The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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with camels, are accustomed to attach two bags on the sides of the  
camel's bodies that is skins in the form shown underneath.  
In these four meshes of the net the camels for baggage place their  
feet.  
[Footnote: Unfortunately both the sketches which accompany this  
passage are too much effaced to be reproduced. The upper represents  
the two sacks joined by ropes, as here described, the other shows  
four camels with riders swimming through a river.]  
1
095.  
The Tigris passes through Asia Minor and brings with it the water of  
three lakes, one after the other of various elevations; the first  
being Munace and the middle Pallas and the lowest Triton. And the  
Nile again springs from three very high lakes in Ethiopia, and runs  
northwards towards the sea of Egypt with a course of 4000 miles, and  
by the shortest and straightest line it is 3000 miles. It is said  
that it issues from the Mountains of the Moon, and has various  
unknown sources. The said lakes are about 4000 braccia above the  
surface of the sphere of water, that is 1 mile and 1/3, giving to  
the Nile a fall of 1 braccia in every mile.  
[
Footnote 5: Incogniti principio. The affluents of the lakes are  
probably here intended. Compare, as to the Nile, Nos. 970, 1063 and  
83  
8


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