
■I k' :■
(
, : 1 f
I ■
I f
| l : j '
I'
Date
1873.
Aug. 14
iì»
16
30 3Ì
Sept. 1
S0
10
I’i
12
Lati- Longitude
tilde
N. AY.
9° 15'
6 11
5 48-
29
18° 28'
17"*26
15 55
16 42
15 57
14 20
13 52
14 49
2 52 17 0
2 25 20 1
2 6
1 47
1 22
1 10
0 4
2 6S.
3 42
4 45
5 54
6 38
7 39
8 33
9 10
22 53
24 26
26 36
28 23
30 20
3 l '" 4
32 21
33"'50
3 3 " ' 7
34 39
34 33
34 12
34 SO
34 49
10 11 : 35 22
1 0 46 , 36 8
13 ; 11 52 , 37 10
Depth
of
the Sea,
Fms.
1750
2450
2475
2500
2275
1850
1500
1900
2275
2475
2200
2275
18
1650
675
400
1715
1200
1015
I
Fms.
Surface.
Bottom.
Surface.
Surface.
40
100
200
Surface
Surface
Surface
Surface
Surface,
50
100
200
300
400
Bottom.
Surface.
Surface.
Bottom.
Surface.
Surface.
Suiface.
25
50
90
200
800
400
Surface.
Surface.
Bottom.
Surface.
Surface.
Bottom.
Surface.
Bottom.
Surface.
Surface.
Surface.
Surface.
Surface.
Surface.
Bottom.
Bottom.
Surface.
Bottom.
Surface.
G
p.GH
III
:l -
25°* 7C.
26 * 0
26 • 2
26 • 2
25 • 6
18 • 3
13 • 8
10 *4
5 -3
4 • 7
1 • 7
25 -8
25 *6
1 • 7
25 • 6
26 • 0
26 • 0
25 • 6
25 • 3
0 • 9
25 • 7
25
0 • 5
25 -6
0 *7
25 • 8
25 • 6
25 *6
25 • 1
25 • 6
25 • 3
2*’’3
25 • 4
2 5 ’” 0
26°* 5C
26 • 2
25 *9
26 *3
25 *2
25 *2
25 • 2
26 • 2
26 • 3
26
26
25
25
25
25
25
25
25
26 • 0
25 *8
24 * 9
• OCsh’T
25 • 2
25 -1
25 ‘ 0
25 • 0
25 • 0
25 • 0
25 • 7
25 *8
25 ■ 8
26 • 2
26 • 1
24 • 3
25 • 4
25 *4
25 • 2
25 * 5
25 • 5
25 • 7
25 • 9 ■25-8
1 26 ■ 3
26 • 3 ¡25-8
26-2
’ 25 • 0
02309
•0231S
•02322
•02322
02392
02366
02340
02337
02344
02336
02325
02314
02398
02385
02362
02352
02373
02341
02338
02327
02353
02320
02331
02332
02341
02374
02875
02355
02366
•02316
1 -02366
1 -02389
o P
d o
08
S’oo> d P,
•02327
•02387
•02382
•02376
•02362
•02346
•02402
•02404
•02411
•02473
■02462
•02464
•02376
•02378
02471
02443
02497
•02618
•02619
02612
02625
02661
02635
02609
02639
02647
02645
02632
02601
02668
02653
02630
02620
02639
02606
02632
02613
02611
02617
02628
02626
02610
02640
02637
02617
02628
02578
02651
02677
02614
02692
02679
•02613
1-02635
1-02619
•02672
•02697
•02704
•02760
•02752
•02752
•02679
■02681
•02759
■02749
•12759
^OG li'^So
•02331
•02816
02330
02326
02599
02690
02721
02340
02350
02343
02330
02318
02594
02687
02731
02793
02819
02808
02342
02330
02808
02333
02331
02329
02613
02797
02808
02759
02369
02405
02821
02407
02396
02822
1-02351
02827
02383
02403
02421
02468
02469
02481
1 -02876
1-02484
1 -02497
CHAPTER III.
B A H IA TO TH E CAPE.
A Shower of Butteiflies.—Bahia de todos os Santos.—Excursion into
the Forest.—San Salvador.—Hospitality of the English Residents.
—Dredging in Shallow Water in the Bay.—A case of Yellow
Fever and our consequent abrupt departure.— Fungia syninie-
¿rica.—Tristan dAcunha.—Inaccessible Island—Story of tbe
Stoltenhoffs.—The Birds of Inaccessible Island.—The habits
of the Penguin.—Nightingale Island.—Subsequent history of
Tristan d’Acunba.—Yoyage to the Cape of Good Hope.—We
leave the Atlantic.
A p p e n d i x A .—Table of Tenjperatures observed between Bahia and
tbe Cape of Good Hope.
A p p e n d i x B.—Table of Serial Soundings down to 200 iatboms,
taken between Bahia and the Cape of Good Hope.
A p p e n d i x C.—Specific Gravity Observations taken between Babia and
the Cape of Good Hope during the months of September and
October 1873.
AYe trawled again on the 11th in 1,715 fathoms, and
this haul gave, along with a characteristic assemblage
of the ordinary deep-sea invertebrates, a specimen of
Eiiplectella suberea, a species which we met ndtli first
ofi' Cape St. A^incent, and a small Umbellularia ; and
on the 12th ive had two fairly successful hauls in
1,200 fathoms. Onr coal was now almost entirely expended,
so the engines were stojiped, and on the 13th
we crept along toivards Bahia under all plain sail.