Fountain
But when, as they went on the rugged path, the were near the city, and had come to the well-wrought, fair-flowing fountain, wherefrom the townsfolk drew water. This Ithakos had made, and Neritos, and Polyctor,
Homer describes the route Eumaios and Odysseus, still disguised as a beggar, take to return to his palace:
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Neriton
Ithacos?
Polyctor?
Neion
Not uncommonly, there's a stream close to the city and a fountain that's apparently been created by a threesome. It's been written that these three were the first inhabitants of the island, so they gave their names to certain places, for instance the mountain Neriton.
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To determine the location of the fountain we start on the coast of Vasiliki Bay by locating the estuary, then simply follow the stream back up. Where it parts ways (or the different streams come together from the mountain's point of view), the fountain where the townfolk drew their water must have been.
Since one is certainly a mountain and the north of the plain is surrounded by two more, it's reasonable to assume all three are mountains. After all, mountains have been known to produce streams.