 26 90 205 360 lbs Cirrus all day. 26 6.00p.m. 2688 31 0 ... Light variable wind. ... 27 10.00 am 1 26 96 27 0 350 2'2'5 Cumulus all day. ... 27 6.00p.m. 26 92 310 Light wind S. ... 28 10.00a.m. 2688 210 11 0 Clear, light wind S.W. 28 6,00p.m. 2688 340 ... 29 10.00a.m. 2678 .•• 170 ... 400 90 Clear, light variable wind. 29 8.00 p.m. 2678 ... 285 30 10.00 a.m. 2692 200 ... 360 90 Few Cirro-cumulus all day. ... 30 6.00 p.m. 27 02 300 ... ... Light wind N.E. 31 10.00 a.m. 27 26 190 ... 350 125 Clear, calm. •■ 31 6.00p.m. 27 10 ... 190 ... 1909 Jan. 10.00 a.m. 2690 120 31 0 10 Heavy cumulus all day. 1 6.00p.m. 2678 245 • > • ... Light variable wind. 2 10.00 a.m. 26 76 ... 250 ... 190 Heavy cumulus all day. 2 6.00p.m. 26 68 31 0 ::: Calm. 3 10.00 a.m. 2672 260 ... 340 11 0 Clear, light variable wind. 3 6.00p.m. 26 64 330 ... ... 4 11.00a.m. 2668 210 390 115 Cirro-cumulus and cumulus all day. 4 6.00p.m. 26 74 ... 345 ... Moderate wind N.W. 5 10.00 a.m. 2684 220 390 220 Cirro-cumulus and cumulus all day. 5 600p.m. 26 82 ... 295 ... Light wind N W. 6 10.00a.m. 2684 205 34 0 135 Cirrus and Cirro-cumulus all day. 6 6.00p.m. 26 78 275 ... ... Light variable wind. 7 9.30a.m. 26 86 20-5 ... 330 150 Cirro-cumulus and cumulus all day. 7 6.00p.m. 26 84 ... 290 Light variable wind. 8 10.00 a.m. 2676 ... 180 340 90 1 Cirrus all day. 8 6.00p.m 26 66 325 ... Light wind W. 9 10.00 am 26 80 ... 210 360 11 5 Cirrus all day 9 6.00p.m. 26 80 330 ' Light variable wind. 10 10.00a.m. 26 94 ... 190 380 16 0 Heavy cumulus and stratus all day •• 10 6.00p.m. 27 00 325 ; Noon to 6.00 p.m. Light snow. Light j variable wind. 11 10.00 a.m. 27 08 SI'S 360 1210 Stratus. Light snow during night and " 11 6.00p.m. 27 02 ^5 '..'. i ... all day. Moderate wind S. 12 10. 00a. m 2702 ... 220 360 200 Little snow during night. Cumulus all " 12 e.OOp.m 27 06 270 day. Moderate wind W. 13 10 00 am 27 10 270 320 15 0 Cumulus and stratus. Light fall snow 13 6.00p.m 27 10 ... 230 1 at 3.00 p.m. Light wind N.W. 14 9.00a. m 27 02 ... 10-5 ... 290 8 5 Few cirrus. Light wind W. 14 e.OOp.m 26 98 250 ... 1 ••• 1 ... 15 8.30 am 27 00 •■• 70 ... 290 1 5-5 Cirro-cumulus all day. •• ... 15 e.OOp.m 26 82 1 ... 280 ... ... i Light wind N. Latitude 36« 35' 33' N.. Longitude 109' 26' 49' E. 229 M ETEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con/;«uc<^. 1- D«le. Time ol Obscn'ation. sl °2 bliv Temperature. REMARKS. PLACE. DiT Wet << en Bulb. Bulb. Max. Min. feet. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. Yen-an Fu 2769 '9=9 Jan. 16 16 10.00 a.m. 6.00p.m. 26 84 2678 230 265 300 160 Snow during night. Cirro-cumulus and cumulus. Light variable wind. 2.00 p.m., clear. ^, 17 10.00a.m. 2672 220 320 ISO Cumulus and stratus all day. ^^ 17 6.00p.m. 26.66 290 Light variable wind. ^^ 18 10.00a.m. 2686 260 300 250 Stratus all day. Moderate wind N.W. ,^ 18 6.00p.m. 27 10 165 • • • ... ... j^ 19 9.00 a.m. 27 16 -10 27 0 -35 Cirro-cumulus all day. ,^ 19 6.00p.m. 2700 110 Light wind N. ,, 20 10 00 a.m. 26 98 10 ... -25 Clear. Light variable wind. ^, 20 6.00p.m. 2696 17-5 ... ... ... ,, 21 10.00 a.m. 26 95 100 ... ... Zero Clear, calm. ^^ 21 6.30 p.m. 26 94 22 0 ... ,, 22 10.00a m. 26 96 90 1-5 Cirro-cumulus during forenoon. ^, 22 6.00p m. 2684 270 Light wind S. ,, 23 10.00 a m 2694 270 ... 180 Slight hoar-frost during night. ,, 23 6.00 pm. 26 86 320 ... ... Clear, light wind S. ,, 24 10.00a.m. 26 78 120 • ■■ 36 0 80 Slight hoar-frost during night. Clear ,, 24 6.00 p.m. 26 72 305 2.00 p.m. Hazy, light variable wind. ,, 25 10 OOa.ra. 2686 180 360 90 Slight hoar-frost during night. ,, 25 6.00 p.m. 2680 29 0 Clear, light variable wind. ^, 26 10.00 a.m. 26 84 150 34 0 60 Slight hoar-frost during night. 4.00 - 26 6.00p.m. 2674 335 p m.. Cirro-cumulus, light variable wind. ,, 27 10.00a.m. 26 90 280 360 185 Slight hoar-frost during night. 2.00 (• 27 6.00p.m. 2690 34 0 p.m.. Cirro-cumulus, light variable wind. ,, 28 9.00 a.m. 26 92 140 390 60 Cirro-cumulus all day. ,, 28 6.00p.m. 26 86 295 Light wind N. „ 29 10.00a.m. 26 86 200 125 Cumulus all day. ,, 29 6.00p.m. 2675 355 ... Light variable wind. ^, 30 7.30 a.m. 2673 190 190 Slight fall of snow during night, and Lao-shan 3207 30 6.00p.m. 26 34 370 ... during day. Cumulus and stratus, light wind S, ,, 31 10.00 a.m. 26 34 280 420 150 Hoar-frost during night. Cumulus all '■ 31 600pm. 26 27 360 ... day. Moderate wind S. Feb. 1 7.30a.m. 26 28 300 380 280 Hoar-frost during night. Stratus and Tao-t30-p'u 2843 1 6.00p.m. 26 68 2062 370 nimbus all day. Light wind S. ,, 2 1000a.m. 2687 370 420 2'3'o Cumulus. 11.00 a.m., clear. ,, 2 6.00p.m. 26 82 305 ... Light wind N. ,, • *t 3 10.00 a.m. 27 08 210 420 90 Clear, moderate wind N. ,, 3 6.00p.m. 26 98 385 .1. ,, 4 7.30 a m. 27 00 120 400 110 Slight hoar-frost during night. Fu Chou 2912 4 6.00p.m. 27 02 206-8 340 ... Cirrus all day, light variable wind. ,, 5 7.30a.m. 27 14 85 390 80 Slight hoar-frost during night. Ch'ang-ts'un-yi ... 