Sailing Around Erythraean Sea: Forty Five

In the last Section, we saw how the native fishermen enter the mouth of  River Narmada, which  drains into Gulf of Khambat, and sail upto Bharuch. In this para we will sea how the tides of the river by Bharuch work:

Now the whole country of India has very many rivers, and very great ebb and flow of the tides, increasing at the new moon, and at the full moon for three days, and falling off during the intervening days of the moon. But about Barygaza it is much greater, so that the bottom is suddenly seen, and now parts of the dry land are seen and now it is dry where ships were sailing just before; and the rivers, under the inrush of flood tide, when the whole force of the sea is directed against them, are driven upwards more strongly against their natural current, for many stadia.


My Search:-

Comparatively a small paragraph where no new ports are introduced.
The unknown sailor had been along the River Narmada.

End of the Section 

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