Scorr.—Macquarie Island. 485 
with the exception of some of the islands in the neighbourhood of Cape 
Horn, it is the nearest point of land to the great Antarctic Continent. It 
lies considerably to the south of Kerguelen Land, or the Crozets. 
On this account then considerable interest attaches to it. I therefore 
availed myself of the opportunity offered me by Messrs. Elder and Nichols, 
in the latter end of 1880, for a trip down to it in the “ Jessie Niecol" 
schooner. It is the results of this excursion that I propose to give in this 
paper. 
The changes which the New Zealand flora undergoes in the Auckland 
and Campbell Islands have been often noted, but almost nothing was known 
of its characters in Macquarie Island. I wished to notice how many plants 
survived in that high latitude, and what changes in appearance and habit 
these had undergone in suiting themselves to the rigorous climate ; whether 
our New Zealand alpine forms were to be found there at the sea level, and 
whether there were to be found any new forms unrepresented even in 
the highest and most remote parts of New Zealand. 
Four or five of the Macquarie Island plants had been sent to the Hooker 
Herbarium by Mr. Fraser, of the Sydney Botanic Gardens, about fifty years 
ago. I cannot, however, make out whether he had visited the island him- 
self, or whether one of the sealers had brought the plants to him. 
I was also anxious to see and study, so far as practicable, the sea 
elephants, which make it their summer resort. They never, so far as I 
_ know, come as far north as either Campbell Island or the Auckland group, 
so in this part of the world Macquarie Island is the only place where they 
can be observed. 
Macquarie Island lies about 600 miles to the south-west of New Zea- 
land, more than twice as far away as the Auckland group, and is separated 
from that group and from Campbell Island by very much deeper water than 
that which lies between them and New Zealand. There is a great valley 
8,000 fathoms deep between Macquarie Island and the Auckland and 
Campbell Islands, while the sea between them and New Zealand is not 
1,000 fathoms deep. 
It is wrongly put down on all the charts. For the following correct 
position I am indebted to Captain Cowper, who, in the “ Jessie Niccol,” 
has made a number of trips to the island :— 
Latitude, north end, 54° 26’ South. 
Latitude, south end, 54° 44’ South. 
Longitude, north end, east side, 159° 5’ 45" East. 
Longitude, south end, east side, 159? 1' 45" East. 
It is about 18 miles long and 5 miles broad, its east side lying N. 4 W. and 
S. 4 E. magnetic. | 