3045 5 6.00 p.m. 27 12 207-2 250 Cumulus and stratus all day, light variable wind. »* 6 10.00 a.m. 27 38 200 360 40 Slight hoar-frost during uight, few „ 6 6.00p.m. 27 29 270 cirrus all day, moderate wind N. ,, 7 7.30 a.m. 27- 18 20 300 2 0 Cirrus all day, moderate wind . Hai-shui-ssQ 3174 7 6.30p.m. 2667 2062 280 . ,. ,, 8 10.00 a.m. 2664 24 0 ... 340 40 Clear, moderate wind S. ,, 8 6.00p.m. 26 52 330 ... ,, 9 8.00 a.m. 2659 150 360 130 Cirrus and cirro-cumulus all day. T'ai-pei-ch'eug ... 3528 9 6.00p.m. 2630 2055 385 Moderate wind N.W. ,, 10 10.00 a.m. 2652 21 0 4'5'o 11 0 Cumulus, dust haze all day. ,, 10 6.00p.m. 2648 350 ... Strong wind N.W. •• 11 8.00 am 26 62 95 ... 370 9-0 Slight hoar-frost during night. 230 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— <:o«//A,M«a. §2 Dale. Time of Observation. 11 Tempermtore. PLACE. Bui?. Wei REMARKS. << £3 Bulb. Max. Mia. feet. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. 1909 Feb. Miao-ts'un 4144 11 6.00p,in. 25 78 204 4 280 ... Few cirms all day, moderate wind N.W. ,, 12 10 00 a.m. 2576 250 350 i'o Clear, strong wind W.N.W. ,, ... 12 e.OOp.m. 25-68 310 ,, ... 13 10.00 a.m. 2553 330 105 Clear, strong variable wind. ,. ... 13 6.00p.m. 25 49 380 ,, ... 14 7.30 am 25 52 22 0 45-5 210 Cirrus and cumulus all day. dust haze. Ho-shui Hsien ... 4146 14 6.00p.m. 26 19 430 380 ... moderate wind S.W. ,, 15 7.30a. m 2625 2054 180 490 170 Few cirrus and haze all day. Ch'ing-yang Fu ... 4216 15 e.OOp.m 26 29 2055 44 5 390 ... ... Light variable wind. ,, 16 1000a. m 2645 300 560 21 0 Few cumulus, noon, clear. , 16 600p.m. 2632 450 39 0 ... Light wind W. , 17 10.00a.m. 26 29 320 500 24 5 Clear, light wind S.E. , 17 6.00p.m. 26 13 480 4'2'o , 18 10.00a.m. 26 23 360 330 52-0 2"8'5 Clear, light variable wind. , 18 e.OOp.m 26 15 480 420 , 19 1000 a.m. 26 55 .. 31 0 ... 560 280 Cirrus all day, light wind N.W. , 19 7.00p.m. 26 44 350 ... , 20 9.30 a.m. 2645 260 560 190 Cumulus all day. , 20 6 30p.m. 26 35 .. 370 34 0 ... Light wind N.W. , 21 7.30a.m. 2641 2058 260 42 0 250 Cumulus, stratus and nimbus all day. Pai-ma-p'u 5677 21 6.00p.m. 25 30 2035 285 ... ... Light wind S.W. 11.00 am. to 2 00 p.m. snow fell. ,, 22 8.00 a.m. 25 20 2034 230 360 21 5 Snow during night and forenoon. Hsi-feng-chen ... 5546 22 6.30p.m. 25 30 2037 300 ... Stratus and nimbus all day, light wind S.W. ,, ... 23 10.00a.m. 25 22 ... 280 360 180 Hea\7 hoar-frost during night. '• ... 23 6.00p.m. 25 20 360 Fog 11.00 am. Cirro-cumulus. 4.00 p.m. cumulus, light wind W. ,, ... 24 10.00a.m. 25 35 350 420 280 Slight hoar-frost during night, cumulus. ,, ... 24 6.00p.m. 25 30 285 Haze all day. light wind W. ,, ... 25 7.30a.m. 25 26 203 6 205 360 19 5 Slight hoar-frost during night. T'ai-pei-ch'Sng ... 5119 25 6.00p.m. 25 29 203 7 285 Stratus and nimbus all day. Light wind S.E. ,, ... 26 10.00 a.m. 2541 25-5 250 Snow during night. " 26 6.00p.m. 2540 ... 350 Overcast, stratus and cumulus all day, light variable wind. ,, ... 27 8.00 a.m. 25 44 2038 265 420 215 Cirrus, cirro-cumulus and cumulus all Chen-yiian Hsien 4478 27 6.00pm. 2604 205 0 410 360 day. light wind N.W. ... 28 10.00 a.m. 26 18 41 5 370 4'20 29.0 Cumulus all day, few flaket snow. •• 28 6.00p.m. 26 10 370 330 Light wind N.W. Mar. 1 7.30a.m. 2601 2050 21 0 48.0 190 Cirro-cumulus and cumulus all day. Yang-shu-wan ... 5336 1 6.30p.m. 25 54 204 1 440 390 ... Light wind S.E. jj ... 2 10.00a.m. 25 74 390 360 560 180 Cumulus and haze. ,, • .. 2 6.00p.m. 2561 400 360 Light wind N. ,, • •• 3 7.30 a.m. 25 50 2040 260 52 0 225 Cumulus all day. Liu-cbia-hua 5763 3 6.00p.m. 25.08 ! 203 2 430 ... Moderate wind N.W. ,, ... 4 7.30 a.m. 25 02 ... 310 _ 480 180 Cirro-cumulus and cumulus since noon. ,, ... 4 6.00p.m. 25 05 455 40 0 strong wind N.W. J, 5 7.30a.m. 25 10 2033 305 560 300 Cumulus and stratus all day. J€u-sa-ho 6345 5 e.OOp m. 24 55 202 2 21 0 Strong wind N W. ,, 6 8.00a.m. 24 52 202 1 80 50 Slight hoar-frost during night, few cirrus *Ku-yuati Chou ... 6333 6 6.00p.m. 24 25 201-7 455 400 all day, light wind N.W. ,_ 7 10.00a m. 24 29 455 400 560 25 5 Cirrus and cirro-cumulus all day, light ,j ... 7 6.30 pm 24 20 430 360 ... ... wind W *i ... 8 10 00a m 24 18 530 460 570 325 Cumulus all day, dust haze. ... 8 6 00p.m 24 19 490 44 5 -I • Light wind N W. ,, ... 9 lOOOa.m. 24 09 480 420 61 5 290 Cirrus and cumulus during afternoon. •• ... 9 6.00p.m. 24 OS 382 40 Moderate wind K. Latitude 36° 00' 23' N., Longitude 106" 6' 28' E. 231 ^ METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con//nwea. 1 'i °S Temperature. Date. Time of Observation. Me 1| REMARKS. PLACE. Dry Bulb. Wet ■<< in «:£• Bulb. Max. Min. feet. ilicbes. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. 1909 Mar. Kn-yiian Chou ... 6333 10 10.00 a.m. 2415 365 350 57 0 225 Stratus and nimbus all day. 10.00 a.m. ... 10 6.00p.m. 24 20 390 350 ... to 1 00 p.m. Little rain, slight wind N ... 11 10 30 a.m. 24 36 300 45-5 2'3-5 7.00 a.m. to 10.30 a.m. Snow, stratus and 11 600pm. 24 42 290 nimbus all day. Light wind N. 12 10.00 a.m. 24 39 300 360 200 Snow. 10.00 a.m. Cumulus and stratus. 12 6 00 p.m. 24-42 280 5.00 p.m. Clear. Light wind E. ... 13 10.00 a.m. 24 41 300 180 Few cirrus all day. ... 13 6.00p.m. 24 35 40-5 360 Light wind S. 14 10.00 a.m. 24 26 400 360 6'o-5 32 0 Cirrus and cumulus all day. 14 6.00p.m. 2430 400 360 Wind N.