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Difference between revisions of "Mound"

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===Usage===
 
===Usage===
  
Washington, George, 1786, describing Mount  
+
* Washington, George, 1786, describing [[Mount Vernon]], plantation of George Washington, Fairfax County, Va. (Jackson and Twohig, eds., 1978: 4:267, 293)  
Vernon, plantation of George Washington, Fairfax  
 
County, Va. (Jackson and Twohig, eds., 1978:  
 
4:267, 293)  
 
  
“[25 January] And set about the Banks round  
+
: “[25 January] And set about the Banks round the [[Lawn]], in front of the [[gate]] between the two '''Mounds''' of Earth. . . . [Fig. 4]  
the Lawn, in front of the gate between the two  
+
: “[13 March] The ground being in order for it, I set the people to raising and forming the '''mounds''' of Earth by the [[gate]] in order to plant weeping willow thereon.”
Mounds of Earth. . . . [Fig. 4]  
 
  
“[13 March] The ground being in order for it, I
 
set the people to raising and forming the mounds
 
of Earth by the gate in order to plant weeping willow
 
thereon.”
 
  
Cutler, Rev. Manasseh, 13 July 1787, describing  
+
* Cutler, Rev. Manasseh, 13 July 1787, describing the [[State House Yard]], Philadelphia, Pa. (1987: 1:262)  
the State House Yard, Philadelphia, Pa. (1987: 1:262)  
 
  
“It was so lately laid out in its present form  
+
: “It was so lately laid out in its present form that it has not assumed that air of grandeur which time will give it. The trees are yet small, but most judiciously arranged. The artificial '''mounds''' of earth, and depressions, and small [[grove]]s in the [[square]]s have a most delightful effect.”  
that it has not assumed that air of grandeur which  
 
time will give it. The trees are yet small, but most  
 
judiciously arranged. The artificial mounds of  
 
earth, and depressions, and small groves in the  
 
squares have a most delightful effect.”  
 
  
Constantia [pseud.], 24 June 1790, describing
 
Gray’s Garden, Philadelphia, Pa. (Massachusetts
 
Magazine 3: 415)
 
  
“On one hand, the lovely valley richly shaded,
+
* Constantia [pseud.], 24 June 1790, describing Gray’s Garden, Philadelphia, Pa. (''Massachusetts Magazine'' 3: 415)
is fancifully adorned, the mountain laurel condescending
 
to flourish there—and on the other,
 
grass grown mounds variegate the view. . . . At
 
every turn shaded seats are artfully contrived, and
 
the ground abounds with arbours, alcoves, and
 
summer houses, which are handsomely adorned
 
with odoriferous flowers. Among these the little
 
federal temple claims the principal regard. It is the
 
very edifice, that upon the celebration of the ratification
 
of the constitution, was carried in triumphant
 
procession through the streets of this
 
metropolis; and, upon a gentle acclivity, upon the
 
summit of a green mound infixed, it hath now
 
obtained a basis.
 
  
Bartram, William, 1791, describing Indian settlements
+
: “On one hand, the lovely valley richly shaded, is fancifully adorned, the mountain laurel condescending to flourish there—and on the other, grass grown '''mounds''' variegate the [[view]]. . . . At every turn shaded seats are artfully contrived, and the ground abounds with [[arbour]]s, [[alcove]]s, and [[summer house]]s, which are handsomely adorned with odoriferous flowers. Among these the little federal [[temple]] claims the principal regard. It is the very edifice, that upon the celebration of the ratification of the constitution, was carried in triumphant procession through the streets of this metropolis; and, upon a gentle acclivity, upon the summit of a green '''mound''' infixed, it hath now obtained a basis.”
in North Carolina, Georgia, and Florida
 
(1996: 566–67)
 
  
“In the Cherokee country, all over Carolina,
 
and the Northern and Eastern parts of Georgia,
 
wherever the ruins of ancient Indian towns
 
appear, we see always beside these remains one
 
vast, conical-pointed mound. To mounds of the
 
kind I refer when I speak of pyramidal mounds.
 
