■ •-■- -• '. i-f. ■..«»,}„■ i*; -" .'* It CRUISE OF THE "ALERT.' :-.:^ "mwvpi M^:.-^'<,am^»Li^i-m^ CRUISE OF THE "ALERT." FOUR YEARS IX PAT AGON I A N, POLYNESIAN, AND MASCARENE WATERS. (1878-82.) HY R. \V. COPPINGER, M.D. (Stafi'-Surgeon Royal Na\'Y, C.M.Z.S.) With Sixteen f nil- f age JVoodctit lUiistratioits from Photngraphs hy 1'. North, R.K., and from Sketches hy the Aiif/ior. SECOND EDITION. NEW YORK : R. \V O R T H I N G T O N, 770, BROADAVAY. 1SS4. 4t>5 u.vnTRsm- OF c^ifor.vu ^77 ^-^-^^A BARBARA PREFACE IX preparing the following pages for the press, I ha\-e endeavoured to give a brief account, divested as much as f)05sible of technicalities, of the principal points of interest in Natural History which came under observation during the wanderings of a surveying ship ; while at the same time I have done my utmost, at the risk of rendering the narrative disconnected, to avoid trenching on ground which has been rendered familiar by the writings of travellers who have \'isited the same or similar places. And if in a few instances I have given some rather dry details regarding the appearance and surroundings of certain zoolc^cal specimens, it has been my intention, by an occasional reference to the more striking forms of life met with in each localit)-, to afford some assistance to those amateurs who, like myself, may desire to avail themselves of the opportunities afforded by the sunejing ships of the British Navy for performing, although with rude appliances and \-er}- few books of reference, some useful and interesting work. Large collections of zoological specimens were made, and as these accumulated on board, they were from time to time sent \ iii Prcjacc. home to the Admiralty, whence they were transmitted to the British Museum, the authorities of that institution then submitting them to specialists for systematic description. For much kindly aid in making these arrangements, as well as for advice and encouragement received during the progress of the cruise, I am indebted to Dr. Albert Giinther, F.R.S., Keeper of Zoology in the British Museum. I take this opportunity to thank Mr. Frederick North, R.N., for the use of a collection of photographs which were taken by him during the cruise under circumstances of peculiar difficulty, and of which most of the engravings in this work are repro- ductions. I am also under obligations to all the other officers for assist- ance rendered to mc in various waj-s ; and especial !)• to those officers who acted successively as Senior Lieutenants, for the consideration with which they tolerated those parts of my dredging operations that necessarily interfered with the main- tenance of good order and cleanliness on the ship's decks. Finally, I have to thank inj- friend, Mr. R. Bowdler Sharpc, the distinguished ornithologist of the British Museum, by whose advice and encouragement I was induced to submit these pages to the public, for his assistance in perusing my MS., and offering some useful suggestions. R. W. C. TABLE OF CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION. PAGE Object of the Voyage— Former Surveys of Straits of Magellan— Change of Programme — Selection of Ship — Equipment — Arrangements for Natural History Work— Change of Captain— List of Officers . . 1—4 CHAPTER I. Departure from England — Storm Petrels — A Sparrow-hawk at Sea — • Collecting Surface Organisms with Tow-net — Water-kite — Wire Sounding Apparatus — Land-swallow at Sea — Gulfweed — Phospho- rescence of Seawater — Arrive at Madeira — Curious Town — Dredging Work — A Pinery — Discoloured Seawater— Petrels again — St. Vin- cent— Cape de Verdes — Pelagic Animals — Sounding near Abrolhos Bank — Dredging over Hotspur Bank — Dredging over Victoria Bank — Moths and Butterflies on the Ocean — E.xtraordinary Vitality of Sphynx Moths — Arrive at Montevideo — Gauchos— Trip into Interior of Uruguay — Buenos Ayres — Dr. Burmeister's Museum — Arrive at the Falklands — "Stone Runs." .S— 33 CHAPTER II. We enter Straits of Magellan — Reach Sandy Point — Gold and Coal- Surrounding Country — Elizabeth Island — Dredging — Fuegians at Port Famine — We enter Smyth's Channel — Canoe "Portage" at Isthmus Bay — Arrive at Tom Bay — A Fuegian Family — Trinidad Channel — CUmate of Western Patagonia — Flora — Rock F'ormation — Soilcap — Natives — The Channel Tribe of Fuegians — Scarcity of Old People — Water-birds of Tom Bay — Sea Otters — A Concealed "Portage" — Habits of Gulls and Shags — Steamer Ducks— Land- shells — Freshwater Fish — Deer 34 — 65 Contents. CHAPTER III. I' ACE Trinidad Channel gouged out by Glaciers — Port Henry — Trumpet-shells — Native Camp — Wolsey Sound — "Cache Diablo" — "Ripple- marked" Limestone — Fuegian Burial-place — Marine Animals — Strange Capture of Fish — Whales Abundant - Kxploration of Picton Channel — Attack on Sealers — Signs of Old Ice Action — " Hailstone" Rock — Soil-motion —We proceed Northward to Refit — Knglish Narrows — Gulf of Peiias 66 — 80 CHAPTER IV. Arrival at Valparaiso — War between Chili, Peru, and Bolivia — Sir George Nares returns to England — Captain Maclear joins — Coquimbo — Shell Terraces Trip to Las Cardas — Habits of Ptcrnptochiis — Island of St. Ambrose — Habits of Petrels — Flight of the Albatross — Santiago de Chile — Natural Historj' Museum — Santa Lucia— Church of La Compania — Heights of Montenegro — A Fly-trap Plant — Copper-mines of Brillador — Peculiarities of Chilian Mines — Talca- huana — Outbreak of Small Po.x — Isla de Los Reyes — Shooting a " Coypo " — Railway Trip to Araucanian Territory — Our Locomotive — Incidents of the Journey — Fossil Tree-trunk at Quinquina Island 81—102 CHAPTER V. We return to Fatagonian Waters- Gulf of Peiias- Spring in the Trinidad Channel Gcphyrean at Cockle Cove -Diving Petrel -Tree Cor- morants— Magellan Kingfisher — A Curious Moss Wind-swept Bushes— Gull, Cormorant, and Skua— E.xamination of Brazo del Norte— Black-necked Swan -A Sealer's Yam Fur-seal Trade - Hardships of Seal-hunting— Otter Skins Experiment with Condor— Fuegians at Tilly Bay -Flaking Glass Arrow-heads List of Fuegian Words— The Maran/iense—A. Magellan Glacier— Native Fish- weirs- The .Magellan Nutria 10.5 126 Cotitents. xi CHAPTER VI. We proceed towards Skyring Water -Otway Water— Canal of Fitzroy Terrace-levels— Plants and Animals— Bay of the Mines— Previous Explorers— The Coal Mines— Altamirano Bay— Prospects of the Settlement- A Seal " Rookery " — Puerto Bueno — We proceed Northwards — Port Riofrio — Gray Harbour-Sailing for Coast of Chili — Small Pox amongst the Chilians — Discoloured Sea-water — Habits of Ant Thrush 12/"— Mi CHAPTER Vn. Early History of Tahiti — Otaheite and Tahiti — Its appearance from Sea- ward— Harbour of Papiete — Produce— Matavai Bay — Tahiti an- nexed to France — Prince Tamitap — Annexation Festivities — King Pomare V. — Coral growing on Ship's Bottom — Nassau Island — Danger Islands — Tema Reef — Union Group — Nukunono — Oatafu — Natives afflicted with a Skin Disease — Stone Implements — Religious Scruples — Metal Fish-hooks not appreciated — Capriciousness of Sharks— Lalla Rookh Bank 144— 15J CHAPTER VHI. Arrival at Fiji — Levuka — Ratu Joe comes on Board — Excursion to Bau in Viti Levu — We visit King Cacobau — A Native F"east — Lalis — Tapa— The Bure Kalou— Bakola— Old Fijian Atrocities— Double Canoe — Stone Adzes now becoming rare — Angona Drinking — Sir Arthur Gordon — Walk across Ovalau — The Kaicolos — An Imprudent Settler — Pine-apple Cultivation— /'f;-/y//;///«/w«J-— Suva — Site of Future Capital — Sail towards Tonga Islands — Pelagic Animals — Early History of Tonga — Missionaries— Nukualofa — A Costly Pair of Gates — Visit to Bea — Davita — Evidence of Elevation of Island — King George of Tonga — Wellington Gnu — Curious Stone Monument —Trip to Village of Hifo— We are entertained by the Natives- Famous Caves— Eyeless Fish— Swifts behaving like Bats— Searching for Reefs— Discolouration of Seawatcr- Return to Levuka Voyage to Australia- Surface l.ife ......■• 159 xii Contents. I'AGP. CHAPTER IX. Refitting Ship at Sydney — Mr. Haswell joins us — We proceed North- wards along East Coast of Australia — Port Curtis, Queensland — A "Labour Vessel" — Mr. Eastlake — Marine Fauna abundant — Festivities at Gladstone — Birds — Percy Islands — Survey of Port MoUe — Queensland Aborigines — "Black Police" — "Dispersing" Black fellows — Dredging Operations — A Parasitic Shell-fish — Port Denison — ^Visit to a Native Camp — Throwing the Boomerang^A Beche-de-mer Establishment at Lizard Island — Hostility of the Natives — Drawings by Aborigines at Clack Island — Albany Island, North-Eastem Australia i8o — 193 CHAPTER X. Settlement at Thursday Island — Torres Straits Islanders — Pearl-Shell Fisheries — Value of the Shell — Pearls not abundant — Neighbouring 1 slands — Lizards — Landcrab — Landshells — Ferns — Birds — ■ Booby Island — Arrive at Port Darwin, North-Westem Australia — Sub- marine Cables — Trans-continental Telegraph — Palmerston — North- ern Territory Goldfields — Aborigines at Port Darwin — Marine Fauna — Birds — Geese perching on Trees 194 — 208 CHAPTER XI. Voyage from Port Darwin to Singapore — Through the Eastern Archi- pelago— We arrive at Singapore — Oceanic "Tiderips" — Bird Island, Seychelles — Seabirds on Land — Port Mahe, Seychelles — The Coco-de-Mer^Gigantic Tortoise — Produce of the Islands — Vanilla — A Primitive Crushing-mill — Dredging Operations — Periophthiilinus—"'L\\\t Seychelles, of Granitic Structure — We visit the Amirante Group — African Islands — Abundance of Orbitolites^ Crabs pursued by Eels— Eagle Island- -Partridge shooting — Young Lizards — Darros Island — Casiiariiias — I )redging -Poivre Island — Trees and Shrubs — Isle des Roches — Flora scanty— Land-birds^ General Remarks on the Amirantes as a Group — " Fringing Reefs," but no "Barrier Reefs" — Signs of Elevation — Weather and Lee Sides contrasted 209—229 Contoils. xiii I'AGK CHAPTER XII. Alphonse Island — Pearl-shell— Providence Island — Method of planting- Cocoa-nuts — Edible Turtle — Flora — Red Coral — Ccrf Islets — St. Pierre — Du Lise Island — Flora and Fauna — Erratic Stones on Coral Reef — Glorioso Island — We sail for Mozambique Island^ And sight East Coast of Africa — Trade at Mozambique — Inhabitants — Caju— Shells of Foreshore — The Survey concluded — Homeward Bound — Cape of tiood Hope — Egg of the Epiornis — Arrival at Plymouth 230 — 24s Genkrai. Index 246 Index of NAirRAr. History Terms 253 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. H.MS. "Al.lCRT" Al ANCHOR IN I'OM HAV, WksI' COASl OV I-adng Patagonia nth- FuEGiAN ANiJ Australian I.mi'I.I'Iiiknts .54 Canoe of Channel Fuegians 50 FUEGIAN "PORIAGE" FOR TRANSPORT OF CANOES OVERLAND . 6o Fuegians Offering their Children for Barter . . .65 Our Fuegian Friends at Tilly Bay, Straits of Magellan . 104 Fuegian Hur at Tilly Bay 120 Foot of Glacier, Ar Glacier Bay, Si raits of Magellan . 124 Fish-hooks of Union Islanders 143 Woman of Tahiti 144 Fishek.man of Tahut 148 KiNc; Cacohai: 0:' I'lji, Wife, and Rait Joe . . . .160 Totoonga Valley, Ovnlai", Imji 166 Ancieni Stone Monl.ment al Tongatahu 174 Facsimiles of Drawings i'.v Australian Ai-.origines . . .192 AliOKIGINES OF NOKTH-WEST AUSTRALIA 204 "Travellers' Trees" in Gardens at Singapore . . . 210 "Coi'ra" Crushing Mill Ar Seychelles 218 CRUISE OF THE "ALERT." INTRODUCTION. IN the summer of 1878 it was decided by the Lords of the Admiralty to equip a vessel for the threefold purpose of continuing the survey of the Straits of Magellan, of investigating the nature and exact position of certain doubtful reefs and islands in the South Pacific Ocean, and of surveying a portion of the northern and western coasts of Australia. The special object of the Magellan portion of the work was to make such a detailed survey of the sheltered channels extending southward from the Gulf of Penas to Port Tamar as would enable vessels to pass from the Straits to the Pacific, and vice versa, without having to encounter the wild and inhospitable outer coasts presented by the chain of desolate islands here fringing the western coasts of South America. It was also desirable that additional anchorages should be found and survc}-ed, where vessels might lie in safety while v.'aiting for the cessation of a gale, or for a favourable tide to help them through the straits. The surveys made by the Adventure and Bcag/c in 1826-36, and by the Niissart in 1866-9, were excellent so far as they went, and so far as the requirements of their times were concerned ; but the great increase of ocean navigation within the last few years had rendered it necessary that the charts should contain more minute survcj-s of certain I 2 Cruise of tlu "Alert:' places which were not formerly of importance. The South Pacific portion of our survey was to be mainly in connection with the recently acquired colony of the Fiji Islands, and was to be devoted to an exploration of the eastern passages leading to this group, with an investigation of the doubtful dangers reported in the vicinity of the great shipping tracts. Finally, on completing the above, and arriving at Australia, we were to spend a year and a half, or thereabouts, in sur\-cying the line of reefs which fringe its whole western seaboard, the