58 LABRADOR 
indefinitely into the mainland. We built a cairn on this 
peak and named it “Mount Sir Donald.” Running an- 
other ten miles, toward the north-northwest, we reached 
a point in the inlet, where it is separated from a similar 
inlet from Ungava Bay only by a low neck of land. The 
main bay continues to the southwestward — how far, I am 
Fig. 2. THE CurRvVE IN GRENFELL TICKLE 
1. Chidley Island; 2. Mt. Sir Donald; 3. Cairn. 
unable to say. On a second visit to this fiord we found 
three families of Eskimo camped on its shore; there are 
remains of ancient Eskimo encampments on the flats. 
This is an excellent ground on which to search for stone 
relics. 
Threading the islands for a distance of ten miles from the 
mouth of this fiord, another inlet opens. It is marked on 
the Admiralty chart under the name “Ekortiarsuk.”’ 
I have never entered it, nor have I record of its exploration 
by a single white man; the inlet is reported, however, 
to wind away among the mountains for thirty miles. 
Fifteen miles to the south-southwest is Mount Bache 
