PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY OF THE GULF OF MAINE 
907 
from its western side recurving to the left across the mouth of the bay. Flotsam 
drifting in this branch may then come under the influence of the drift setting east- 
ward into the right-hand side of the Grand Manan Channel. But only one bottle 
can so be classified, while five seem to have passed by the channel in their rounds to 
Penobscot Bay. 
It is interesting that only two bottles from any of the several series 81 have been 
recovered along the coast sector between Petit Manan and the western entrance to 
the Grand Manan Channel, although many must have passed by. Judging from 
this, such parts of the dominant surface drift as veers westward past Grand Manan 
Fig. 184.— Assumed drifts of bottles recovered to the westward and inshore from Series D, set out off Mount Desert Island, 
August 6, 1923. •, places of release 
does not usually strike the coast of Maine in summer until it has passed the longi- 
tude of Mount Desert Island. 
The circulatory scheme just outlined reconciles the bottle drifts for 1923 with 
those of the bottles set out in the Bay of Fundy in the summer of 1919, except that 
the latter certainly hugged the coast more closely in their westward and southward 
journey, else so many of them would hardly have been embayed behind Cape Cod. 
In this respect the summer of 1919 paralleled the April and July currents of 1925 
si One set out in the Bay of Fundy in August, 1919 (Mavor, 1922, bottle no. 181); the other (no. 65) from the inner part of 
the Cape Elizabeth line of July, 1922. 