-W. 15 10.00 a.m. 24 26 380 610 300 Fog. 11.00 a.m. Cumulus. _^ 15 6.00p.m. 24 31 415 380 Light wind N.E. 16 7.30 a.m. 24-47 2020 310 650 31 0 Fog and haze. Noon, Cirro-cumulus Ch'ang-yi-p'u 6813 16 6.00p.m. 2337 1997 360 and Cumulus. Wind. a.m.. N. ; p.m., S.W. Snow till 11.00 a.m. Stratus and ti 17 10.00 a.m. 2343 330 42.5 19-5 cumulus. ,, 17 6.00p.m. 23 32 300 ... Light wind \V. ,, 18 7.15 a.m. 23 20 199-5 310 180 Stratus and nimbus. 11.00a.m. cumulus. Ch'ang-t'ai-p'u ... 6653 18 6.00p.m. 23-95 2008 420 370 2.00 p.m. clear. Moderate wind S. _, ... 19 10.00 a.m. 24 08 380 4'5-0 150 Strong wind during night. Haze all 19 e.OOp.m 24 06 350 ... day. Moderate wind S. 20 7.00 a.m. 24 10 201 3 300 24-0 Cumulus all daj'. Ching-ning Chou . 6276 20 6.00p.m. 2446 201 8 460 40 0 ... Moderate wind S.W. ,_ 21 10.00 a.m. 24-34 41 0 380 520 395 Small amount of rain in morning. •• ... 21 6.00p.m. 24-29 ... 45 0 425 Cumulus and stratus all day. Light wind S.W. „ 22 10.00 a.m. 24 38 430 400 465 33-5 Fog and overcast all day. Light wind •■ 22 6.30p.m. 24-59 310 W. 5.00 p.m. little snow. Small amount of rain in morning. 23 7.00a.m. 24 80 2028 290 460 170 Little snow during night. Cumulus and Ch'ing-chia-yi ... 7468 23 6.00 p.m. 24 10 201-4 24-5 ... stratus all day. Strong wind N. _^ ... 24 9.30 a.m. 24 07 280 60 Clear, light wind W. ,j ... 24 6.00p.m. 24 -48 400 35 0 ... ... J, ... 25 7.00 a.m. 24 03 2012 200 550 180 Cirro-cumulus all day. Hui-ning Hsien ... 6125 25 6.00p.m. 24 49 2020 430 390 Light wind E. 26 10.00 a.m. 24 37 37 0 330 500 22 5 Little snow. Strong wind and dust ,_ 26 6.00p.m. 24 28 390 350 storm S. Cumulus all day. ,, 27 7.00 a.m. 24 37 2620 280 51 0 21 5 Cirro-cumulus all day. Hsi-kung-yi 6568 27 6.00p.m. 24 16 2013 500 380 ... Light wind S.W. 28 10.00 a.m. 24-28 430 34 0 570 270 Cumulus all day. Evening overcast. ,, 28 6.00p.m. 24 20 490 390 ... Light wind W. ^, 29 7.00 a.m. 24 25 261-6 34 0 560 325 Snow during night and at 7.00 a.m. up An-ting Hsien ... 6762 29 6.00p.m. 23 88 2011 400 350 ... to noon, fog. Clear towards evening. Wind N. Noon, wind S.W. __ ... 30 10.00 a.m. 23 83 420 360 580 205 Cirro-cumulus all day. ,, 30 6.00p.m. 23-74 580 465 Light variable wind. J, 31 10.00 a.m. 24 00 44 0 380 640 2'8"o Cumulus all day. •• 31 6.00p.m. 23 95 430 340 ... ... Light wind N.E. April 1 7.15 a.m. 23 87 2009 21 5 620 14-5 Cirrus all day. Ch'6ng-k'ou-yi ... 6839 1 6.00p.m. 23 75 2005 510 380 Light variable wind. ,, 2 7.15a.m. 2380 200 7 300 620 270 Few cirrus all day. Kan-tsao-tieti 6781 2 6.00p.m. 2381 2006 58 5 390 Light wind N.W. ,j 3 10.00 a.m. 23 86 490 450 680 320 Clear, light variable wind. „ 3 6.00p.m. 23 74 540 430 Snow between 6 00 and 9.00 a.m. ,, • •• 4 7.00 a.m. 23 83 2009 420 350 580 370 Cumulus with haze all day. Hsiao-shui-t7.a ... 5559 4 6.00p.m. 24 96 2030 54 0 410 Light wind N.W. 4.00p.m. Strong N.^W. •• 5 7 00a.m. 25 26 203-8 410 35 0 560 410 Overcast, cumulus. 4 00 p.m. Clear. 232 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS -continued. Mm Dale. Time of Observation. H Temperature. PLACE. B Dry Wet REM.\RKS. << ^^ ^S Bulb. Bulb. Max. Mio. fcel. incbes. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. 1009 *I;u^. Cumulusand mist all day. Light wind E. 17 10.00 a.m. 24 94 700 580 ... 575 Rainfall 0 01 inches. Cirrusand cumulus 17 5.00p.m 24 84 790 670 ... ... all day. Light wind E. 18 10.00 a.m. 24 90 710 610 84 0 620 Cumulus and haze all day. ... 18 6.00p.m. 24 98 64 0 56 0 ... Light wind N.E. 19 11.30a.m. 24 94 750 620 820 570 Cumulus all day. Moderate wind W. 19 6.30 p.m. 24 88 74 0 63 0 ... ... 20 10.00 a.m. 24 90 72 0 600 780 55 0 Cumulus all day. 20 7.30p.m. 24 86 76 0 65 0 ... Light wind \V. 21 1000a m 24 90 69 0 62 0 I 80 0 ee'o Cumulus and stratus all day. 21 6.00p.m. 24 92 74 0 68 0 ... Moderate wind \V. 11.00 a.m. Rain. 22 9.00a.m. 24 96 70 0 610 80 0 550 23 6.00p.m. 24 86 80 0 66 0 ... Cumulus all day. Moderate wind W. 24 10.30 a.m. 24 88 710 650 860 63-0 Cumulus all day. 24 7.00p.in. 24 90 790 660 ... ... Light wind E. 235 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— co«//>7«ea'. PLACE. Lan-chou Fu Hsiao-shui-tzQ Kan-tsao-tien Ch'^ng-k'ou-yi An-ting Hsien .. Ching-liang-shan Ying-tao-ho Hui-ning Hsien .. Ts'ai-chia-Tsui .. << Date. feet. 1909 5106 June 25 ... 25 26 ... 26 27 27 28 28 29 29 30 30 July 1 2 ... 2 3 3 ... 4 4 • .. 5 ... 5 ... 6 ... 7 7 8 8 9 9 10 10 11 12 12 ... 13 14 14 15 5559 15 ... 16 6781 16 17 6839 17 17 18 18 19 6762 19 7217 19 ... 20 6025 20 6125 20 21 6363 21 Time of Observation. V V inches. 