[s. F. DAWSON 1 



THE VOYAGES OF THE CABOTS 



251 





«0 



^j^i^^ Sinus SXaurertry. _/'^ ^ÙyJ^siJ,..àcJ-c*^^ 



Eslretctde STierre 



Cap de MirtKvrayicu 

 Ccf Je S. ALfje 







C âi ^rUjt^ 



YMUcaJ» 









<. 



Fig. 28.— Whytfliet, A.D. 1597. 



Sauvages, and Bay St. Lunarie. The same indications are on the Whyt. 

 rtiot map (151^7) (fig. 28) — there are Miscou (C. d'espérance) Bay de St- 



Lunarie, C. des Sauvages, R. des 



" >3w;'/f J^c^ barques, and there, very plainly, 



' '' -^ as also on the Mercator map, is 



^-^■^ 



«/^, 



».^ 



C-^Ji^ 



Z'* Calcus 

 Fig. 29.— Hakluyt, A.D. 1600. 



lap. 



Cap de S. Jean, on that part of 

 the coast where we shall see the 

 real Isle de St. Jean separate away 

 later on. Continuing, T append 

 (tig. 29) an extract from Hakluyt's 

 map (1600). On it the shape, the 

 position, the axis, and the attend- 

 ant islets, identify the island con- 

 cave to the east as the Magdalen, 

 and there is no other island there. 

 This closes the series of 16th 

 century maps. I come now to 

 the works of the men who colon- 



ized New France, and I give an extract from the map (1609; of Marc 

 Lescarbot (fig. 30;. The names are indicated by numbers on the map. 

 Only the more important are written out at length. The numbers refer 

 to a table, and I cite only those bearing on this point. 



