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Maryland Geological Survey, Volume 1, 1897
Volume 423, Page 52   View pdf image (33K)
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52 HISTORICAL SKETCH

and Lord Baltimore in 1732, stipulating that their boundary line
should be drawn across the peninsula of Maryland from Cape Hen-
lopen (wrongly located by the Penns 15 miles too far south!) and
from its central point a meridian should be followed to a circle drawn
with a twelve mile radius about New Castle, Del. From the tangent
point this meridian was to be followed to a parallel of latitude fifteen
miles south of the southern boundary of Philadelphia, and this
parallel was to be the E. W. boundary between the two colonies.
To this deed was attached a small map with the boundaries indicated
in red, known as " Lord Baltimore's Map. " This map was printed
by Franklin.

After twenty-eight years of further controversy, a second and final
deed was executed in 1760. In 1763 the Penns and Lord Baltimore
secured the services of two London surveyors, Mason and Dixon, who,
between November 15, 1763, and September 29, 1767, continued the
survey as far west as Dunkard's Creek, within 36 miles of its western
limit. Here they were stopped by the Indians. The bounding
parallel was fixed by this survey as N. 39° 43' 26", instead of 40°,
as was stated in Lord Baltimore's original patent of 1632. Mason
and Dixon's map, with the final award of the Joint Commission and
with their report on parchment, is in the Maryland Historical Society's
library. 1

EARLY GEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS IN THE PERIOD BETWEEN THE

REVOLUTION AND THE ORGANIZATION OF THE FIRST

STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY.

This period witnessed the gradual development of the modern
science of geology. At first the methods were crude, but already
some years before the organization of the first survey of the state,

1 For the history of the Mason and Dixon Survey, with the controversies
which led to it, see J. Dunlop, "Mem. on the Controversy between W. Penn
and Lord Baltimore, " Penn. Hist. Soc., Mem. 1, 1826; " History of the
Mason and Dixon Line, " by J. H. B. Latrobe, address before Pa. Hist.
Soc., 1854, Philadelphia, 1855; " Mason and Dixon's Line—A History, " by
James Veech, Pittsburg, 1857.

This description is taken from Williams' " Maps of the Territory included
within the State of Maryland, " etc.


 

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Maryland Geological Survey, Volume 1, 1897
Volume 423, Page 52   View pdf image (33K)
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