£52 



APPENDIX. 



extending from it to the shore. Between the two is a bay, but 

 scarcely affording anchorage. The coast line is partly a rocky and 

 partly a sandy beach ; in-shore are hills about fourteen hundred 

 feet in height, inclining gradually toward the coast. 



N. 41° W., twenty miles from Asia Island, is Chilca Point ; it is 

 about three hundred feet in its highest part, has several rises on it, 

 and terminates in a steep cliff, with a small flat rock close off it. 

 The valley of Chilca lies a league to the southward of the point, 

 and the harbour of the same name half a league to the northward. 

 This is a snug cove, but very confined ; anchorage is good in any part 

 of it, and landing tolerable ; there is a small village at the head of 

 the bay, but no information could be obtained from the inhabitants 

 about Chilca, for they deserted their huts on our arrival. 



From Chilca the coast forms a bend to about the Valley of Lierin, 

 off which are the Pachacamac Islands. llie northern is the 

 largest, half a mile in length, and about a cable's length broad ; the 

 next but one to it is the most remarkable, being quite like a sugar- 

 loaf, perfectly rounded at the top : the others are mere rocks, and 

 not visible at any distance. At the northern end of these islands 

 lies a small reef, even with the water's edge : the group run nearly 

 parallel to the coast, in a N.W. and S.E. direction, and are about a 

 league in extent. There is no danger on their outer side, but 

 towards the shore the water is shoal, which causes a long swell, that 

 at times must break. Between these islands and the Morro Solar is 

 a sandy beach, with moderately high land a short distance from 

 the sea. The Morro Solar is a remarkable cluster of hills, situated 

 on a sandy plain ; when seen from the southward it has the appear- 

 ance of an island in the shape of a quoin, sloping to the westward, 

 and falling abruptly on its in-shore side ; facing the sea it termi- 

 nates in a steep cliff, and has a sandy bay on each side of it. 



Off the point of the southern sand bay is an islet with some 

 rocks lying about it, and off the point of the northern sand bay is 

 a reef of rocks of about a cable's length ; round this reef, on the 

 north side of the Morro, is the town and road of Chorillos. The 

 town of Chorillos, built on the cliff, at the foot of one of the 

 slopes of the Morro Solar, is used chiefly as a bathing-place for the 

 inhabitants of Lima, and during a revolution its road is filled with 

 the shipping from Callao ; though it is an exceedingly bad place for 

 them : the bottom is a hard sand, with patches of hard stony clay 



