Notes | - Relief is shown pictorially on the map.
- Consider Winckworth Tonge as cartograper is based on the map's stylistic similarities with 'A DRAUGHT of the ISTHMUS which joins Nova Scotia to the Continent ...' which is signed 'W.Tonge' (Maps K.Top.119.64.).
- The name Captain Matthew Floyer is not given on the source, nor in the accompanying manuscript journal, but a number of tentative online references to Floyer as this map's cartographer have been located; in Northeast Archaeological Research's Mission Sainte-Anne project http://www.northeastarch.com/sainte_anne.html and in 'My Pioneer Ancestors ...' http://www3.sympatico.ca/jgharris/PioneerAncestors.pdf However, these online references ultimately to refer back to this copy of the map in the King's Topographical Collection.
- The scale is given at lower left in its own surround where 5 miles are equal to 6 6/10 inch.
- An extensive key is given down the left side of the map identifying places of note and highlighting locations referenced in the accompanying journal of the exploratory march. These include "Fort Sacville", areas of cultivated land, the location of encampments, former French settlements and more.
- The map (survey) and journal (see Maps K.Top.119.61.b.) of the march are referenced in 'Journal, October 1754: Volume 61, Part 2', Journals of the Board of Trade and Plantations, Volume 10: January 1754 - December 1758 (1933), pp. 68-76. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=77338 (viewed 2013).
- The map is accompanied by a manuscript journal (Maps K.Top.119.61.b.) of the march made by the surveyors, comprising 10 pages of manuscript text.
- Titled 'A drawn Plan of the River Chibenaccadie, from its source to its discharge into the Bay of Mines, surveyed in August 1754. Two sheets. With a MS. Journal' in the Catalogue of Maps, Prints, Drawings, etc., forming the geographical and topographical collection attached to the Library of his late Majesty King George the third, etc., London, 1829.
- Titled 'A colored "Plan of the River Chibenaccadie, from its source to its discharge into the Bay of Mines [at the head of the Bay of Fundy]; surveyed in August, 1754;" drawn on a scale of 3/4 mile to an inch; 5 f. 6 in. x 1 f. 6 in. Attached is a Ms. journal of the march made by the surveyors' in the Catalogue of the manuscript maps, charts, and plans, and of the topographical drawings in the British Museum.
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