i, ' \ w . ^ 
•¥‘SA^-@¥-¥-4g--€-" year by the Coast Guard, ^0 Is located &4-4be 4a. -wr 1 the south 
end of the island. Three of the buildings used by the colonist in the 
although riddled with shell holes and bullet holes, wfcIS*, 
but g 
are still standing .wad tfes-waHs~e£-a?-teu3& and t 
(jVSi^V Udv*«s^- *'grC fv» , _ 
the coloni*t period cover the area just south of the lighthouse. A range marker 
between/here/and the lighthouse marks a poor channel through the fringing reef. 
Further noi St a n the hthouse are the oiBroc alls’ of some 
** e *^»* 
used during the eunab cjayfr and near the "guano hill" are moi^ remain^ of buildings 
as well as the r« 5 gjnnts of the tramway no. tr• ,m cars. The "guano hill'^ the 
^most conspicuous feature on the IslancL Is about 20 feet high, 60 feet wide and 
several hundred feet long east and west. It is composed of low grade guano 
in t he 1880 *s and t > 
dumped at the end of the t rami me *9rHdr~4k^ ,, “h±arl—i*? now covered v it a a eaant 
growth of vegetation. 
The tramway extends both north and south from this point and the old 
track beds are still obvious today. The southern extention runs along the 
east side of the lagoon to the southern Cordia groves and the northern branch 
through the center of the Island almost to the north end of the island 
runs 
