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.

XVII.  Fourteen views of headlands, etc. on the south coast
of Terra Australis.

XVIII.  Thirteen views on the east and north coasts,
and one of Samow Strait.

AND

Ten plates of selected plants from different parts of Terra Australis.

BOOK II

Transactions during the circumnavigation of Terra Australis,
from the time of leaving port Jackson to the return to that port.

CHAPTER I.

Departure from Port Jackson, with the Lady Nelson. 
Examination of various parts of the East Coast, from thence to Sandy
Cape. 
Break-sea Spit. 
Anchorage in Hervey’s Bay, where the Lady Nelson joins after a
separation. 
Some account of the inhabitants. 
Variations of the compass. 
Run to Bustard Bay. 
Port Curtis discovered, and examined. 
Some account of the surrounding country. 
Arrival in Keppel Bay, and examination of its branches,
one of which leads into Port Curtis. 
Some account of the natives, and of the country round Keppel Bay. 
Astronomical and nautical observations.

[East coast. Towards Hervey’s bay.]

THURSDAY 22 JULY 1802

Lieutenant John Murray, commander of the brig Lady Nelson, having received orders to put himself under my command, I gave him a small code of signals, and directed him, in case of separation, to repair to Hervey’s Bay; which he was to enter by a passage said to have been found by the south-sea whalers, between Sandy Cape and Break-sea Spit.  In the morning of July 22, we sailed out of Port Jackson together; and the breeze being fair and fresh, ran rapidly to the northward, keeping at a little distance from the coast. (Atlas, Plate VIII.)

At eleven o’clock, the south head of Broken Bay bore W. by N. three leagues; and Mr. Westall then made a sketch of the entrance, with that of the Hawkesbury River, which falls into it (Atlas, Plate XVIII, View 2).  The colonists have called this place Broken Bay, but it is not what was so named by captain Cook; for he says it lies in latitude 33 deg. 42’ (Hawkesworth III. 103), whereas the southernmost point of entrance is not further than 33 deg. 34’ south.  There is, in captain Cook’s latitude, a very small opening, and the hills behind it answer to his description of “some broken land that seemed to form a bay,” when seen at four leagues, the distance he was off; but in reality, there is nothing more than a shallow lagoon in that place.  In consequence of this difference in position, Cape Three-points has been sought three or four leagues to the north of Broken Bay; whereas it is the north head of the entrance into the bay itself which was so named, and it corresponds both in situation and appearance.

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