224 CREW POINT TO CAPE EAY. 



Copper island, southwestward, ly^- miles from Bonnels point, is 

 a conspicuous bare cone, 102 feet high; and there is a shoal, with 3 

 fathoms of water over it, close to its eastern end. Bad rock lies 

 600 yards westAvard of it, and there is a third rock midway between 

 them. There is no channel among the numerous rocks and shoals 

 northwestward of Copper island that is navigable without local 

 knowledge. 



Black rock, bearing 86°, distant 1,300 yards from Copper island, 

 is a small pinnacle 14 feet high, with 10 fathoms water close around 

 and deep water a short distance to the eastward of it. 



Ramea Southeast rocks, bearing 148°, distant 3y% miles from 

 Bonnels point, are two ■ rocks separated by a boat channel. The 

 eastern and higher rock is 20 feet high. A rock with 1 foot of water 

 over it bears 99°, distant 400 yards from these rocks. 



Ramea South, bank, bearing 221°, distant 3 miles from Ramea 

 Southeast rocks, has 2f fathoms of water over it. 



Ice. — Northern ice has arrived at Ramea only four times during 

 twenty years; on these occasions it appeared between the end of 

 February and the middle of March and left between the first and the 

 middle of April. The harbor is only frozen when northern ice is 

 present. 



Northwest head, the northwestern part of the western entrance 

 point of Wliite Bear bay, is rugged and faced by cliffs. 



Turks head, westward, distant 1^ miles from Northwest head, is 

 a steep bluff with a rugged background. Between these heads is 

 Emily Storehouse cove, a bight 1,000 yards deep and open to the 

 southward. 



Offer Sunker, bearing 273°, distant 1,400 yards from White island, 

 and 315°, distant 1,400 yards from Black rock, has 1 foot of water 

 over it, with depths of 11 to 22 fathoms close-to. 



Anderson rock, bearing 339°, distant TOO yards from Offer 

 Sunker, is awash at high water' springs and steep-to. 



.Anderson Sunkers, bearing 294°, distant 1,200 yards from Offer 

 Sunker, are 2 rocks awash at low water. 



Gull island, bearing 239°, distant 1 mile from Turks head, is 73 

 feet high, and the outer of a cluster of cliffy islets. Being of the 

 same color as the mainland, it is not easily distinguished. 



Several shoals which lie within a little over a mile westward and 

 southward of Gull island, with depths of 4 to 7 fathoms over them, 

 break heavily in bad weather. 



Red island, westward 1| miles from Gull island, is about i% mile 

 long in a northerly and southerly direction, with a width var^dng 

 from 1,000 to 300 yards, and it is divided into two parts by a low 

 neck of land, the inner a wooded cone 377 feet, and the outer a flat- 

 topped hill with a white summit 326 feet high. Its outer cliffs are 

 red. 



