A correspondent recently had an interview…
🔗 View originalhttps://archive.org/details/silvercity1891
Primary copy hosted at archive.org — opens in a new tab.
Entities extracted from this source (2)
Chunks (1)
chunk 912 · paragraph 1130
interest. Arrivals from these places are few,
but are immediately seized upon for the latest
news from what has apparently developed into
a country of surprises and extraordinary sur-
prises.
A correspondent recently had an interview
with Miguel and Shampore, two sturdy Cocopah
Indians, who arrived from the lower country
Sunday. Their statement corroborates the one
made by Gardner.
Both Indians live in Lower California near
the Colorado river, and say that early Thursday
morning they expected something very unusual
to occur, as the hundreds volcanoes, some thirty
miles distant, had suddenly become very active
and turbulent, throwing up immense quantities
of lava and a black smoke like vapor. The pe-
culiarity of the eruption, not only in the force,
but the change from mud volcanoes, was some-
thing that appalled the entire Cocopah tribe.
The volcanoes continued to increase the violence
of the upheaval until the noise when at a dis-
tance of thirty miles was simply deafening.
The air became oppressively heavy, and
breathing was difficult. Many of the infant
Cocopah Indians were asphyxiated. Suddenly
a crash of thunder and flashing lightning clear-
ed the atmosphere and the poor Indians were
hopeful that all danger had passed when the
water of the river became agitated and great
clouds of mist arose hundreds of feet.