370 



Pa-pa^s Sketch of Pond's Bay. 



[January, ISGO. 



in his igloo^ the accompan3'ing sketch of Pond's Bay, Hall writing 

 down fi-om dictation the names corresponding to Pa-pa's numbers. 



SKETCH OF POND'S BAY, DRAWN BY THE INNUIT PAPA. 



1. Too-e-joo. 



L'. Oo-gla. 



'^. Discharging glacier. 



4. 4. Too-loo-yer. 



5. Grounded icebergs. 

 G. Sliar too. 



7. Ing-nnt-ta-lik. 



8. Large and high grounded iceberg. 



9. Ou-kee-lee-ark-tung. {The penin- 



sula.) 



10. Ou-u-ee-too. {Glacier.) 



11. A bay abounding in whales. 



12. A roof-like hill, on an extensive 



plain. 



13. Koo-ook-ju-a. {A very high water- 



fall; tenting -place there.) 



14. E-te-u-yer. 



15. Two remarkable rocks. 



16. Too-noo-nee. 



17. Kung-e-er-a. 



18. Neer-ker-oon. 



19. See-er-wok-too-u. 



20. Too-arn. 



21. Ung-raa. 



22. Kik-kik-te-ting-nim. 



23. Kik-kik-tuk-jua. 



24. Im-me-le. {LalxC on this isle.) 



25. E-e-la. {Something Mice a windoio in 



mountainside.) 

 20. A head of whalebone just below 

 low tide. 



27. Kim-e-big. 



28. Too-loo-karn. {Four isles.) 



29. Kook-win-ar-loo. 



30. Toong-win. 



31. Kin-e-loo-kun. 



32. Ee-we-shar. 



32. Ee-ark-ju-a. {The point; a very high 



mountain and the wind heard con- 

 stantly roaring at its top. 



33. Small island. 



From natives of the inlet he received some singular accounts of 



minerals found there. 



Native iron in great abundance. Stones that are of very fine grain, look 

 pretty, and stand upright; the same being long, slender, and like round sticks of 

 wood ; some elastic, that is, will bend. Also a great many pretty stones that are 

 transparent, just as clear as crystal, like the sun-glass given to Ar-lca-too. From 

 the desciiption of some of these stones, or I should say of some other kinds which 

 are also like glass in appearance, I cannot well comi)reliend what they be, for JLr- 

 Ica-too says, as the sun is shining on them, if the hand shadows them, away they 

 go down in the ground, appearing to act as though alive. By great carefulness 

 Innuitshave succeeded in catching now and then some of these wonderful stones, 



