As to the buses or trams, the route may be different to what it was in 1930, so I don't really know where she would have got off of the vehicle.
It was probably along the main road, that is, Comiston Road, the same as it is today.
I wouldn't think that if it was a freezing night, she would walk all the way from the city centre.
See above. People did walk more then that we do now.
When I googled the Braid Burn, it says that the burn is prone to flooding. Could it have been flooded that night? Though very cold that night, would it have been icy and slippy?
Possibly yes to both questions.
Can you tell me which newspaper might have reported on the inquest by the Procurator Fiscal.
See my earlier reply.
There could not have been an inquest. There is no such thing as an inquest in Scots Law. Please try to forget the word 'inquest' altogether in relation to this incident.
I have tried the Scotsman online records but don't know what else to try?
The only other Edinburgh paper that springs to mind is the Edinburgh Evening News.
I don't really know if it is usual for the RCE to differ from the death certificate.
The RCE did not differ from the death certificate. They both gave the cause of death as drowning.
I'd love to know what evidence was said in the inquiry.
There may not have been any court proceedings. If the Procurator Fiscal did not have any evidence that there was any reason to think it was other than accidental, the only record could be the papers in the Fiscal's files.
I don't know if there was a post mortem.
If the doctor was satisifed that the cause of death was drowing, and there was no reason to suspect anything else, there would probably not have been a full post-mortem.
How do we know she wasn't thrown into the burn?
You don't. What you do know is that the relevant officer of the law, i.e. the Procurator Fiscal, saw no evidence to suggest it was anything other than an accident.
Surely it would have been reported somewhere?
Not necessarily. An unfortunate accident to an obscure middle-aged spinster might not have interested the papers.
We have been to the area and looked at maps. We believe that the only place where she could have been found in the Braid Burn, east of Braid Road, is within the grounds of the country park.
Yes. See my earlier reply.
The burn then goes under the road, to the west side of Braid Road.
No. Other way round. The burn rises in the Pentland Hills, flows north through the Braidburn Valley, under Comiston Road, then eastwards under Braid Road and through the Hermitage of Braid (country park). The it goes under the Cameron Toll Shopping Centre (which has been known to be flooded; I well remember the area being under a couple of feet of water one July in the 1980s) then round to the north of Arthur's Seat to enter the sea at Portobello.