10 00am. 24 90 7 30p.ni. 24 86 9.30a.m.! 2504 6.00p.m. 25 00 10 00 am 7 OOp m 10 ;iOa til 6.00 p. m 10 30a. m 7 30p.ui 10.00 am 7 OOp m 10.00 a.m. 6 00p m. 11 00 a.m. 6.00p.m. 11.00 a.m. 5 00p.m. 10 00 a.m. 6.00p.m. 10.00 am 6.00 p.m. 10.00 a.m. morning 6.00p.m. 10 00a.m. 8.00 p.m. 10 00 a.m. 6.00p.m. 10.00 a.m. evening 10.00 a.m. 10.00 a.m. 800p.m. l.OOp.m 2.00p.m 6 OOp.m. 7 00 a.m. 4.30p.m, 5.30 a.m. 800p.m. 7.00a.m, 2.00p.m, 8.00p.m. 10.00 a.m. 6 00 p.m. 6.30 a.m. 3.00p.m. 8.00p.m. 6.00 a.m. 2.00p.m. 7.00p.m. 6.30a.m. 6.00p.m. 24 90 24 74 24 72 24 60 24 76 24 -70 24 82 24 84 24 94 24 98 24 -90 24 88 24 80 24 97 24 90 24 92 24 86 24 89 24 80 24 71 24 -75 24 79 24 75 24 70 24 88 24 84 24 93 24 96 24 90 24 90 24 82 24 82 24 86 24 86 24 87 23 83 23 79 23 63 23 60 23 79 23 78 23 84 23 80 23 14 23 14 24 30 24 23 24 14 2388 MS ■5 o OF. 202 8 202 8 200 9 2006 2004 2002 200 6 200 6 200 6 200 8 1993 1992 201 6 2016 2016 2009 Temperature. Dry Bulb. 780 830 600 620 64 0 64 0 660 620 71 0 785 705 72 5 82 0 780 73 0 780 770 710 710 74 0 860 74 0 750 635 690 71 2 790 850 81 0 710 75 0 60 0 730 64 0 74 5 705 65 0 69 0 595 775 67 0 598 790 755 630 71 5 Wet Bulb. OF. 660 680 600 600 600 640 64 0 750 64 0 670 75 0 620 630 620 64 0 62 0 685 710 65 0 660 665 71 2 650 68 0 668 660 63 5 675 670 680 680 685 620 61 0 61 5 722 65 2 65 0 64 0 560 602 61 0 64 5 630 585 598 565 625 57.2 52 0 62 0 600 580 637 Max. OF. 860 900 680 860 900 860 800 815 Min. OF. 630 600 530 570 680 640 600 530 585 608 61 0 64 5 615 662 64 2 655 630 562 612 61 0 620 580 600 575 595 545 568 REMARKS. Cumulus all day. 1 Moderate wind E. - Cumulus and stratus. Moderate wind W. Rainfall 2 00 a.m. to 6 00 p.m. 0 72 inches (2.00 a.m. to 9.30 a.m. 0 51 inches). Cumulus all day. Light wind W. Cumulus. Light wind W. Cumulus all day. Morning Moderate wind E. Evening Moderate windN.E. Rainfall Oil inches. Stratusandcumulus all day. Light wind N.E. 9.00 a m. Rain 0 08 inches. Cumulus.and stratus all day. Light variable wind. Stratus and nimbus all day. Light variable wind. Rainfall 0 17 inches. Cumulus, stratus. Clear overhead. Rainfall =0 03 inches. Rainfall3 30a m.to8 00a.m.=0 lOinches. Cumulus and stratus. Clear, calm. Overcast. Light wind W. Clear, calm. Evening Stratus and cumulus. Strong wind E. 10.00a.m. Dull. calm. 8 OOp ni. Overcast. Brisk breeze N.E. 10 00 am Clear, calm. 6 00 p.m. Cum- ulus. Light wind N.E. Overcast, calm all day. 10.00 p.m. Heavy shower of raiu. Rain all day. total rainfall .since 10.00 p.m. July'lOth =0 92 inches. Morning Clear. Light breeze N.E. Evening Cirrus, calm. Clear, calm. Cirro-stratus. Fresh breeze N.E. Evening Cirrus, calm. Morning Overcast, calm. Evening Overcast, thunder clouds. Morning Clear. Evening ^ part cirrus, calm. 8.00 p.m. Rain in torrents. 8.00 p.m. July 17th, to 6.00 am. July 18th, = r32 inches. Overcast all day. Little rain. No wind. 6.30 a.m. Overcast. 3.00 p.m. Overcast, calm. Cirro-cumulus. 2.00 p.m. Cirro-cumu- lus, calm. 7.00 p m. Clear, calm. 6.30 a.m. Cirro-stratus, calm. 6.00 p.m. Cirrus, calui. 236 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERYATIO'^S— continued. PLACE. Ts'ai-chia-Tsui .. Kao-chia-p'u Ch'i-chia-ta-slian . Ching-ning Chou Shan-chia-chieh .. Chang-fai-p'u .. Ch'ang-yi-p'u Ku-yiiau Chou S,= Date. r«t. 6363 5862 6662 6276 6203 6653 Jen-sa-ho ... 5915 Jen-chia-wan ... 5263 Chung-tza-yang chia 6813 6333 K'ai-pien Chen-yiian Hsien T'ai-pei-ch'eng .. Yi-ma-kuan Pai-ma-p'u Ch'ing-yang Fu .. Ho-shui Hsien 4950 4454 4478 5119 5108 5082 4216 4146 1909 July 22 22 23 23 23 24 24 25 25 25 26 26 27 27 28 28 Auer 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 11 11 12 12 13 Time of Observation. 6 30 am S.OOp.m 7.30 am 11.00 am 6.00 pm 8.00 am e.OOp.m 6.00a. m 2.00 p. m 7.00p.m 9.00 am 6.00 p. m e.OOa.m 5.00p.m, 6.30 a.m. 5.30 p.m. e.OOa.m 6.00 p. m 8.00 a 111 6.00 p.m 10.00 a. m e.OOp.m 7.00 a. m 2.00p.m S.OOp.m 6.30 am e.OOp.m e.OOa.m e.OOp.m e.OOa.m e.OOp.m 8.00 a.m e.OOp.m e.OOa.m e.OOp.m 4.30 am e.OOp.m 5.15 a.m. noon 8.00p.m. 7.00 a.m. e.OOp.m. e.OOa.m. e.OOp.m. 6.00a.m. 6.00p.m. 8.00 a.m. 7.00p.m. 6.00 a.m. 3.S inches. ■o 9 a S. OF. 93 32 32 64 34 46 36 ' 40 13 92 01 98 98 91 97 26 200 201 201 200 201 202 202 202 201 201 201 201 Temperature. 201 2 2010 2012 2000 23 26 199 8 24 08 2016 24 18 201 7 24 17 201 6 24 -27 24 -28 24 32 24 40 24 75 24 71 25 07 25 10 25 53 25 64 25 90 25 93 25 85 25 89 25 30 25 28 24 98 24 97 25 10 2607 26 11. 26 07 2609 26 04 2608 2601 26 09 2605 2018 201 8 203 203 204 204 204 204 204 205 203 203 203 203 203 205 205 205 205 205 Dry Bulb. OF. 660 73 2 692 71 0 77 5 710 775 70 5 840 680 64 0 720 64 0 800 620 736 Wet Bulb. OF. 600 640 628 655 64 5 660 655 670 620 61 5 660 605 652 585 629 570 540 77 2 660 70 5 638 678 628 630 71 0 2019 59 0 2017 76 0 202 7 660 2027 560 205 2 204 9 205 1 205 0 2050 760 590 77 0 67 0 73 2 74 0 798 668 670 64 0 725 660 80 5 715 730 735 630 705 630 698 67 5 71 5 64 4 600 640 570 590 599 530 64 0 570 655 630 65 0 640 674 638 620 620 650 628 680 67 0 65 5 665 608 636 610 65 8 650 675 625 Max. Min. OF. OF. 815 84"6 930 850 92.0 900 845 860 905 1022 930 990 485 650 660 600 495 578 490 592 582 51 0 540 490 590 640 64 5 570 580 645 630 648 eO'S REMARKS. 6.30 a.m. Clear, calm. 8 00 p.m. Overcast, threatening rain. 7 30 a.m. Overcast, threatening rain. 6.00 p.m. Overcast. 8.00 a.m. Calm, overcast. 6.00 p.m. Clear, calm. 6.00 a.m. Clear, calm. Heavy rain since 9.00 p.m. July 25th. =0 72 inches. 9.00 a.m. Overcast little rain. 6.00 a.m. Clear, calm. 5 00 p.m. Cumulus, calm. Heavy rain during night Rainfall since ll.OOp ni. July 27th=0 73 inches. 