2. Continuation of Notes of a Voyage round the Island of 
Trinidad in October , 1868. 
By Thomas William Carr. 
* • i • 
/Communicated by the President.) 
Part II. 
(Abridged.) 
The length of the North Coast is stated, on the authority 
of old marine surveys, to be 46 nautical miles (=53£ Eng. 
m.) ; for less than half of this, from the Boca to Point 
Chupara, 18£ nautical miles, the coast is, with a few breaks 
to be noticed presently, closely locked by an uneven 
line of dark forest-clad mountains, whose highest points 
are 1,800 to 2,250 feet high, the culminating peak behind 
Las Cuevas Bay rather exceeding 3,000 feet. When a 
mile and a half outside of the Boca, we sighted round 
Corozal Point the high conical wood-clothed Islet off the 
windward point of Saut d’Eau Bay, commonly called Saut 
Island into Waterfall Island, terms never heard in tho 
colony. The Geologists retained in their excellent maps 
tho local term Saut d’Eau for the bay (and abandoned 
hamlet), and Maravaca for the Islet. Seeing that the 