To the south and west of the Altamaha, I observed
 
none of these in any part of the Muscogulge country,
 
but always flat or square structures. The vast
 
mounds upon the St. John’s, Alachua, d Musquito
 
[sic] rivers, differ from those amongst the Cherokee
 
with respect to their adjuncts and appendages,
 
particularly in respect to the great highway or
 
avenue, sunk below the common level of the
 
earth, extending from them, and terminating
 
either in a vast savanna or natural plain, or an
 
artificial pond or lake. A remarkable example
 
occurs at Mount Royal, from whence opens a glorious
 
view of Lake George and its environs.
 
  
“Fig. 6 is a perspective plan of this great
+
* [[Bartram, William]], 1791, describing Indian settlements in North Carolina, Georgia, and Florida (1996: 566–67)
mound and its avenues, the latter leading off to an
 
expansive savanna or natural meadow. A, the
 
mound, about forty feet in perpendicular height;
 
B, the highway leading from the mound in a
 
straight line to the pond C, about a half a mile distant.
 
. . . The sketch of the mound also illustrates
 
the character of the mounds in the Cherokee
 
country; but the last have not the highway or
 
avenue, and are always accompanied by vast
 
square terraces, placed upon one side or the other.
 
On the other hand, we never see the square terraces
 
accompanying the high mounds of East
 
Florida.” [Fig. 5]
 
  
Clitherall, Eliza Caroline Burgwin, active
+
: “In the Cherokee country, all over Carolina, and the Northern and Eastern parts of Georgia, wherever the ruins of ancient Indian towns appear, we see always beside these remains one vast, conical-pointed '''mound'''. To mounds of the kind I refer when I speak of ''pyramidal '''mounds'''''. To the south and west of the Altamaha, I observed none of these in any part of the Muscogulge country, but always flat or square structures. The vast '''mounds''' upon the St. John’s, Alachua, d Musquito [''sic''] rivers, differ from those amongst the Cherokee with respect to their adjuncts and appendages, particularly in respect to the great highway or [[avenue]], sunk below the common level of the earth, extending from them, and terminating either in a vast savanna or natural plain, or an artificial [[pond]] or [[lake]]. A remarkable example occurs at Mount Royal, from whence opens a glorious [[view]] of Lake George and its environs.
1801, describing the Hermitage, seat of John Burg-
+
: “Fig. 6 is a perspective plan of this great '''mound''' and its [[avenue]]s, the latter leading off to an expansive savanna or natural meadow. A, the '''mound''', about forty feet in perpendicular height; B, the highway leading from the mound in a straight line to the [[pond]] C, about a half a mile distant. . . . The sketch of the '''mound''' also illustrates the character of the '''mounds''' in the Cherokee country; but the last have not the highway or [[avenue]], and are always accompanied by vast [[square]] [[terrace]]s, placed upon one side or the other. On the other hand, we never see the [[square]] [[terrace]]s accompanying the high '''mounds''' of East Florida.” [Fig. 5]
win, Wilmington, N.C. (quoted in Flowers 1983:
 
126)
 
  
“In a small brick building called the study, on
 
a high mound in the Big Garden, was a fine collection
 
of books, writing desk and tables.”
 
  
Southgate, Eliza, 6 July 1802, describing Elias
+
* Clitherall, Eliza Caroline Burgwin, active 1801, describing the Hermitage, seat of John Burg-win, Wilmington, N.C. (quoted in Flowers 1983: 126)  
Hasket Derby Farm, Peabody, Mass. (quoted in  
 
Kimball 1940: 76)  
 
  
“at the upper end of the garden there was a  
+
: “In a small brick building called the study, on a high '''mound''' in the Big Garden, was a fine collection of books, writing desk and tables.”  
beautiful arbour formed of a mound of turf and
 
’twas surrounded by a thick row of poplar trees
 
which branched out quite to the bottom and so
 
close together that you could not see through.”  
 
  
Jefferson, Thomas, February 1811–13, describing
 
Poplar Forest, property of Thomas Jefferson,
 
Bedford County, Va. (quoted in Chambers 1993:
 
69)
 
  
“[February 1811] Memom. plant on each
+
* Southgate, Eliza, 6 July 1802, describing Elias Hasket Derby Farm, Peabody, Mass. (quoted in Kimball 1940: 76)
mound 4. weeping willows on the top in a square
 
20 f. apart. Golden Willows in a circle round middle.
 
