BLAKENEY POINT IN 1913. 
711 
simplest and most obvious remedy would seem to be the 
cutting of a new channel through the saltings of the National 
Trust to the South {i.e., landward side) of the existing restricted 
channel. This alone, however, would prove but a temporary 
expedient, as the advancing beach would in a few years over- 
take the new channel and reproduce the existing situation. If 
a new channel be cut there must be concurrent treatment of 
the beach to arrest its advance. The obvious treatment would 
be to plant this section of the beach with Suczda bushes ; 
these, if properly placed, should raise the height of the crest 
and at the same time automatically stabilise the beach. The 
matter is referred to here with a view to ventilating the subject 
in the locality. 
A. W. Cozens-Hardy, Chairman, 
F. W. Oliver, Secretary, 
Blakeney Point Committee. 
REPORT 
ON THE BLAKENEY POINT LABORATORY 
FOR THE YEAR 1913. 
One of the obligations of the Trustees of the Laboratory is 
to report annually on the progress of work carried out therein. 
As, however, the investigations conducted in the Laboratory 
form but a part of the work on Blakeney Point, from which 
they are inseparable, it is proposed to deal comprehensively 
in these reports with the whole of the scientific work that is 
in progress. 
