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    Author's Introduction

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    The geological formation of that portion of the American Union, which
    lies between the Alleghanies and the Rocky Mountains, has given rise
    to many ingenious theories. Virtually, the whole of this immense
    region is a plain. For a distance extending nearly 1500 miles east and
    west, and 600 north and south, there is scarcely an elevation worthy
    to be called a mountain. Even hills are not common; though a good deal
    of the face of the country has more or less of that "rolling"
    character, which is described in the opening pages of this work.

    There is much reason to believe, that the territory which now composes
    Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and a large portion of the country
    west of the Mississippi, lay formerly under water. The soil of all the
    former states has the appearance of an alluvial deposit; and isolated
    rocks have been found, of a nature and in situations which render it
    difficult to refute the opinion that they have been transferred to
    their present beds by floating ice. This theory assumes that the Great
    Lakes were the deep pools of one immense body of fresh water, which
    lay too low to be drained by the irruption that laid bare the land.

    It will be remembered that the French, when masters of the Canadas and
    Louisiana, claimed the whole of the territory in question. Their
    hunters and advanced troops held the first communications with the
    savage occupants, and the earliest written accounts we possess of
    these vast regions, are from the pens of their missionaries. Many
    French words have, consequently, become of local use in this quarter
    of America, and not a few names given in that language have been
    perpetuated. When the adventurers, who first penetrated these wilds,
    met, in the centre of the forests, immense plains, covered with rich
    verdure or rank grasses, they naturally gave them the appellation of
    meadows. As the English succeeded the French, and found a peculiarity
    of nature, differing from all they had yet seen on the continent,
    already distinguished by a word that did not express any thing in
    their own language, they left these natural meadows in possession of
    their title of convention. In this manner has the word "Prairie" been
    adopted into the English tongue.

    The American prairies are of two kinds. Those which lie east of the
    Mississippi are comparatively small, are exceedingly fertile, and are
    always surrounded by forests. They are susceptible of high
    cultivation, and are fast becoming settled. They abound in Ohio,
    Michigan, Illinois, and Indiana. They labour under the disadvantages
    of a scarcity of wood and water,--evils of a serious character, until
    art has had time to supply the deficiencies of nature. As coal is said
    to abound in all that region, and
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