A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 15 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 762 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 15.

A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 15 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 762 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 15.

On the 8th, we were in the latitude of 8 deg. 57’ S.; which is a little to the southward of Cape St Augustine, on the coast of Brazil.  Our longitude, deduced from a very great number of lunar observations, was 34 deg. 16’ W.; and by the watch, 34 deg. 47’.  The former is 1 deg. 43’, and the latter 2 deg. 14’ more westerly than the island of Fernando de Noronha, the situation of which was pretty well determined during my late voyage.  Hence I concluded that we could not now be farther from the continent than twenty or thirty leagues at most; and perhaps not much less, as we neither had soundings nor any other signs of land.  Dr Halley, however, in his voyage, published by Mr Dalrymple, tells us,[85] that “he made no more than one hundred and two miles, meridian distance, from the island [Fernando de Noronha] to the coast of Brazil;” and seems to think that “currents could not be the whole cause” of his making so little.  But I rather think that he was mistaken, and that the currents had hurried him far to the westward of his intended course.  This was, in some measure, confirmed by our own observations; for we had found, during three or four days preceding the 8th, that the currents set to the westward; and, during the last twenty-four hours, it had set strong to the northward, as we experienced a difference of twenty-nine miles between our observed latitude and that by dead reckoning.  Upon the whole, till some better astronomical observations are made on shore on the eastern coast of Brazil, I shall conclude that its longitude is thirty-five degrees and a half, or thirty-six degrees W., at most.

[Footnote 85:  Page 11.]

We proceeded on our voyage, without meeting with any thing of note, till the 6th of October.  Being then in the latitude of 35 deg. 15’ S., longitude 7 deg. 45’ W., we met with light airs and calms by turns, for three days successively.  We had, for some days before, seen albatrosses, pintadoes, and other petrels; and here we saw three penguins, which occasioned us to sound; but we found no ground with a line of one hundred and fifty fathoms.  We put a boat in the water, and shot a few birds; one of which was a black petrel, about the size of a crow, and, except as to the bill and feet, very like one.  It had a few white feathers under the throat; and the under-side of the quill-feathers were of an ash-colour.  All the other feathers were jet black, as also the bill and legs.

On the 8th, in the evening, one of those birds which sailors call noddies, settled on our rigging, and was caught.  It was something larger than an English black-bird, and nearly as black, except the upper part of the head, which was white, looking as if it were powdered; the whitest feathers growing out from the base of the upper bill, from which they gradually assumed a darker colour, to about the middle of the upper part of the neck, where the white shade was lost in the black, without being divided by any line.  It was web-footed; had black legs and a black bill,

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A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 15 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.