578 
APPENDIX, 
[C. 
has named Mounts Trafalgar and Waterloo, on the north- 
east of Prince -Regent’s River, not far from its entrance, 
are remarkable for cap-like summits, much resembling those 
which characterize the trap formation. 
Mount Trafalgar. Mount Waterloo. 
The coast on the south of this remarkable river, to Cape 
Leveque, has not yet been thoroughly examined ; but it ap- 
pears from Captain King’s Chart (No. V.) to be intersected 
by several inlets of considerable size, to trace which to their 
termination is still a point of great interest in the physical 
geography of New Holland. The space thus left to be 
explored, from the Champagny Isles to Cape Leveque, 
corresponds to more than one hundred miles in a direct 
line; within which extent nothing but islands and detached 
portions of land have yet been observed. One large inlet 
especially, on the south-east of Cape Leveque, appears to 
afford considerable promise of a river; and the rise of the 
tide within the Buccaneer’s Archipelago, where there is 
another unexplored opening, is no less than thirty- seven 
feet. 
The outline of the coast about Cape Leveque itself is low, 
waving, and rounded; and the hue for which the cliffs are re- 
markable in so many parts of the coast to the north, is also 
observable here, the colour of the rocks at Point Coulomb 
being of a deep red: — but on the south of the high ground 
