A Voyage to Terra Australis — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 639 pages of information about A Voyage to Terra Australis — Volume 2.

A Voyage to Terra Australis — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 639 pages of information about A Voyage to Terra Australis — Volume 2.

We had the wind at N. W. in the morning, and steered close to it on the larbord tack, until noon; when the hill on the outer north-east island, bore S. 891/2 deg.  W., nine or ten miles.  The latitude of the hill is 13 deg. 381/4’, and from six sets of distances of stars east and west of the moon, its longitude would be 136 deg. 36’; but from the survey and more numerous observations, it is 137 deg. 01/2’ east.* After a calm the sea breeze came in, and our course was directed for the north-east point of Groote Eylandt; at sunset we approached a rocky islet three or four miles from the point, and anchored under it in 61/2 fathoms, sandy ground, with the point bearing S. 5 deg.  E., and the furthest visible part, very low and sandy, S. 63 deg.  W. five or six miles.  On the other side, the north-east islands extended from N. 32 deg.  E. to 39 deg.  W., with many small rocks scattered along them; the nearest of which, a split rock, was distant a short mile.

[* The apparent error of 241/2’ in the first longitude, is greater than should exist in the mean result of six sets of distances.  There is an interval of three days in the observations of the moon at Greenwich with which these distances were compared; and it seems probable that a great part of the error might arise from that cause.]

WEDNESDAY 12 JANUARY 1803

In the morning we steered close to a N. N. W. wind, for the low sandy point, where the shore was found to trend southward; and five or six miles to the west there was other land, moderately high and in some places cliffy, which took nearly a parallel direction; and the bight between them ran so far up towards the north-east bluff of the woody hills, that a junction with the small opening seen on the outside appeared to be probable.  A shelving spit extended out from the low point, and on opening the bight our soundings decreased from 6 to 21/2 fathoms, which made it necessary to tack; and the wind being adverse to passing within the north-east islands, if indeed there be water enough for a ship, which seemed doubtful, we steered out by the way we had come in.

Having little wind, the isles were not passed till late in the evening, and from the same cause not much progress was made to the westward next day [THURSDAY 13 JANUARY 1803]; but the land was better distinguished than before, and many straggling rocks and two islets were seen to lie off the north end of Groote Eylandt.  In the morning of the 14th [FRIDAY 14 JANUARY 1803] we weathered all these, and on the wind dying away, anchored in 111/2 fathoms, blue mud; the outer North-point Islet, which lies in 13 deg. 37’ south and 136 deg. 45’ east, then bore E. 3 deg.  S. five miles, and the furthest extreme of a higher cliffy island, S. 38 deg.  W. three miles.

I went in a boat to this last island with the botanical gentlemen, intending to take bearings from the uppermost cliffs; but the many deep chasms by which the upper parts are intersected, made it impossible to reach the top in the short time we had to spare, and a few bearings from the eastern low point were all that could be obtained.  This was called Chasm Island; it lies one mile and a half from a low point of Groote Eylandt, where the shore trends southward and seemed to form a bay, into which I proposed to conduct the ship.

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A Voyage to Terra Australis — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.