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42
WATERWAYS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION

plate of lead "at the entrance of the river and on the south bank of the Kenawah, which discharges itself to the east of the river Ohio."[1] According to Bonnécamps's journal, the plate was interred at the mouth of the Kanonouaora. This third plate was probably buried at the mouth of Wheeling Creek in West Virginia, though the descriptions of the place as given by both Céloron and Bonnécamps are so vague that it is quite impossible to identify positively the site.[2]

At seven o'clock on the morning of the fourteenth, the expedition was again on its way down the river. They passed two rivers, the entrances of which, Céloron tells us, were very beautiful. On the fifteenth the route was continued, and a leaden plate was interred "at the foot of a maple, which forms a tripod with a red oak and a cone pine, at the entrance of the river Yenanguekouan, on the west shore of this river . . and in the same place

  1. Céloron's Journal in Darlington's Fort Pitt, p. 39.
  2. The location of the burial places of Céloron's leaden plates as given in Darlington's Fort Pitt, which would naturally be considered authoritative, are inexplicably contradictory.