15. f. apart. Aspens in a circle round the foot.
 
  
15.f. apart. . . .”  
+
: “at the upper end of the garden there was a beautiful [[arbour]] formed of a '''mound''' of turf and ’twas surrounded by a thick row of poplar trees which branched out quite to the bottom and so close together that you could not see through.”  
Dearborn, H.A.S., 1832, describing Mount
 
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass. (quoted in
 
Harris 1832: 76)
 
  
“The approach from the main road leading to
 
Watertown, was by a broad and umbrageous
 
avenue to the foot of the hill, which closes the dale
 
of consecration on the north. This small eminence
 
  
was thickly overgrown with pines and cedars, but
+
* Jefferson, Thomas, February 1811–13, describing Poplar Forest, property of Thomas Jefferson, Bedford County, Va. (quoted in Chambers 1993: 69)
the lower limbs having been pruned, the symmetrical
 
contour of the mound was disclosed, and it
 
assumed the appearance of an ancient tumulus,
 
reared to the memory of some great chieftain, like
 
that of Achilles, of Ajax, and of Patroclus, on the
 
plains of Troy.
 
  
Walsh, Alexander, 1 February 1841, “Remarks
+
: “[February 1811] Memom. plant on each '''mound''' 4. weeping willows on the top in a square 20 f. apart. Golden Willows in a circle round middle. 15. f. apart. Aspens in a circle round the foot. 15.f. apart. . . .”
on Ornamental Gardening” (New England Farmer
 
  
19: 308)
 
“H and I two mounds 12 inches diameter, 3
 
feet 6 inches high, enclosed by octagons, leaving a
 
walk 4 feet in the narrowest part, with openings of
 
6 feet to the centre walk and elipsis [sic]; the
 
mounds enclosed with brick, placed endwise,
 
inclining to the centre, and sunk 3 inches in the
 
ground; the enclosure filled with soil; each mound
 
has growing in its centre an evergreen tree. H covered
 
with evergreen periwinkle, Vica minor, and I
 
covered with variegated periwinkle, Vica minor fl.
 
alba.” [Fig. 6]
 
  
Hovey, C. M., April 1842, “Notes made during a
+
* Dearborn, H.A.S., 1832, describing Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass. (quoted in Harris 1832: 76)
Visit to New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, &c.,”
 
  
describing the White House, Washington, D.C.  
+
: “The approach from the main road leading to Watertown, was by a broad and umbrageous [[avenue]] to the foot of the hill, which closes the dale of consecration on the north. This small [[eminence]] was thickly overgrown with pines and cedars, but the lower limbs having been pruned, the symmetrical contour of the mound was disclosed, and it assumed the appearance of an ancient tumulus, reared to the memory of some great chieftain, like that of Achilles, of Ajax, and of Patroclus, on the plains of Troy.
(Magazine of Horticulture 8: 128–29)
 
  
“The garden consists of nothing but a plain  
+
 
piece of ground, formerly quite level, but now  
+
* Walsh, Alexander, 1 February 1841, “Remarks on Ornamental Gardening” (New England Farmer 19: 308)
made uneven and unmeaning by three artificial  
+
 
mounds. ...The mounds which we have referred  
+
: “H and I two '''mounds''' 12 inches diameter, 3 feet 6 inches high, enclosed by octagons, leaving a [[walk]] 4 feet in the narrowest part, with openings of 6 feet to the centre [[walk]] and elipsis [''sic'']; the '''mounds''' enclosed with brick, placed endwise, inclining to the centre, and sunk 3 inches in the ground; the enclosure filled with soil; each mound has growing in its centre an evergreen tree. H covered with evergreen periwinkle, ''Vica minor'', and I covered with variegated periwinkle, ''Vica minor fl. alba''.” [Fig. 6]
to have been thrown up, and thus remain, without  
+
 
any plantations of shrubs or trees to give a character  
+
 
to the garden, or hide the nakedness of these  
+
* Hovey, C. M., April 1842, “Notes made during a Visit to New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, &c.,” describing the White House, Washington, D.C. (''Magazine of Horticulture'' 8: 128–29)
elevations, seeming more like heaps of earth accidentally  
+
 