6 30 a.m. Entire cumulo-stratus, calm. 5.30 p.m. Clear, breeze X.W. 6 00 a.m. Clear, calm. 6.00 p.m. Overcast, calm. 8 00a.m. Overcast, calm. 11.00a m. Rain, thunderstorm S. Rainfall=0 26 inches. 6 00 p.m. Overcast, calm. Raining, calm. 6.00 p.m. Clear, calm. 7.00 a.m. Clear, calm. 2.00 p.m. Clear, calm. 8.00 p.m. Clear, calm. 6.30 a.m. Clear, calm. 6.00 p.m. Clear, calm. 6.00 a.m. Clear, calm. 6.00 p.m. Overcast, calm. 6 00 a.m. Light rain, calm. 8.00 a.m. Almost clear, calm. 6.00 p.m. Strato-cuniuhis. calm. 6.00 a.m. Overcast, stratus, calm. 6.00 p.m. Overcast, calm. 4.30 a.m. Overcast, calm. 6.00 p.m. Overcast, calm. 5.15 a.m. Entire cirro-cumulus, calm. Noon, Cumulus and light cirnis. calm. 8 00 p ni. Raining. I'all = 0 08 inches. 7.00 a.m. Cirro-cumulus, calm. 6.00 p.m. Heavy rain S. e.OOa.m. Clear, calm. e.OOp.m. Stratus, calm. 2 00 to 4.00 p m. Rainfall = 0 09 inches. 6.00 a.m. Cirrus, calm. 6 00 p.m. Raining Heavy rain since 6 00 p m August 11th. Rainfall for 12 hours ending 6.00 a in, =0 58 inches. Light cumulus, calm. Clear, calm. 237 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— con/w«erf. 8- Date. Time of Observation. "5 ? c H •56 Temperature. PLACE. Bull. Wet REMARKS. « ^x «:? Bulb. Max. Min. feel. inches. OF. OF. OF. OF. OF. 1909 Miao-ts'un 4144 AuB. 13 eoop.m 25 39 2039 720 670 6.00 p m. Few stratus, calm. ,, 14 2.00p.m. 25 43 204 2 700 662 6.00 p.m. Raining. Fall since noon=0 23 ,, ... 14 6.00p.m. 2541 204.2 700 67 0! ••• inches. ,, ... 15 6.00 a.m. 25 39 204 0 645 630 54-'4 6.00 a m. Overcast, calm. T'ai-pei-ch'fing ... 3528 15 6.00p.m. 2606 205 1 772 678 6.00 p.m. Clear, calm. ,, 16 6.30 a.m. 2608 205 1 600 597 560 Heavy dew 6.30 am Cirro-stratus, calm. Hai-shui-ssQ 3174 16 7.00p.m. 2624 205 6 705 67 5 7.00 p.m. Clear, calm. (Shensi) ,, 17 7.00a.m. 2632 2055 615 608 ... 7.00 a.m. Overcast, mist, calm. Ch'ang-ts'un yi ... 3045 17 8.00p.m. 2658 2060 71-5 61 5 6.00 p.m. Thunderstorm, without rain, from N.E 8 00 p.m. Clear, calm. ,, 18 8.00 a.m. 2673 2063 685 652 8.00 a.m. Entire cirro-stratus, calm. Yang-chiian 4085 18 noon 25 99 204 8 755 660 Noon. Overcast, calm. Fu Chou 2912 18 7.00p.m. 26 76 2064 71 5 64 5 7.00 p.m. Overcast, calm. ,, ... / 19 5.40 a.m. 26 79 2064 655 620 590 5.40 a.m. Entire light cirrus, calm. Kau-ch'iian Hsien 3416 19 8.00p.m. 26 49 2062 655 622 Noon. Commenced to rain heavily. 8.00 p m. Overcast, calm. ,, ... 20 7.00a.m. 2649 206 2 620 600 770 390 Rain all night. Fall for 12 hours ending •• ... 20 6.00p.m. 2642 2058 675 67-5 11.00 a.m.=0 66 inches. 6.00 p.m. Few cirrus, calm. ,, 21 6.30 am 2642 205 7 62 2 608 600 6.30 a.m. Overcast, calm. 8.00 p.m. Ma-p'u-tai-ho 3756 21 8.00p.m. 26 15 205 3 625 595 Overcast, calm. 10.00 p.m. Raining. ,, 22 8 00 a.m. 26 17 205 4 67 0 62 0 s'o's 8.00 a.m. Clear, calm. Heavy dew. Yen-an Fu 2769 22 8.30p,m. 2667 2062 70S 64 0 8.30 p.m. Clear, calm. ,, 23 8.00 a.m. 2672 2064 670 620 I ... 8.00 am. Calm. ■ I ... 23 600p.m. 26 64 206 2 780 66 5 1 ... 6.00 p.m. Calm. li 24 8.00 a.m. 26 75 2063 64 5 630 615 8.00 a.m. Scotch mist. ,, 24 6.00p.m. 26 62 206- 1 800 675 6.00 p.m. Clear, calm. ,, 25 6,30a.m. 26 67 206 3 650 61 5 592 6.30 a.m. Clear, calm. Yaotieii 2514 25 2.00p.m. 26 68 206 2 880 698 2.00 p.m. Cumulus, calm. Kan-kuyii 2527 25 7.00p.m. 2681 206 4 800 67 5 7.00 p.m. Cirro-cumulus, calm. ,, 26 6.00a m. 2681 2064 630 605 ■ ■ . 5'40 6.00 a.m. Clear, calm. Ma-chia-k'ou 2369 26 7.00p.m. 2693 206 4 820 675 7.00 p.m. Entire cumulus, calm. , , 27 5.00 a.m. 26 98 2066 660 620 890 59-'9 5.00 a.m. Clear, calm. Ch'ing-cbien Hsien 2583 27 6.00p.m. 26 74 2063 882 694 6.00 p.m. Clear, calm. ,, 28 4.00a.m 26 79 2064 690 64 8 930 630 4 OOa.m. Clear, calm. Shih-ts'ui-yi 3017 28 6 OOp m. 2638 205 7 878 702 6.00 p.m. Light stratus, calm. ,, 29 3 30 a m. 2645 205 8 71 0 658 3.30 a.m. Clear, calm. Sui-te Chou 2330 29 eoop.m 2706 206 9 780 ... ... 6.00 p.m. Overcast, heavy cumulus, calm. ,, 30 8.30 a m. 27 16 2070 725 65*0 900 635 8 30 a.m. Overcast, calm. II 30 6 00p.m. 27 09 2069 790 690 .. • 6.00p.m. Overcast, threatening, breezeS. ,, 31 5.45 a.m. 27 17 207 0 720 662 68-2 5.45 a.m. Overcast, calm. 5.00 p.m. Rain. Yii-ho-ch'eng 2537 31 6.00p.m. 2688 2065 70.0 602 6.00 p.m. Overcast, threatening, calm. Sept. 1 6 OOa.m 2691 206-6 62-5 570 6.00 a.m. Overcast, threatening, calm. K'aiig-chia-fa ... 1822 1 6.00p.m. 2763 2079 685 635 ... 11.00 a.m. Rain till 2.00 p m. 6.00 p.m. (on Yellow River) Overcast, calm. ,, 2 600a.m. 27 63 2080 670 630 59-4 6.00 a.m. Overcast, calm. Rainfall for Liu-lin-chen 2316 2 6.30p.m. 27 18 207 2 730 650 ... 11 hours ending 6.00 a.m.=0 36 inches. (Shansi) 6.30 p.m. Clear, calm ... 3 6 OOa.m. 27-23 207-2 620 585 555 6.00 a.m. Cirro-cumulus, calm. 6.00 Yung-ning Chou .. 2738 3 600p.m. 26 79 2066 655 620 p.m. Raining. Fall since 3.00 p.m. =0 16 inches. ,, 4 6.00 am 26 84 2064 59-5 580 590 6.00 a.m. Entire cirro-cumulus, calm. Wu-ch'^ng 4165 4 6.00p.m. 25 57 204 0 680 625 6 00 p.m. Overcast, calm. " ... 