APPENDIX. 



be obtained ; but water is scarce, the greater part of which is brought 

 from Supe, for the use of the inhabitants of the village. 



The best anchorage is in four fathoms, with Point Thomas shut in 

 by the inner point, about a cable's length from the rocks running 

 off that point, and rather more than a quarter of a mile from the 

 village. There is good anchorage further out, in six or seven fathoms, 

 but little sheltered from the swell. In entering, there is no danger ; 

 Point Thomas is bold, with regular soundings, from ten to fifteen 

 fathoms three-quarters of a mile off it. Off Inner Point there are a 

 few rocks to a short distance ; but there is no necessity for hugging 

 the shore so close, as you can always fetch the anchorage, by keeping 

 at a moderate distance in standing in. 



To distinguish this port, the best guide at a distance is the Bell 

 Mountain, the highest and most remarkable mountain in the second 

 range ; it bears from the anchorage E. 39° N. ; may be distinguished 

 by its shape like a bell, and has three distinct rises on its summit — 

 the highest at the north end ; on that side it shews very distinctly, 

 there being no other hills near it for a considerable distance. On 

 approaching the coast, the island of San Martin to the southward, 

 and Mount Darwin and Cerro Horca (a small round hill on the beach, 

 with a steep, cliffy side to it, facing the sea, with apparently an islet 

 olF it), will be seen, nearly four leagues to the northward. The har- 

 bour itself has a white rock at its north extreme, and cannot be 

 mistaken, for there is no other like it near this part of the coast. 



From Supe the coast is a clay cliff, about a hundred feet in height, 

 to the distance of a league and a half; it then becomes low and 

 covered with brushwood, until you reach Cerro Horca already men- 

 tioned ; here it again becomes hilly near the sea, with alternate rocky 

 points and small sandy bays, which continue to the distance of six 

 leagues ; where is the bay called Gram ad el. 



This is a wild-looking place, with a heavy swell roUing in ; it is 

 visited occasionally for the hair seal, with which it abounds : there is 

 anchorage in six or seven fathoms, sandy bottom, with the bluff that 

 forms the bay bearing S^S.E. about half a mile from the shore ; 

 but landing is scarcely practicable. 



The coast maintains its rocky character, with deep water off it, as 

 far as the BufFadero, a high, steep cliff, with a hill having two paps 

 on it, a little in-shore. From this bluff is a rocky cliff, from two 

 hundred to three hundred feet high, and more level country, as far as 

 Point Leganto, round which is the Port of Guarmey. 