placed there, and grown with turf, rather  
+
: “The garden consists of nothing but a plain piece of ground, formerly quite level, but now made uneven and unmeaning by three artificial '''mounds'''. ...The '''mounds''' which we have referred to have been thrown up, and thus remain, without any [[plantation]]s of shrubs or trees to give a character to the garden, or hide the nakedness of these elevations, seeming more like heaps of earth accidentally placed there, and grown with turf, rather than the natural undulations of the surface. We can conceive of no worse taste than the execution of the work as it now is: the object of these '''mounds''' seems to have been to hide one part of the garden from another.”  
than the natural undulations of the surface. We  
 
can conceive of no worse taste than the execution  
 
of the work as it now is: the object of these  
 
mounds seems to have been to hide one part of  
 
the garden from another.”  
 
  
 
{{breakl}}
 
{{breakl}}
 +
 
===Citations===
 
===Citations===
  

Revision as of 15:33, April 19, 2016

See also: Mount

History

The term mound connoted raised features in both the natural and designed landscape, but in landscape-design vocabulary it usually signified an artificial hill. Both Ephraim Chambers’s Cyclopaedia (1741–43) and Noah Webster’s An American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) defined a mound as a bank of earth. In common usage it usually denoted a rounded or conical elevation of earth. Native Americans in the eastern half of the United States had built mounds for millennia [Fig. 1]. While the similarity in form links these prehistoric conical and platform mounds to the mounds created in American gardens, differences in their scale and use suggest various meanings in each context. Native American mounds were used for burials and, in the case of larger platform mounds, for elite residences and sacred areas. In European and American gardens, mounds were used as observation places or as an ornamental variety of surface. Garden mounds or mounts, which appear to have been built mainly in the late eighteenth through mid-nineteenth centuries, were planted with grass, ground cover, shrubs, trees, or a combination of these materials. [1] For example, the mound at the Elias Hasket Derby Farm in Peabody, Mass., was turfed, while at Mount Vernon in Fairfax Country, Va., willow trees and at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Mass., evergreens were planted. Periwinkle was recommended by the New England Farmer in 1841 as a ground cover for mounds; and grass, altheas, gelder roses, lilacs, calycanthus, weeping willows, and aspens were planted on the mounds at Thomas Jefferson’s Poplar Forest in Bedford County, Va.

The relatively simple form of a mound of earth or earth and stone was used as a design element in American gardens to achieve a variety of purposes or effects. Mounds were sometimes used for the base of a garden house, such as the brick study or chapel described in 1801 at John Burgwin’s Hermitage, in Wilmington, N.C. Not only did the mound’s elevated position enhance the structure as a viewing platform, but it also served as a focal point within the garden. Furthermore, symmetrically placed mounds could be used to frame distant views, as at Mount Vernon, or to frame a house, as at Poplar Forest. The mounds at Poplar Forest were connected to the house with double rows of poplars, which functioned visually like hyphens. Mounds may also have been added to provide sculptural relief and visual interest to relatively flat areas, as in the yard at the State House Yard in Philadelphia, which Rev. Manasseh Cutler described in 1787. This use of mounds was occasionally controversial; C. M. Hovey described the much-criticized mounds on the grounds of the White House in Washington, D.C., in an 1842 issue of the Magazine of Horticulture. A mound offered a slope against which to plant, creating much the same effect as plants of successive height arrayed in a shrubbery. In this way, a mound allowed the viewer at ground level to see the pattern of the plantings in much the same way an elevated view allowed one to appreciate the intricacies of a flat parterre. [2]

Several extant and archaeological examples also indicate that small mounds were often created in the construction of domestic icehouses, as Thomas Moore advised in his 1803 treatise. [3] Mounds provided insulation and were also a convenient way to use fill that had been excavated for the ice pit. While not using the term “mound,” George Washington noted in his diary in December of 1785 that he had “[f]inished covering my Ice House with dirt and [the] sodding of it.” [4] Several images, from about that time, show what appear to be mounds, particularly those near a main house; these may have been icehouse mounds [Fig. 2]. Mounds were also associated with burials, as seen in James Smillie’s engraving of the “Indian Mound” at Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn, N.Y. [Fig. 3], or the mound at Mount Auburn Cemetery, which, according to H.A.S. Dearborn (1832), harkened back to the ancient tumuli of Troy.

