64 
B^tang-LupoTj the S^rtbas, the R^jang (which is navigable for 
140 miles), the Binttilu, the Baram^ the Limbang or BrCinei Ri- 
ver, the Tewiran, and the Tampasuk ; the last two having 
their sources in Moiint Kina Balu itself. But by far the largest 
rivers are those In the south-western versant; the largest being 
the Kapuas (which, rising in 114° E. longitude, falls into the sea 
between Mgmpa\va and SukadAna) and the Banjer-Masin or 
Barito, the master stream of this country, which rises in the 
Kutei-Lama lake, and reaches the Sea of Java at 114° East lon- 
gitude, in the centre of the South coast almost opposite to Sou- 
rabaya in Java. The next largest, the Kutei (Coti) or Mahak- 
kan, rises in Mount Lasan-Tula, flows East with a rapid course, 
and falls by numerous mouths into the Straits of Macassar. 
Most of the rivers of the northern versant are necessarily short, 
as the island there narrows into a kind of promontory, 
6^////^ and Btiys.—'DBXn Bight to the East of Sarawak, Gaya 
Bay, Marudu Bay, with Kudat Harbour on the North, Paitan 
Bay, Labuk Bay, Sand^ikan Harbour, and Darvel Bay on the 
West of British North Borneo. 
Straits, — Carimata Channel between Borneo and Billiton ; 
Macassar Strait between Borneo and Celebes. 
Oipes.—C'd^Q Samba, Flat Point, Cape Malang- Layer, and 
Cape Sungei Bharu on the South ; Capes Datu, Sink, and 
Baram on tbe East ; Cape Kanyungan, Sampan-Mangio Point 
on the North; Cape Unsang at the end of a promontor}' on 
the East. 
There are very few islands of importance off the 
coast of Borneo, a fact which has been explained by the 
deposition of new land which is going on, many of the islands 
which fringed the coast in former times having, tt is supposed, 