5 5.30 a.m. 25 58 204- 1 620 590 592 5.30 a.m. Cirro-cumulus, calm. 238 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS— continued. • o ti °t Temperature. S'S E- PLACE. Date. Time of Observation. a c Dry Wet REMARKS. << U «£• Bulb. Bulb. Ma X. Min. feet. ioches. OF. OF. OF. OF \ OF. 1009 Sept. Fen-chou Fu 2414 5 e.OOp.m. 27 32 207 4 785 690 ... 6.00 p.m. Clear, calm. , , ... 6 6.00 a.m. 27 31 207 2 660 620 632 6.00 a.m. Clear, calm. Kuan-hsin-cheu ... 2591 6 7.00p.m. 27 17 207 0 740 650 .. 7.00 p.m. Strato-cumulus, calm. , , ... 7 6.00 a.m. 27 29 207 3 67 5 530 ... 6.00 a.m. Overcast, fresh breeze S.E. Chiu-ssQ 2657 7 7.00p.m. 27 27 207 3 62 5 452 ... 7.00 p.m. Clear, calm. ,. ... 8 6.00 a.m. 27 20 207 2 455 41 0 450 6.00 a.m. Clear, calm. Tai-yiian Fu 2600 8 10.00p.m. 27 14 207 0 605 502 10 00 p.m. Clear, calm. , , ... 9 8.00 a.m. 27 24 207 2 64 0 54 8 80 0 390 8.00 a.m. Light cirrus, calm. , 9 5.00p.m. 27 19 207 1 753 558 .. ... 5.00 p.m. Clear, calm. , 10 8.00 a.m. 27 32 207 3 625 532 80 4 452 8 00 am. Light cirrus, calm. , ... 10 7.00p.m. 27 26 207 2 690 582 .. 7 00 p.m. Misty, calm. , 11 8.00 a.m. 27 29 207 3 690 54 8 600 8.00 a.m. Overcast calm. , ... 11 8.00p.m. 27 22 207- 1 672 56 5 8.00 p.m. Clear, calm. 12 8.00 a.m. 27 31 2073 650 575 520 8.00 a.m. Clear, calm. 238 INDEX. INDEX. Acari Accentor Accipiter Acredula iEgialitis Aex galericulata Alcedo . . AUactaga Altitudes Ampe'-is Anas Ancistrodon Anderson (Mr. M. I Anorthura Anser . . Antelope Anthropoides . . Anthus spinoletta An-ting Hsien (Shensi) (Kansu) Apodemus Aquila . . Aranea; (Araneida;) Ardca cinerea . . Athene pluinipes Austen (Mr. E. E.) Badger . . Base line Baths (Lin-t'ung H) Bats Bear Bedford (D. of) Bittern . . Botaurus Broomhall (Mr. M.) Bruce (Major C. D.) Bubo . . Buddha (Buddhist) 17, 18, 29, 30,43 Bufo .... Bugonia-myth Bunting Bustard . . . . . . 36, Buteo . . Butterflies Buzzard Caccabis Calbrecht (Father) Cambridge (Rev. O. P. Canis lupus Capreolus Caprimulgus . . Came^^ie Expedition (and Institution) Carp Carpodacus Casarca Catfish . . Cave-dwellings Ccrchneis Ch'ang-t'ai-p'u PAGE 186, 187, 192 100 103 99 107 106 93, 108 92, 93, 171. 183 131, 133. 170 100 106 no 79, Si, 83, 85, 87, 180 91, 100 105 ■ 20, 85 107 99 123 53. 59. 134 80, gi, 92, 178, 179 lOI 1S6, 187, 204-218 106 103 186, 188 85 3, 130. 132 41. 124 93 91 . . 79, 83 106 106 50 134 103 48.49.51.52.53.90 112 189 (and Note) 97 38. 55. 56. 86, 89, 105 103 5. 76. 93 103 104 74 204 82 80, 82, 174, 192 103 115. 116, 124 "3 97 106 "3 36. 74 103 58, 72, 92, 151 Ch'ang-ts'un-yi Ch'ang-wu Hsien Ch'ang-yi-p'u . . Chao-chuang . . Cheng (Prince) Ch'eng-k'ou-yi Ch'eng-tu Fu . . Cli'Cng-wu Miao Chcn-t'ai Chen-yiian Hsien Chia-lu . . Chiao-ch'eng Shan 3. 34 5". 73 Ch'ien-chou Chien Shcn Chien-tsai Ho . . Chih-fu (Prefect) Chih-hsien (District Magistrate) Chihii . . 71, 73, 92, 97, 105, 115 Chin-chia-k'ou Ching-chia-yi . . Ch'ing-chien Hsien Ching-Iiang Shan Ching-ning Chou 7, 8, 14, 79, 81, 82 117, 120, 121, 125 Ching-pien Ch'ing-ting Shan Ch'ing-yang Fu Ch'in-Iing Shan Cliipmunk Chiu-ts'ai Chou-chih Hsien Chough Chung-nan Shan Chung-pu Hsien Ciconia . . Cinclus . . Circus cyaneus Citellus Clangula Classics (The Sixteen) Clemen ti (Mr.) Coal 7, 17, 20, 24 Cobb (Mr. H. B.) Cobitis tinia Coccothraustes Coleoptera Coloeus . . Coltman (Mr.) Coluber dionc Columba Colynibus Confucius Coot Cormorant Corvus . . Coturnix Cotyle . . Crab 21 57 19 19 116, 119, 127, 128, 129 17 58 27, 28, 123 59 53. 54. 58, 70. 71. 92. 93. 125 122 10, 13, 14, 15, 122, 142 50. t>9, 70. 73. 74. 75. 125, 133. 134. 146 PAGE ■ • 55. 5'J 53 • • 58, 72 136, 137. 138 45 59. 136. 151 2 13 19 151 17 88, 92, 127, 129, 141 53 (note) 12.1 136. Si, 82 28 (barges, 40), 5. 13. 14. H9 19. 151 116 85. 88, 91, 92 17 51 97 51 36,37.45, 124 107 100 103 83. 91. 98. 177 106 • ■ 49. 51 ^ii, 134 120, 123, 124 22. 32, 34, 83 113 97 190 96 79 ilo ■• 105 .. 107 47 107 .. 107 96 .. 104 lOi 76. 91. 93 186, . 61, 86, 243 PAGE PAGE Cranes . . 85. 107 Goral . . . . . . 48, 90 Craseomys 80, 81. 182 Graculus i6 Cricctulus 80, 81, 83, 86, 87, 92, 179, 180 Grant (Mr. G. A.) •• 3. 4. 5. 7. 19 22. 32. 33. Crocidura 82 34. 55. 56. 69 70. 76. 87, 92, 93. 132, 133, 186, 187 Crossoptilon . . 104 Grebe . . 107 Crows . . 85. 96, 97 Grosbeak . . 98 Cuckoo . . 108 Grouse . . 105 Cuculus. . 108 Grus . . . . 107 Curlew . . 82, 107 Gull 106 Cyanopolius 88,97 Gypaetus 102 Cygnus ferus . . 106 Hai-ch'eng Hsicn 134 Cyprinus carpio 113 Hai-shui-ssu 55. 124 Dafila 106 Halcyon 93, 108 David, A 81 Haliaetus .... 102 Pcre 94 Hamster .. 81, 83, 87 Da\ ies (Major) 5. 132 Han River 44 Deer lo, 30, 55. 72, 7. ), 76, 77, 82, 87, 88, 89, 91, 92, 93 Han-chung Fu . . .. 38. 44 Dello (Mr.) 71 Hang Shan (see Sacred Peaks) Dendrocopus . . 108 Hankow 32, 42, 43, 44.91 Dicrurus 100 Hare .. 30.31. 82, 86, 87, 89, 91 Pipodida; 83 Hawks . . .. 82, loi, 103 Diptera 1S6, 188, 189 Hazrat Ali .. 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 24, 26, 27, Dipus sowerbyi 80, 83, 92, 183 28, 31 32, 33, 55, 63-69, 130. 131 Dog 30. 31. 37 Hedgehog 83 Douglas (Captain H. E M., V.C.) 4, 5, iS, 19, 20, Hemiptcra 186, 191 3i. 55. <>8. 69. 71 79, 82, 186, 188, 194. 203, Heng Shan (see Sacred Peaks) 204, 213, 217 Henicurus 86, 100 Dove 28, 86, 105 Heron . . . . 