332 
APPENDIX. 
A. commences at Cape Londonderry, and projects from the 
shore for nearly five miles, but to the eastward of the cape 
^ West a ship may approach it within two miles. 
To the south of Cape Talbot the land trends in and forms 
a bay twelve miles deep, and wide, that was not examined. 
It is fronted by SIR GRAHAM MOORE’S ISLANDS, one 
of which is eight miles long, and low, excepting at the 
east end, where there is a flat-topped hill ; there is also an- 
other remarkable summit on a smaller island, to the north 
of the principal island. 
At twenty miles W.S.W. from Cape Talbot is the east en- 
trance of VANSITTART BAY; it is formed between Mary 
Island and the easternmost of the Eclipse Isles, (Long 
Island;) but this space, which is nearly three miles wide, 
is much occupied by rocks, so that it is contracted to the 
width of little more than half a mile. 
The channel to this is between two extensive reefs, the in- 
nermost of which commences at eight miles to the westward 
of Cape Talbot, and extends along Sir Graham Moore’s 
Islands to Mary Island. 
The outer reef commences at about twelve miles from the 
cape, and extends to the westward, embracing Jones’s 
Island (in latitude 13° 44', and longitude 126° 23'), and 
the Eclipse Isles. The passage is from three and a half to 
five miles wide, and is deep and free from danger. The 
bottom is rocky until within five miles of the Eclipse Islands, 
when good anchorage may be obtained in five and six fa- 
thoms, upon a muddy bottom. 
The entrance is between Middle Rock, and a patch of 
dry rocks to the eastward of Long Rocks, the distance 
