185 
The principal named islands of this chain are :— 
Abaco 
Highborn Cay 
Andros. Hog Island. 
Atwood Cay. Hogsty Reef. 
Bacon Cay. Inagua, Great. 
Berry Island. Inagua, Little. 
Bimini. saac. 
Castle. Jamaica Cay. 
Cat Cay Jumentos Cays 
a Little Exuma 
Cay Verde Little San Salvador 
Chub Cay. Long I 
Columbus Cay May 
Conception. : New Providence 
Crooked Island. North Caicos 
uck Cays. lana Ca 
Dun Providenciales 
East Caicos. ed 
East Harbour. Royal Island 
Egg Island. 
Eleuthera. Salt Cay 
Exuma Chain Sam 
Fish Cays. San Salvador 
Flamingo Cay. Serab Cay. 
Fortune Island. Seal Ca 
Grand Caicos. Furks Islaud 
Great Docenti Water Cay 
Gre Watling. 
Great Stirrup Cay. Wax Cay. 
en Cay. West Caicos 
un Cay. E ite Cay. 
Harbourd. Yuma., 
Eggers, H. F.A. Flora of the Bahamas: Nature, xxxvii. (1886), 
Baron Eggers’s paper is merely a sketch of the prominent features in 
the “pial Mr. J. G. Baker bed since examined and reported on 
Eggers’s botanical collections: see report of the committee 
Budd for the purpose of e splord the Flora of the Bahamas in 
the uut of the British Association for 1888. : 
Bar Ty his island lies in about 13? 10’ N. lat. and 59° 30’ W. 
long., Gd i is the most easterly of the West Indian islands, It is nearly 
twenty-one miles long by fourteen in breadth, and has an area of 1 
Hughes, Griffith. The Natural History of the Barbados. In ten 
books. London, 1750. Folio. pp. 314, tt. 29. Botany, pp. 97-256. 
Maycock, J. D. Flora Hibin London, 1830. 8vo, with a ; 
test map 
nating, B. History of Barbados. London, 1848. 8ve. 
ion. pp. 573-633.) E 
Barsupa.—A small RUM island, about half a degree north of < 
Miga in about 17° 40’ N. 1 ang 
Caicos Istanps. See Sika 
U 58741. ce 