ill-defined position of which is a serious obstacle to the now extensive trade between Western Australia and the Dutch islands of the Malay Archipelago. The latter part of the orders was subsequently changed, inas- much as we were directed to omit the survey of the western shores of Australia, and were ordered instead, on completing the North Australian work, to proceed to Singapore, in the Straits of Malacca, to refit. Thence we were to return home by the Cape of Good Hope, stopping on our way at the Seychelles, Amirante Islands, and Mozambique, in order to fix astronomically the position of the Amirante group, and, as opportunities occurred, to take a line of soundings off the east coast of Africa. The vessel selected for this special ser\ice was the Alert, a man-of-war sloop of 7 5 i tons measurement and 60 horse-power nominal ; and the command of the expedition was given to Capt. Sir George Nares, K.C.B. By a happy coincidence the same stout craft which had already done such good service in the Arctic Expedition of 1S75-6, and which bears the honour of having attained the highest tiorthent latitude, was selected as the ship in which Sir George Nares was now about to proceed on a voyage of exploration in high southern latitudes. She was offi- cially commissioned on the 20th of August, with a complement of 120 officers and men, her equipments including apparatus for conducting deep sea sounding and dredging operations, and a miscellaneous collection of instruments not usually supplied to H.M.'s ships. Object of the Voyage. 3 It being the wish of the enterprising hydrographer of the navy ■ — Captain, now Sir Frederick Evans, K.C.B. — that the opportu- nities which this expedition would afford of making a valuable natural history collection in regions little known to science should not be thrown away, and Sir George Nares warmly seconding him in this wish, the Admiralty determined on appointing as surgeon an officer who, in addition to his duties as medical officer of the ship, would be inclined to devote his spare time to the cause of natural science. Sir George Nares, knowing my fondness for natural history, with characteristic kindness gave my appli- cation his support, and I had therefore the good fortune to be appointed as medical officer of the /llert, on the understanding that (so far as my medical duties permitted) I would not lose sight of the advantages which would accrue to science from a collection of natural-history objects illustrative of the fauna and flora of the countries visited in the course of the voyage. During the four years over which my narrative extends, many changes took place in the pcrsonnet of the expedition. Scarcely a year had elapsed from the date of our departure from England, when we had to regret the loss of Sir George Nares, who left us at Valparaiso, and returned to England by mail steamer, in order to enter upon his duties as Director of the Marine Department of the Board of Trade. We were fortunate, however, in having as his successor Captain John Maclcar — formcrlv of the Challenger exploring expedition — to whom I take this oppoiiunity of express- ing my thanks for the unvarying kindness which I have always experienced at his hands, as well as for much assistance and encouragement in the prosecution of our zoological work. The following is a list of the officers: — Captain Sir George S. Nares, K.C.I]., F.R.S. ; succeeded by Captain John Maclear, F.R.M.S. Lieut. George R. Bethell ; succeeded by Lieut. James Deedcs. Lieut, the Hon. Foley C. P. Verckcr ; succeeded by Lieut. George Roopcr. 4 Cniise of the ''Alert." Lieut. Gordon S. Gunn (subsequently became senior lieutenant). Nav. Lieut. William II. Petley. Sub-Lieut. James H. C. East (subsequently served as lieutenant). Sub-Lieut. Charles W. de la P. Beresford (left the ship at Singapore). Staff-Surgeon Richard W. Coppinger, M.D. Paymaster Frederick North. Engineer, John Dinwoodie. Engineer, William Cook. Boatswain, Alfred Payne. (Lieut. Grenfell joined the ship at Singapore, and remained until the close of the commission.) Our Bird Viiiiors, CHAPTER I. FROM ENGLAND TO THE FALKLANDS AFTER various delays, owing to defects in machinery, we finally bade adieu to the shores of England on the 25 th of September, 1878, taking our departure from Plymouth. On the second day at sea the little storm-petrels appeared over our wake, and accompanied us, off and on, for most