312 
APPENDIX. 
A, springs, vessels drawing ten or eleven feet may proceed up 
Sect. Ill, river. 
N. Coast. The stream runs in a very tortuous course for upwards of 
forty miles, but as our examination was unassisted by bear- 
ings or observations, it is laid down from an eye sketch. 
POINT BRAITHWAITE, in latitude 11° 45 ' 50 ", and 
longitude 133° 55 ' 20 ", is twenty miles to the westward of 
Haul-round Islet ; to the southward of it is Junction Bay, 
which was not examined. 
For the next thirty miles the coast is very much indented, 
and has some deep bays on either side of Point Barclay, as 
also one to the eastward of Point Turner, at the bottom of 
which an opening, a mile in width, is probably a river. 
Here also the feature of the coast is altered, being low and 
level to the eastward as far as Point Dale, without a hill or 
rising ground in the interior to relieve its monotonous ap- 
pearance. At this place, however, a range of rocky hills, 
Wellington Range, commences, of about twenty miles in 
extent: five miles behind it is the Tor, (latitude 11° 54 ', 
and longitude 133° 10' 20") a solitary pyramidal rock; and 
seven miles and a quarter W.b.S. from the latter is a peak- 
topped hill. 
The two latter are apparently unconnected with the range, 
on which there are four remarkable ridges, of which the 
two westernmost are the most remarkable. 
GOULBURN ISLANDS consist of two islands, each 
being about twenty miles in circumference ; they are sepa- 
rated from each other by a rocky strait three miles wide, 
which in most parts is deep enough for a ship of any 
size to pass through ; the latitude of the centre of this strait 
is 11° 32'. Macquarie Strait separates the southernmost 
