S9A 



APPENDIX. 



By referring these several observations to Port Famine by chrono- 

 metrical differences, its longitude by observation will be 70° 54' 1 1" 

 which is nearly identical with that produced by the chronometric 

 chain from Plymouth, viz. 70° 54' 01" west. The last has, there- 

 fore, been taken for its longitude, and all the meridians of the coast, 

 surveyed by the expedition under my command, depend upon that 

 determination. Phillip Parker King. 



After having perused Captain King's Report of the chronometrical 

 observations made under his direction, I would ask the reader to turn 

 to Dr. Tiarks's Report on Captain Foster's chronometrical observa- 

 tions in H.M.S. Chanticleer, published in the A2:>pendix* to a 

 *' Narrative of a Voyage to the Southern Atlantic Ocean, in the years 

 1828, 29, 30, performed in H.M.S. Chanticleer, under the command 

 of the late Captain Henry Foster, F.R.S.— By W. H. B.Webster, 

 surgeon of the sloop." 



It will also be useful to refer to a work on " Chronometers and 

 Longitudes," by Captain Owen ; and to the " Pilote du Bresil," by 

 the Baron Roussin ; as well as other works, before forming an opi- 



very numerous, were chiefly computed by Lieutenant Skyring. During 

 the years 1826 and 1827 Captain King considered the longitude of 

 Villegagnon to be about 43° 9', but afterwards he thought 43° 5' more 

 correct. 



There is a striking accordance between the results of Captain Stokes's 

 numerous lunar observations, and the late measurements by the Beagle's 

 chronometers. 



I was informed by Lieutenant Skyring, and by Mr. John L. Stokes, 

 that the longitude of Villegagnon, by the Beagle's chronometers only, in 

 1826, was 43° 9' (to the nearest minute). 



In 1829, Mr. L. Stokes, a good observer even at that time, took many 

 sets of lunar observations at San Carlos, in Chiloe ; the mean result of 

 which gave 73° 56' for the longitude of Point Arena. 



Now, these results are so close to those lately obtained in the Beagle — 

 being Avithin a mile in each case — that I should hesitate to give them 

 without all their data, did I not know that the officers employed on board 

 the Adventure and Beagle were aware of these determinations, and often 

 discussed them, before the year 1836. Captain King and Lieutenant 

 Stokes are more particularly acquainted with them. 



Robert FitzRoy; 



* Vol; II. pp. 233-254. 



