422 APPENDIX TO COUNTER-CASE OF GREAT BRITAIN. 



_ cruftweii, c. " l^ccriiiii's Islniid. An island ill the NorMiPacificOcefiti. 

 STteer," 1808. " Kauitcliatka. Eiver, wliioli runs into tbe North Piieilic 

 Ocean. 



" Kamtehatka. reninf;nla, bounded on the east and 

 south by the JSforth Pacific Ocean." 

 Mangnaii, R.' " Islauds iu the Eastcm or Great Pacific Ocean; Bhe- 



Geography,, lli'S » ISie. 

 1815. " 



i^nr'- London" Behring Sea not mentioned. 



1819."'' "^^ ""' "'Pacific Ocean' coiiisidored as the boundary of the 

 Eussian Empire, washes the shores of the Government of 

 Irkutsk, from Tschukotskoy Koss, or Cook's Straits, to the 

 frontiers of China; or, in other words, from the mouth of 

 the liiver Aimakan, that is, from 05^ to 450 north hititude. 

 It is divided into two great ])arts. That lying eastwards 

 from Kamtshatka, between Siberia and America, is emi- 

 nently styled the Eastern, or Pacific, Ocean; that on the 

 west side, from Kamtshatka, between Siberia, the Chinese, 

 Mongolia, and the Knrile Islands, is called the Sea of 

 Okliotsk. From the different places it touches it assumes 

 ditteront names, c. g., from the place where the Eiver Ana- 

 dyr falls into it, it is called the Sea of Anadja*, and above 

 Kamtshatka the Sea of Kamtshatka; and the bay between 

 the districts of Okhotsk and Kamtshatka, is called the Sea 

 of Okhotsk, the upper part of which is termed Penjinskoye 

 More, that is, the Penjinskian Sea, as it approaches the 

 mouth of the River Penjine." 

 A?"'G*eo.cii?i- " Stilles Meer. Vom 5 nordl. Br. an bis zur Berings- 

 sciu>.s wor'ter-strasse aufwarts stets heftige Sturme." [Behring's Strait 

 S'" "^^^*^' is at the northern extremity of Behring's Sea.] 



Ga'zf«i°/"'eail "Behring's Island. An island in the North Pacific 



turn 1822,' vol. i, Ocean." 



p. 432. 



etteer^'-Tondon " Becriug's Ishiud. lu tlic North Pacific Ocean." 

 182;{. ' 

 "Kew London " Becring's Islaud. In the Pacific." 



Universal Gazet- *^ 



teer, 182(5. 



G.nzftlioiV' w " Kamtschatka (Peninsula). On theeast it hasthe North 

 don. 1827,' vol. i, Pacific Occaii, and on the west that large gulf of it called 

 P-^^-- the Sea of Okhotsk." 



"Dictionnaire 39 u ]\|gr Pacififiuc. II sY'tcud du uord an sud depuis 



Gfosraph ique t ^ i t^ 1 • , i- 1 j. ^ ■• ■ 1 • i t\ ' 



univeisoi," 1828. Ic Cerclc Polaire Arctique, c est-a-aire. depuis le De- 



troit de Behriug, qui le fiiit cominuniquer a I'Ocean Glacial 

 Austral." 

 Scitz.Pr. J.C., ugi^iiips jMeer, Yom 30 siidlicher Breite bis zum 5 nord- 



"Gcosraplnsclies ,, ., t j_ i , • it -^ i -j. i cij.-n 



stanstischeslicher Bieite verdient es duicli seme Lleiterkeit und Stille 

 bucr'^'^^'esth/^^^^ namen des Stillen Meers; von da an bis zur Beriugs- 

 1822, Haiber'-strasse ist es heftigen Stiirmen nnterwofen." 



8tadt, 1829. '^ 



'Tenny Na- "Becriug's Islaud. In the North Pacific Ocean." 



tional Library '^ 



Geography an "d Gazetteer," 1830. 



Arrows m i th, 



•'(Ira miliar of "Bhcriug Strait connects the Frozen Ocean with the 



Modern Geogra--j^ .„ ° 



phy,"1832. PaCmC. 



" The Anadir flows into the Pacific Ocean. 

 "The principal gulfs of Asiatic Russia are: the Gulf of 

 Anadir, near Bhering's Strait; the Sea of Penjina, and the 



