NARRATIVE OF THE CRUISE. 
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Paul’s Rocks, fixed against the lower parts of the cliffs, breeds a species of Noddy ( Anous ), 
and together with it a beautiful small snow white Tern with black eyes ( Gygis Candida), 
called by the seamen the “ White Noddy,” to distinguish it from the “ Black Noddy.” 
The summit of the rock is fiat, and the plateau is covered with guano ; in hollows 
nest the Booby (Sid a leucogastra), a Gannet (Sulci piscator), and the Frigate Bird 
(Tachypetes ciquila). The throat of the Frigate Bird hangs in the form of a sort of 
pouch in front, which is bare of feathers and of a brilliant vermilion colour, as if rubbed 
over with some bright red powder ; this gives the bird a very handsome appearance. 
When the plateau was first reached all the birds allowed themselves to be knocked 
over with sticks on their nests or when near them, but they soon became generally alarmed 
and took to flight. The Frigate Birds were on the lookout whenever the Ga n nets were 
molested, and snatched up the small fish which they disgorged, thus profiting by the general 
disaster. A single “ Wideawake,” the name given to the Tern (Sterna fuligmosa), which 
breeds in millions gregariously at “ Wideawake Fair” on the main island, was found on 
the plateau ; the bird was nesting amongst the Gannets for some reason or other. 
It was striking to find breeding thus in the middle of the Atlantic, on the top of a 
steep volcanic rock, the same assemblage of birds which had been seen breeding together 
on a coral island at sea level off the northeast coast of Australia. At Raine Island there 
is a third species of Gannet and a Frigate Bird but no Gygis ; the same Noddy, the same 
two Gannets, and the Wideawake breed there together as at Ascension ; and also one 
of the species of Tropic Birds of Ascension. 
The whole island is a series of extinct volcanic cones (fig. 331) ; the rocks collected 
being augite-andesite, basalt, phonolite, trachyte, liparite (?), obsidian, pumice, volcanic 
tufa ; one ejected specimen was a granite. 
The Expedition remained at Ascension from the 27th March to the 3rd April, coaling 
and provisioning the ship, and obtaining astronomical and magnetical observations. During 
this time the members of the Expedition visited all the chief points of interest, and received 
the greatest attention and assistance from the resident naval authorities. 
Ascension to Porto Praya. 
At 5 a.m. on the 3rd April the voyage to England was resumed. After sounding 
and dredging in 420 fathoms close to the island, a line of soundings was carried north- 
wards to the Equator to join a line of soundings which had been obtained in August 1873 
from the Cape Yercle Islands south to the parallel of 3° N. At a position in lat. 3° 10' N., 
long. 14° 5F W., a dredging was taken in 2450 fathoms on the same spot where a sounding 
was obtained on the 21st August 1873. The ship then proceeded northwards along the 
coast of Africa to Porto Praya, San Iago. 
Between Ascension and the Cape Verde Islands the southeast trade only extended to 