-- Elizabeth Kryder-Reid

Texts

Usage

  • Washington, George, 1786, describing Mount Vernon, plantation of George Washington, Fairfax County, Va. (Jackson and Twohig, eds., 1978: 4:267, 293)
“[25 January] And set about the Banks round the Lawn, in front of the gate between the two Mounds of Earth. . . . [Fig. 4]
“[13 March] The ground being in order for it, I set the people to raising and forming the mounds of Earth by the gate in order to plant weeping willow thereon.”


  • Cutler, Rev. Manasseh, 13 July 1787, describing the State House Yard, Philadelphia, Pa. (1987: 1:262)
“It was so lately laid out in its present form that it has not assumed that air of grandeur which time will give it. The trees are yet small, but most judiciously arranged. The artificial mounds of earth, and depressions, and small groves in the squares have a most delightful effect.”


  • Constantia [pseud.], 24 June 1790, describing Gray’s Garden, Philadelphia, Pa. (Massachusetts Magazine 3: 415)
“On one hand, the lovely valley richly shaded, is fancifully adorned, the mountain laurel condescending to flourish there—and on the other, grass grown mounds variegate the view. . . . At every turn shaded seats are artfully contrived, and the ground abounds with arbours, alcoves, and summer houses, which are handsomely adorned with odoriferous flowers. Among these the little federal temple claims the principal regard. It is the very edifice, that upon the celebration of the ratification of the constitution, was carried in triumphant procession through the streets of this metropolis; and, upon a gentle acclivity, upon the summit of a green mound infixed, it hath now obtained a basis.”


  • Bartram, William, 1791, describing Indian settlements in North Carolina, Georgia, and Florida (1996: 566–67)
“In the Cherokee country, all over Carolina, and the Northern and Eastern parts of Georgia, wherever the ruins of ancient Indian towns appear, we see always beside these remains one vast, conical-pointed mound. To mounds of the kind I refer when I speak of pyramidal mounds. To the south and west of the Altamaha, I observed none of these in any part of the Muscogulge country, but always flat or square structures. The vast mounds upon the St. John’s, Alachua, d Musquito [sic] rivers, differ from those amongst the Cherokee with respect to their adjuncts and appendages, particularly in respect to the great highway or avenue, sunk below the common level of the earth, extending from them, and terminating either in a vast savanna or natural plain, or an artificial pond or lake. A remarkable example occurs at Mount Royal, from whence opens a glorious view of Lake George and its environs.
“Fig. 6 is a perspective plan of this great mound and its avenues, the latter leading off to an expansive savanna or natural meadow. A, the mound, about forty feet in perpendicular height; B, the highway leading from the mound in a straight line to the pond C, about a half a mile distant. . . . The sketch of the mound also illustrates the character of the mounds in the Cherokee country; but the last have not the highway or avenue, and are always accompanied by vast square terraces, placed upon one side or the other. On the other hand, we never see the square terraces accompanying the high mounds of East Florida.” [Fig. 5]


  • Clitherall, Eliza Caroline Burgwin, active 1801, describing the Hermitage, seat of John Burg-win, Wilmington, N.C. (quoted in Flowers 1983: 126)
“In a small brick building called the study, on a high mound in the Big Garden, was a fine collection of books, writing desk and tables.”


  • Southgate, Eliza, 6 July 1802, describing Elias Hasket Derby Farm, Peabody, Mass. (quoted in Kimball 1940: 76)
“at the upper end of the garden there was a beautiful arbour formed of a mound of turf and ’twas surrounded by a thick row of poplar trees which branched out quite to the bottom and so close together that you could not see through.”


  • Jefferson, Thomas, February 1811–13, describing Poplar Forest, property of Thomas Jefferson, Bedford County, Va. (quoted in Chambers 1993: 69)
“[February 1811] Memom. plant on each mound 4. weeping willows on the top in a square 20 f. apart. Golden Willows in a circle round middle. 15. f. apart. Aspens in a circle round the foot. 15.f. apart. . . .”


