BRANNER: THE STONE REEFS OF BRAZIL. 201 
ҮШ. 
Annotated Bibliography of the Stone Reefs of Brazil. 
Angelo, Е. Michael, and Carli, Denis de. A curious and exact account 
of a voyage to Congo in the years 1666 and 1667. Pinkerton’s 
collection of Voyages and Travels, London, 1814, Vol. XVI. 152. 
The authors of this account touched at Pernambuco on their way to 
Africa. In the first part of it Angelo speaks of “a wall... which cred- 
ible people say is natural, running three hundred miles, one part of it 
enclosing the harbour.” 
Anonymous (?). Sommier Discours ouer den Staet vandee vier gecon- 
questeerde Capitanias Parnambuco, Itamarica, Paraiba ende Rio 
ande inde Noorderdeelen van Brasil. 
This paper is a separate from the “ Bijdr. en Meded. II.” The article 
is said to be from the “ Archief van Hilten,” and is dated January 19, 
1608. 
Speaking of Pernambuco (р. 306) the author says: “This haven is 
wonderfully situated, for it has a continuous stone wall just like a dike, 
forty paces or more in width, and from the bar it extends for more than 
& mile in front of Recife, and on the inside it makes the harbor big 
enough to hold many ships.” 
Anonymous. Nautical Magazine for July, 1861, p. 345-349, contains 
an article quoted from the Moniteur de la Flotte. 
It says the Pernambuco reef is made by “coral insects.” References 
to schistosity, vertical dips, and parallelism of the reefs with the moun- 
tain systems of Europe suggest that the article may have been written by 
M. Liais. 
Anonymous. Pacific Line Guide to South America, containing infor- 
mation for travellers and shippers to ports on the cast and west 
coasts of South America. London, 1895. 8º, 151 pp. 
