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The extreme penin- 

 sula at С. Brewster is 

 comparatively low and 

 plateau-shaped with steep 

 walls towards the sea. 

 The E. coast of Brewster 

 Land (the NE. peninsula 

 of Christian IX Land) 

 shows a great variation 

 in appearance compared 

 with the one described 

 above. However I did not 

 succed in getting a com- 

 plete survey of the land. 

 Islands are not so nume- 

 rous as the old maps make 

 out; in the work of the 

 Expedition only Turner L 

 remains as such; while 

 other large tracts, looked 

 upon as islands, proved 

 to be connected with the 

 mainland, though at times 

 only by very low necks 

 of land. Still, the coast 

 is much cut up by nu- 

 merous fjords, which, even 

 if they never attain a 

 greater length than 10 — 

 15 miles, are in any case 

 very typical examples of 

 fjords in their every cha- 

 racter. In both these re- 

 spects they recall the 