  • Dearborn, H.A.S., 1832, describing Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass. (quoted in Harris 1832: 76)
“The approach from the main road leading to Watertown, was by a broad and umbrageous avenue to the foot of the hill, which closes the dale of consecration on the north. This small eminence was thickly overgrown with pines and cedars, but the lower limbs having been pruned, the symmetrical contour of the mound was disclosed, and it assumed the appearance of an ancient tumulus, reared to the memory of some great chieftain, like that of Achilles, of Ajax, and of Patroclus, on the plains of Troy.”


  • Walsh, Alexander, 1 February 1841, “Remarks on Ornamental Gardening” (New England Farmer 19: 308)
“H and I two mounds 12 inches diameter, 3 feet 6 inches high, enclosed by octagons, leaving a walk 4 feet in the narrowest part, with openings of 6 feet to the centre walk and elipsis [sic]; the mounds enclosed with brick, placed endwise, inclining to the centre, and sunk 3 inches in the ground; the enclosure filled with soil; each mound has growing in its centre an evergreen tree. H covered with evergreen periwinkle, Vica minor, and I covered with variegated periwinkle, Vica minor fl. alba.” [Fig. 6]


  • Hovey, C. M., April 1842, “Notes made during a Visit to New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, &c.,” describing the White House, Washington, D.C. (Magazine of Horticulture 8: 128–29)
“The garden consists of nothing but a plain piece of ground, formerly quite level, but now made uneven and unmeaning by three artificial mounds. ...The mounds which we have referred to have been thrown up, and thus remain, without any plantations of shrubs or trees to give a character to the garden, or hide the nakedness of these elevations, seeming more like heaps of earth accidentally placed there, and grown with turf, rather than the natural undulations of the surface. We can conceive of no worse taste than the execution of the work as it now is: the object of these mounds seems to have been to hide one part of the garden from another.”

Template:Breakl

Citations

Chambers, Ephraim, 1741–43, Cyclopaedia

(2:n.p.)

“MOUND, a term used for a bank, rampart, or other fence, particularly of earth.”

Moore, Thomas, 1803, An Essay on the Most Eligible Construction of Ice-houses (p. 13)

“In level situations, where a drain cannot be conveniently dug out from the bottom of the pit; I should suppose it would answer very well to enclose the ice by a mound raised entirely above the surface of the earth, through which the water may be discharged. . . . This perhaps would not be quite so cool a repository as if under the surface of the earth; unless the mound was very thick; but I am persuaded that the loss of a few degrees in

temperature bears very little proportion to the advantage resulting from dryness.”

Webster, Noah, 1828, An American Dictionary of the English Language (n.p.)

“MOUND, n. [Sax. mund; W. mwnt, from mwn; L. mons. See Mount.]

“Something raised as a defense or fortification, usually a bank of earth or stone; a bulwark; a rampart or fence.

“God has thrown

“That mountain as his garden mound, high raised. Milton.

“To thrid the thickets or to leap the mounds. Dryden.”

Images

Notes

  1. Although the first usage noted in this study is George Washington’s 1786 diary entry, Eliza Lucas Pinckney’s description in 1743 of the mount in William Middleton’s garden suggests that similar garden features were built earlier in the century, even if they were not identified as mounds. In addition, Native American mounds predate the first English-language accounts by nearly half a millennia.
  2. This observation has been made about English shrubberies in Mark Laird, “Ornamental Planting and Horticulture in English Pleasure Grounds, 1700–1830,” in Garden History: Issues, Approaches, Methods, ed. John Dixon Hunt (Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1992), 257, view on Zotero.
  3. Examples of icehouses with mounds include the Governor’s Palace, Williamsburg, Va., and General Charles Ridgely’s estate, Hampton, in Baltimore County, Md.
  4. George Washington, The Diaries of George Washington, ed. Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, vol. 4 (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1978), 244, view on Zotero.

Retrieved from "https://heald.nga.gov/mediawiki/index.php?title=Mound&oldid=21554"

History of Early American Landscape Design contributors, "Mound," History of Early American Landscape Design, , https://heald.nga.gov/mediawiki/index.php?title=Mound&oldid=21554 (accessed November 25, 2024).

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