Part, chapter

 1    1,    5|         that it starts from the Lake of Lauricocha, which is
 2    1,    5| rejected.~At its departure from Lake Lauricocha the youthful
 3    1,    5|        affluents, descends from Lake Chucuito, in the northeast
 4    1,   11|     which communicates with the lake of Cabello-Cocha on the
 5    1,   12|  degrees further, as far as the Lake of Ega.~But in the meantime
 6    1,   15| anchored at the entrance of the Lake of Ego, or Teffe, which
 7    1,   15|       reach the entrance to the lake.~
 8    1,   16|       be favorable for crossing Lake Teffe. They could go to
 9    1,   16|       The southern shore of the lake had to be followed to get
10    1,   16|  Iquitos. On looking toward the lake a beautiful panorama unfolded
11    1,   16|       admire the borders of the lake as the setting sun gilded
12    1,   16|         the morning, across the lake fed by the black waters
13    1,   16|      leagues away from there at Lake Apoara, which is fed by
14    1,   16|    stopped at the entrance into Lake Coary.~This lake is one
15    1,   16|  entrance into Lake Coary.~This lake is one of the largest which
16    1,   16|        or fall of the water the lake stretches away on all sides
17    1,   16|         reached the entrance to Lake Miana.~No fresh incident
18    1,   18|        a furo of that name, and Lake Manaori, which is fed by
19    1,   18|      planted in the middle of a lake. The stems of the trees
20    2,    1|    reported, near the legendary lake of Parima—which would seem
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