General view of Payne's home - grass in fore - has been a plantation, since the soil is ridged. Path leads to home. Tree at right was Empe oribo - from which cuttings were taken. [Shantz travel journal, Mar. 27, 1920]
General view of Payne's home - grass in fore .... Close up showing mango trees in yard - fruit and cuttings taken from the first tree at the right of the path. [Shantz travel journal, Mar. 27, 1920]
Tall Andropogon with trees in the back. These ... photos are typical of the more open areas - it seems a little more sandy. But just beyond into dry forest of Elizabethville type. [Shantz travel journal, Mar. 28, 1920]
At depot in Tabora. In the fore - a mopane leaf pink flowered legume - long 6 inch hard pod, flour inside and relatively small seeds, a very pretty ornamental - also mango and oleander - and a home at left - rock border shows. [Shantz travel…
Nssoke - Here there are a lot of plantings of corn and m'tama. Shows path in fore, corn with native huts - tall grass in the fore. [Shantz travel journal, Mar. 28, 1920]
Corn & mango tree, way back - post may show in photo. Rather sandy land and peanuts planted with corn at times. Tricholaena rosea quite abundant here. Round native huts. Mango and Manihot trees. Have not seen fields of manihot. Peanut looks…
Lower swampier type - short grass, low trees - sweet potatoes are also planted here. The banana and manihot are not princ[ipal] crops. Here a fine herd of African cattle and some goats. [Shantz travel journal, Mar. 28,1 920]
M'tama about 6 ft. tall - just coming into head. [Shantz travel journal, Mar. 28, 1920] M'tama is a millet - 4 varieties - some yield a kilo per head. [Shantz travel journal, Feb. 19, 1920]
A panorama just back of the depot - shows the depot at right with mopane, oleander, mango and the mango trees all through to a house at the left. Kapok lines the road and from the severe drought, they are now badly damaged. [Shantz travel journal,…
Tall grass in fore - cultivation and a few trees - wooded hills in back. A mango at left in back. We should be nearing Tabora. [Shantz travel journal, Mar. 28, 1920]