Maximilian, Prince of Wied's, Travels in the Interior of North America, 1832-1834, part 2
volume v, p. 26.--ED.
[203] See preface to our volume xiii, for sketch of life of Thomas Nuttall.--ED.
[204] Maximilian appears to distinguish between La Côte Noire and the Black Hills. The term Côtes Noires was, however, applied by the early voyageurs to the entire body of the highlands in Nebraska, and in South and North Dakota. The limitation of the term Black Hills to the particular chain now thus named in South Dakota, is of recent use. Maximilian makes a curious error in thinking that these hills form part of either the Mississippi or the Arkansas watershed. Taken in the wider sense they form the dividing ridge between the Platte, Yellowstone, and Missouri systems.--ED.
[205] For brief sketch of Thomas Say, see our volume xiv, James' _Long's Expedition_, p. 40, note 1. Maximilian spent part of the winter of 1832-33 with this naturalist at New Harmony (see our volume xxii); and visited him upon his return; he died, however (October, 1834), just after the prince had reached Europe.--ED.
[206] See opposite page for illustration of head of _Antilocapra Ord._--ED.