352 
APPENDIX. 
A. 
Sect. IV. 
N.’West 
Coast, 
miles from east to west, and from one to one and a half 
broad; its west end is in 15 ° 30' S., and 123° 9' 15" E. 
At about a league N.W. from its western end are two bare 
sandy islets, which were uncovered as we passed, but which 
as there was not the slightest appearance of vegetation 
upon it, may be covered at high water. On the western side 
of Adele Island, is an extensive patch of light-coloured 
water, in some parts of which the sea broke upon the rocks, 
which were only just below the surface. The light-coloured 
water extends for fourteen miles N.W.b.W.-|W. from Adele 
Island, but there is reason to think that the water is deep 
over the greater part of it; for we crossed over its tail, and 
sounded in forty-five fathoms without finding bottom, whilst 
in the darker-coloured water on either side of it, we had 
forty- two and forty-four fathoms. 
POINT SWAN is the north-easternmost point of the land 
of Cape Lev^que ; it has an island close off its extremity, 
round which the tide rushes with great force, and forms a line 
ofripplings for ten miles to the W.N.W., through which, even 
in the Bathurst, we found it dangerous to pass. Five miles 
to the north-eastward of the point are two small rocky islets, 
two miles apart from each other. 
CAPE LEVEQUE is low and rocky, with a small islet 
close to its extremity : its extreme is in latitude 16° 21' 50", 
and longitude 122° 56' 35". Between the cape and Point 
Swan, there is a sandy bay, fronted by a bed of rocks. It 
was in this bay that the Buccaneers anchored, which Dam- 
pier has so well described. 
The coast between Capes Leveque and Borda extend- 
ing S. 40° W. nineteen miles, is low and rocky, and the 