85, 106, 107 Dragonflies 75. 93 Hirst (Mr. S.) . . . . 18(1, 187, 192 Drongo 100 Hirundo loi Drj'onastes 91.99 Hogg (Mr. H. R.) . . 1S6, 204-21S Duck 32, 40, 75, 89. . .91, 106 Honan (and H. Fu ) ■ . 3. 32. 33. 34 42. 43. 44. tagle 12, 82, 86, 91, loi, 102 52, 62, 69, 89, 91, 106, III, 113, 128 Edwards (M. Milne) . 80 Hoopoe 108 Eel "3 Ho-shui Hsien 56, 125 Elaphis no Hot Springs 41, 45, 51, 124 Emberiza 97 Hsi-an Fu 14, 22, 32, 33. 34, 36. 38-43. Eophona melanura 98 44-54. 58. 69. 89, 91, 99, 105, 106 113. 114. Epimys see Mus. 124, 129, 132 Eptesicus 93. 171. 172 Hsiao-shui-tzQ 59, 60, 71, 125, 126 Eremias no Hsia Yii Ch ii Shui Pi see Vu Erinaceus . . 80, S3 Hsieh-tao-ts'un 7 Erythacus 99 Hsien-yang Hsien •• 51. 53 Erythropus 103 Hsi-feng-chtn . . 56 Eutamias 80, 81, 85, 92, 176, 177 Hsi-kung-yi 59 Falco (Ealcon) 102, 105 Hsin Chou . . 129 Felis chinensis 88, 173 Hsii-chou Fu . . 2 Fen-chou Fu . . 15, 70, 78, 117, 127, 132, 134 Huai Ho 119 Feng-hsiang-ch'eng II Huang Ho (or Yellow River) 11, 13, i. , 15. 16, 18 Fen Ho 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 14. 15. 34. 116. 117. "9. 120, 24. 43. 44. 59. 60, 61, 71, 77, 82, 106, III, 113, 121, 127, 141, 151 116, iig, 121, 122. 126, 128, 133, 134, 141, Filchner (Herr W.) . 81, 134 142. 147, 149 Finches 82, 97, 98 Huang-ho-yeh 14. I". 17 Foxes . . ..20, 82, 85, 87, 91 Huang-ti 36, 45, 46 (note) Fringilla 97 Huang-t'u 115, lib, 120, 121, 122, 123, 127, 128 Frogs 76, 82, 85, 112 Huang-t'u-tsai. . 115 Frugilegus 96 Hua Shan . . 43. 48 FuChou ..34. 35 . 55. 5*^. 76. 77, 124, 126, 128, 134 Hua-yi Miao . . . . 42 Fulica . . 107 Hui-ning Hsien ■ ■ 53. 58. 126 Gahan (Mr. C. J.) 186. 190 Hymenoptera . . 186, 191 Gallinago ..107 Ibidorhynchus 107 Gallinula 107 Ibis 40, 89, 107 Ganges . . 51 Imperial Family 19, 22, 32 Garrulus 91, 97 Tombs 02 Gecinus . . 9 1 , 1 08 India {and Indian inlluence) .. 2, 29, 47, .=ii Gecko III Inns and Innkeepers . . 24. 26, 35, 53, y, Gee.se . . .. 32, 40, 43, 85, 89, 91, 105 Instruments (Surv eying) 1 3. " Martins . . . . . . . . . . . . loi Kan-chou Fu . . 53 Matschie (Mr. Paul) 81 Kan-ch lian Hsien 34. 77. 134 McCov (Mr. and Mrs.) . . . . . . . . 7 K'ang-chia-t'a 77 Meade-Waldo (Mr. G.) 186. 191 K'ang-hsi (Emperor) . 41, 42. 48, 50, 133 Merganser . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 06 Kan-icu-yii . . 28. 136, 144 Mergus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Kan-tsao-k'ou 13, 83, 142 Meriones 80,85,86,178 Kan-tsao-tien . . 59 Miao-ts'un . . . . . . . . . . . . 55, 76 Kao-ti . . 46 Mi-chih Hsien . . . . . . . . . . . . 26, 28 Kashgar (Kashgari) . 62, 64, 133, 134 Microsarcops . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 K'e-lan Chou . . .. 80, 87, 117 Microtus .. .. .. 80, 81, 87, 171, 180, 181 K'e-lan Shan . . 81 Miller (Mr. G. S.) . .So, 81. 83. 85. 92. 93. 95, 171, 180 Kemas galeanus 1 75 Milvus . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 Kestrel 103 Min Chou . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Kingfisher ■ . 75. 93. 108 Min Ho . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Kite 85, 102 Ministers (Briti.sh and American at Peking) . . 67. 68 Kokonor 147, 149 Mink 89 Kowloon 133. 134 Minnow . . . . . . . . . . 75. 114 Kuan Li (or Kuan Kung) • . 47. 50 Mi.sgurnus .. .. .. .. .. .. 113 Ku-chao . . 8, 120 Missionaries 8. 10. 11. 12. 39, 41, 50, 56, 66, 73. 74, 133 Ku-lu (or Drum Tower) 44 Mi-yiieh-ch'eng . . . . . . . . . . 9 Kuo-t'ing 49 Mo-an . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Ku-yiian Chou 57, 58, 70, 72, 73, 125, 131, 133, 146, 151 Mo-erh Shan . . . . . . 9, 15, 81, 82, 121, 141 Lammergeier . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 Mohammedan Rebellion . . 29, 54, 55, 56, 62, 74, 75 Lan-chou Fu a. 51, 53, 54, 55, 56, 58, 60 63, 65, Mole 84 67, 70, 91, 92, loij), 112, 124, 125, 126. 130, Mole-rat . . . . . . . . 82, 84, 129 131, 132. 133. 134, «37. 145. 147. 148. 149. 150. 151 Mongolia .. .. 44, 62, 71, 83, 85, 98, 102, 105 Lanius . . 100 Monkey . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 Lan-ts'un 119 Monoptcrus .. .. .. .. .. .. 113 Lao Chao 34 Monticola . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Lao-shan 123 Monument Grove . . . . . . (see Pei-Ung) Larks . . ..85, 99 Moorhen .. .. .. .. .. .. 107 Larus . . 106 Motacilla . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 Latitudes . . 70, 132, 170 Mounds (about Hsi-an Fu) . . . . . . . . 45 Leopard . - 75. 88 Moupin . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 Lepidoptera 186, 193 Mouse (wood, 81, 88), (field, 86, 89) . . . . 10, 89 Lepus . . 80, 82 87, 177, 184 Muhammad liusein . . . . . . 3. 5, 63, 65, 66 Li-ch'iian Hsien 5i Mullen (Mr.) 41 Lien-hua-ch'ih 60 Mus 80.86,89.178,193 Ligurinus 97 Mustela. . .. .. .. .. .. 92, 174 Limnocr)ptes . . .. 107 Myospala.x . . 80 (note), 82, 84, 92, 182, 192, 202 Lin Hsien 12, 13, 26, 121, 122. 142 Nan-shih . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Lin-t'ung Hsien 41, 42, 45, 51, 89. 124 Ne.storian Tablet . . . . . . . . . . 49, 51 Liu-chia-hua . . 