76 EJNAR MIKKELSEN. 
or in between the continuous landmasses of Holm’s Land and Amdrup’s 
Hojland, and a rather good kroki was thus obtained. There are in 
all nine sketches of land in the journal as well as six krokis. 
The compasses were sometimes used for taking bearings, but they 
proved very inaccurate when check-bearings were taken, and none of 
these bearings are used for laying down the land, save in one case, 
with Laub’s Nunataks, in which case, however, a check is possible, 
as the coastland, surveyed by the Danmark-Expedition, was visible at 
the time, and the nunataks were seen over a very pronounced gap in this 
coastland. 
The bodies of land surveyed on the voyage from Dronning Louise’s 
Land to Danmark’s Fjord may appropriately be treated under three 
different headings: 
I. The isolated group of nunataks from 78°10’—78°35' N. Lat. 
II. The land bordering the Inlandice to the east from lat. 79°40’ М. 
and northward to about 80°35’ and Amdrup’s Højland around the 
bottom of the Danmark’s Fjord from 80°15’ to 80°35’ N. Lat. 
ПГ. The Fyen’s Lake and the resurveying of the lower end of the Dan- 
mark’s Fjord. 
I. The Moltke’s, Garde’s and Bildsoe’s Nunataks are laid 
down on the basis of bearings taken from stations I, II & IV, that is 
one station to the south, one west and one NNW off the Nunataks. 
The positions of the stations are determined by longitudes and latitudes 
on the basis of the hourly travelling records, and the bearings are 
sun-azimuths. 
The bearings from the south were taken from the top of a high 
hill at a distance of about 35 miles and comprise 3 sights: 1 to the conical 
top of Moltke’s Nunatak, and 2 to the east and west point of the largest 
Bildsoe’s Nunatak. These were the only well-defined points visible from 
this distance. An azimuth to Cape Bellevue on Dronning Louise’s Land 
was also taken from this station. 
The sights from the west were also taken from the top of a high 
hill, from where all the land was visible at a distance of about 12 miles. 
The points to which azimuths were taken were sharply defined. A good 
kroki of the land was obtained from this station. 
The azimuth from the north was taken from 79°27’4 N. Lat. and 
was but one very long sight to Moltke’s Nunatak, as the extension in 
E-W direction of Garde’s Nunatak — also visible — was too uncertain 
to be used for measuring purposes. 
II. The land east and west of Kronprins Christian’s Land's 
Inlandice is laid down on the basis of some long azimuths to well- 
defined points taken from 2 stations, namely: 
ГУ on 79°27’4N. Lat. and 26°09’ W. Long. and 
У - 800048 — and2651’ — . The position of these 
