Chapter
1 X | myself at a very moderate elevation, I should not burn more
2 XII | best to keep at his present elevation. He could thus reconnoitre
3 XII | for we must keep at an elevation of five or six hundred feet.”~“
4 XIII | Rubeho.—Six Thousand Feet Elevation.—A Halt in the Daytime.~
5 XIII | are going to ascend to an elevation of five thousand feet.”~“
6 XIII | eight inches, announced an elevation of six thousand feet.~“Shall
7 XIV | ascending, and had reached an elevation of from six to seven hundred
8 XVI | twelve thousand feet of elevation. It was then eleven o’clock
9 XVIII | above the ground.~From that elevation could be distinguished an
10 XX | ground, at scarcely the elevation of one hundred feet, and
11 XXII | which carried it up to an elevation of a thousand feet.~“What’
12 XXIV | the ground, and, at that elevation, a feeble current drove
13 XXV | The balloon rose to an elevation of five hundred feet, but
14 XXV | dense fog, suspended at that elevation; but it did not meet with
15 XIX | pounds, and it went up to an elevation of more than eight thousand
16 XXXVIII| Touaregs. The plateau, at an elevation of eighteen hundred feet
17 XXXVIII| and, in order to keep our elevation, I am compelled to give
18 XLI | above them. She lacked an elevation of more than five hundred
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