57 Nettion . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Liu-chia-mo 17. 142 Neuroptera . . . . . . . . . . 186, 193 Liu-chien-hua . . 18 Xew Dominion . . . . . . (see Sinkiang) Liu-hn-chen 77 Ning-hsia Fu .. .. .. .. ..44.123 Liu-p'an Slian • . 57. 58. 125 Ning-ling T'ing .. .. .. .. .. 26 Liu-pei . . 48 Ning-wu Fu .. 10. 14, 15, 80, 87. 92, 117. 119, 121 Liu-ts'un . . 89, 92 Nipponia . . . . . . . . . . 89. 107 Lizards . . 86, no. HI Nucifraga . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 Loach . . 113.114 Numenius . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 Lo-ch'uan Hsien 36 Nutcracker . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 Longitudes 5, 21. 132, 170 Nuthatch . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 Lophophanes . . 99 Nycticorax . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 Lo Shui . . 77 Nyroca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Loxia . . 97 Ochotona .. .. .. 80.87.92,171,184,185 Lung-k'ou Miao .. 5.2. 53 Oil (Mineral) .. .. .. .. .. 24,123 Lung-wang Shan 10 Ordos Desert 10, 17. 20 .21. 29. 71. 80. 83. 85, 87. Lutreola 89 96. 105. 106, 110. HI. 112. 122. 123. 128. 129. 136, 143 Lyman (Professor) 117 Oriole . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Ma (General) . . 54 Oriolus . . .. .. .. .. .. .. 100 245 PAGE PAGE Osprey . . Otis dybowskii . . 103 105 Sheldrake Sheng-yi 40, 85, 106 .. 7. 3_ Otters . . 76 ShCn-kan . . 2, 62 Otus 103 Shensi (North S. basin) .. 122, 124, 125, 128, 129 Oustalet (M. E.) 81 Shih Huang-ti (Emperor) 45 Owl . . 85, loi, 103 Sliih-ts'ui-yi . . 27, 86 Pai-ma-p'u 56 Shou-yang Hsien 129 Pandion 103 Shrew . . 82 Pao-tiiig Fu 116, 127 Shrike . . 85, 100 Parker (Professor E. H. 49 (note) Siberia 62, 105 Partridges 17.28/ 30, 75, 82, 86, 91, 104 Silurus . . 113 Parus minor 99 Silver Ore 119, 126 Pei-chih-li 71 Sinkiang (or New Dominion) ■ . 44. <>2 Pei-ling 47 et seq. Siphneus 183 (note) Peking . . 3. 22, 44. 62, 68, ( '9, 73. 78. 88. 92. 134 Siphonaptera . . . . . . 88, 186 . 187, 194-203 Perdix . . 104 Sitta 99 Petersen (Miss) 73 Smew . . 106 Phaeomys (sec Microtus) Snakes . . . . . . . . .. 76, 86, 93, log, 1 10 Phoenicurus 91. 98 Snipe .. 75,85,91,107 Phalacrocorax 107 Sowerby (Miss) . . . . . . . . . . 7 Phasianus 104 Spatula . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Pheasant 28, 30, 31. 32 34. 30. 37. 75. 82, 85, 86, 88, 89, 91, loi, 104 Squirrel 83, 86, 88, 91 SsQch'uan .. .. .. 2, 10, 44, 61, 62, 88 Phodopus 83. 180 Emigrants . . . . . . . . 38, 55, 73 Phroxinus "4 Starhng . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 Phrynoccphalus 86. Ill Sternus . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 Pica 97 Stork . . . . . . . . . . . . 85, 106, 107 Picus . . 108 Sui-fu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Pig (Wild) i" 31 37 75. 77. 82, 88, 89, 92, 93. 94 Sui-te Chou .. ..26, 27, 28, 70, 77, 123, 126, 151 Pigeon . . 30.85 Sung-chia-k'ou .. .. .. .. .. 11, 13 Pi Jung-pei (Chic f of Police) 19. 23 Sung Shan . . . . . . . . see Sacred Peaks Pika . . 82, 87, 92 Suslik 83 Pin Chou 53 Sus moupincusis .. .. .. 82, 93, 94, 95, 175 P'ing-liang Fu 52. 53. 56. 134 Swallows . . . . . . . . . . . . loi Pipistrellus 93. 172 Swan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Platalae 107 Swifts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Plover .. 107 Syrrhaptes . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Podiceps 107 Szechenyi (Count della) . . . . . . . . 134 Polecat 71.84,92 Tadorna 106 Polo, Marco I Ta-fu-ssu 52 Pomatorhinus . . 88, 99 Tahkin 48 Potamon 91, 187 T'ai-pei-ch'C-ng (2) . . . . . . . . 55, 56, 76 Propasser 97 T'ai-pei Shan . . . . . . . . . . ... 48 Pterorhinus 99 T'ai Shan see Sacred Peaks Kallus . . 107 T'ai-yiian Fu 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10, 14, 15, 26, 30, 31, Kana 112 69.70.78,79, 80, 81, 85, 87, 92, 95, 106, 115, 116, Rat 86, 89 117, 119, 120, 126, 127, 129-140, 142, 151, 152 Raven . . 9O Ta-mo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Redstart 91, 98 Tao-tei-ching . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 " Research in Cli ina "5. "6 Teal 30, 85, 106 Rhopophilus . . 99 Temples 13, 17, 18, 20, 29, 30, 43, 48, 52, 53, 60, 76, 90, 138 Richthofcn (Baron von) 115. 116, 117. 120 Tharrhaleus .. .. .. .. .. .. i"o Rockhill 61. 124 Thomas (St.) . . . . . . . . . . . . -i 7 Rothschild (Hon N C.") . . 186, 194-203 Thomas (Mr. O.) .. 80, 83, 84, 171, 179, 180, iS) Russian Geological Society 134 Thrush . . . . . . . . . . . . . . >i') Ruticilla 98 Tibet (Tibetan) .. .. 2, 44, 62, 63, 94, 147 Sacred Peaks (Five) 43 (note) 48, 50 Tichodroma .. .. .. .. .. 91, n>o Salt 17. 18, 25 T'ien-chuang . . . . . . . . . . . . -^7 Sandstorm . 102, 129, 147, 149 Tientsin 5, i.(2 San-yeh Miao . . 13. 18 Timeline 82, 88, 91, _ "=C LU ^ CJ Q S ^ S2 ^ o "^ >- ^ CO or iieawv Wmm or cjiiroflNw fiimsioi RdfTE OF THR CLARK EXPEDITION THROI'On SU.tSSl. SHKSSI. AND KANSf iooa-9. I ^"1" ->v ■^' n x -N 1 ■c^t) .■ ^^- '?-^AJ OUTMERN REGIONAL LiaRAHY FACILITY ' III! IMliilllllilll llllMl D 000 524 890 1