1. questions aroused by brownlie
    the following notes are cobbled from the intro to african boundaries p17 etc a great many boundary descriptions affecting alignments in africa refer to rivers
    Sep 25, 2003 @ 18:49 - Michael Donner ("Michael Donner" <barbaria_longa@...>)
  2. Re: [BoundaryPoint] questions aroused by brownlie
    In POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY (Second Edition) by Norman J. G. Pounds (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1972), which was one of my graduate school textbooks, ...
    Sep 25, 2003 @ 23:19 - Lowell G. McManus ("Lowell G. McManus" <mcmanus71496@...>)
  3. Re: questions aroused by brownlie
    ... hahahahahah hahaha & i completely understand & agree with & thank you for this & all these comments any idea why only civilized & why only commerce how
    Sep 25, 2003 @ 23:44 - m06079 ("m06079" <barbaria_longa@...>)
  4. Re: questions aroused by brownlie
    & why only historic wouldnt actual navigation in the present be given more weight than historic navigability if a question ever came up
    Sep 25, 2003 @ 23:52 - m06079 ("m06079" <barbaria_longa@...>)
  5. Re: questions aroused by brownlie
    another interesting aspect of this is the general rule & really a consequence of natural laws that the smaller the stream the closer the median line is to the
    Sep 26, 2003 @ 00:25 - m06079 ("m06079" <barbaria_longa@...>)
  6. Re: [BoundaryPoint] Re: questions aroused by brownlie
    ... I didn t make the rules. Apparently they were made by civilized Europeans who wouldn t have considered native savages in a canoe anything more than
    Sep 26, 2003 @ 03:05 - Lowell G. McManus ("Lowell G. McManus" <mcmanus71496@...>)
  7. Re: [BoundaryPoint] Re: questions aroused by brownlie
    I should have said any evidence rather than any historic evidence. I was trying to emphasize that any historic evidence at all would prove the case for
    Sep 26, 2003 @ 03:17 - Lowell G. McManus ("Lowell G. McManus" <mcmanus71496@...>)