436 JS. D. Dana—LHistory of the Changes in Kilauea. 
and since the text (Polyn. Res., vol. iv, p. 266) gives the same 
statement as the Narrative as to where the sketch was taken, the 
artist’s fancy is evidently the chief source of the difterences. The 
cones are fewer, but they are as active; and one, placed out in 
the front, is a grand high shooter, far outdoing any of those on 
the other plates. Further, the features of the black ledge and 
the wall above are changed on both sides of the pit, and the Great 
South Lake is put in a southeast recess instead of to the south- 
west. Mr. Ellis was a second time at Kilauea, but this was be- 
fore 1826. He then found the crater much more quiet, and “ the 
fires in the south and west burning but feebly.” 
Il. Journal of a voyage to the Pacific Ocean and residence at 
the Sandwich Islands, 1822-1825; by Rev. C. 8. Srewarr. 8vo. 
New York, 1828. Contains an account of a visit to Kilauea, 
made on July 2, 1825. Am. J. Sci., xi, 363, 1826. 
IV. Visit to the South Seas, by C.S. Srewarr. 2 vols. 12mo. 
New York, 1831. In vol. ii, an account of Kilauea after a visit 
Oct. 9, 1829, not overdrawn like that in the preceding work. Am. 
Jacl xx 229, 183i 
V. Voyage of H. M. 8. Blonde to the Sandwich Islands in the 
years 1824, 1825, by Right Hon. Lord Byron, Commander. 260 
pp. 4to, with plates. London, 1826. Contains an account of a 
visit to Kilauea on June 28, 29 (29, 30, American time), illus- 
trated by a folded plate presenting a view of the volcano, by 
R. Dampisr, in which the many cones give out vapors quietly, 
and a map of the crater by Lieut. Maxpen, R. N. (see p. 441 
beyond). 
VI. Letters of Rev. Josep Goopricn: a, Am. J. Sci., xi, 2, 
1826, letter of April 20, 1825; 4, ibid., xvi, 345, 1829, letter of 
Oct. 25, 1828; c, ibid., xvi, 346, letter of June 12, 1828; d, ibid., 
xxv, 199, 1834, letter of Nov. 17, 1832. 
VII. Letter of Rev. A. Bisnop, Missionary Herald, xxiii, 53, 
1827, after a visit to Kilauea, Jan. 3, 1826. 
VIII. Note of Rev. L. CHampBerrtatn, after a visit to Kilauea 
with J. Goodrich, Dec., 1824, Missionary Herald, xxii, 42, 1826; 
also in Ellis’s Pol. Res., iv. 258, and Phil. Mag., Sept., 1826. 
TX. a. Memoir of Davin Dovetas, by Dr. W. J. Hooker, with 
portrait, letters and Journal, Companion of the Bot. Mag., 11, 79-. 
182, 1836 ; the part on Hawaii, pp. 158-177. ‘The visit to Kilauea. 
was on Jan. 23-25, 1834, and to top of Mauna Loa, on Jan. 29; the 
account of the latter in his Journal, p. 175, and that in a letter 
to Dr. Hooker, p. 158.—%. Letter to Capt. Sabine, dated Oahu, 
May 3, 1834, partly from his Journal, but with additional mate- 
rial on his barometric, hygrometric, thermometric and hypso- 
metric observations, Journal Royal Geogr. Soe., iv, 333-334, 1834. 
—c. Extracts from the Journal of Mr. Douglas, Mag. Zool. and 
Bot., i, 582, 1837, and including the letter to Dr. Hooker which 
describes Mt. Loa. 
Mr. Douglas spent a dozen years in travels over N. America 
(Oregon, California, Hudson’s Bay region, etc.) as an exploring 
ie 