of our way to Madeira. These seemed to be of two kinds, the Tlialas- sidroma pelagica and Thalassidroma Leachii, the latter being suf- ficiently recognizable from their having forked tails, in which respect they differ from other species of the genus. Many at- tempts were made to catch them by means of hooks baited with fat, skeins of thread, etc., but all to no purpose; and I rather fancy that in this thoroughfare of the ocean the wily creatures have had too much experience of the arts of man, and are there- fore not to be caught so easily as their more ignorant brethren of the southern hemisphere. On the 28th of September, when 155 miles to the westward of Cape P^inisterrc, and during a fresh easterly breeze, a sparrow-hawk made his appearance, at first hovering round the ship, and ulti- mately settling on the rigging. It had probably strayed too far from the shore in the pursuit of some tempting prey, and had then lost its reckoning, being eventually blown to seaward. At ali events, it had travelled some long distance, as it evinced its weariness by resting quietly and contentedly on the main-top- gallant rigging, until one of the seamen, who had managed to 6 Cruise of I he " Alert r climb up unobserved, suddenly laid hands on it. On placing it in a meat-safe, which we extemporised as a cage, it ate ravenously, as well it might after its long journey. When in the latitude of Lisbon, and 1 80 miles to the westward of the Portuguese coast, a large " sea-flier " bird paid us a visit, soaring over the waves in our vicinity, and evidently on the look- out for garbage from the ship. The plumage of the upper surface of wings and body was of a dusky brown colour, the under surface of the body was whitish, and the wings were long and pointed ; in mode of flight he resembled a large tern. He did not long remain with us, probably not finding it a sufficiently productive hunting-ground. I may here mention that on the 6th of October, ' when a hundred miles from Madeira, we sighted a bird answering the same description. All opportunities of plying the tow-net were duly availed of, but owing to the unusually rapid speed of the ship, these were few. However, we succeeded in capturing many specimens of living Foraminifers (mostly of the genus OrbitoHtcs), stalk-eyed Crus- taceans, Radiolarians, an lanthina, a few Salpae, and the pretty little Pteropod Mollusc, the Criscis Aciailata, besides many other organisms which the rapid motion of the net through the water had rendered unrecognizable. As it is usually found that these minute pelagic organisms are to be obtained from the surface in most abundance at night-time, and during the day retreat for some fathoms from the glare of the sunlight, I constructed a wooden apparatus on the principle of a kite, which I attached to the towing line at some three or four yards from the net, and which had the effect of dragging down the net some yards below the surface, and then retaining it at a uniform depth. It of course required to be adjusted each time to suit the required depth and the rate of the vessel, but it had this great advantage over the usual system of employing heavy weights, that the strain not being nearly so great, a light and manageable rope could be used ; and that, moreover, the adjustment for depth could be A Sounding Apparatus — Swallows at Sea. 7 readily made by altering the trim of tiiis water-kite. When I first tried this apparatus, and before I had succeeded in trimming it satisfactorily, it caused great amusement to the blue-jackets by the playful manner in which it manoeuvred under our stern, now diving deeply towards our rudder post (the shimmer of the white wood in the deep blue water reminding one of a dolphin), and now whimsically rising rapidly to the surface with an impetus that shot it fully six feet out of the water. On the 4th of October, the captain made some experiments with the " Lucas deep-sea sounder." It consists of a strong brass drum carrying 2,000 fathoms of fine steel wire, and fitted with a cyclometer which registers on a dial the number of fathoms of wire run out. The sinker, which weighs 20 lbs., is made of lead, and has at its lower extremity a bull-dog snapper, which, on striking the ground, shuts up suddenly, so as to enclose a sample of the sea bottom. The apparatus is supposed to be capable of sounding to a dc[)th of 500 fathoms in a vessel going 5 knots, and to 50 fathoms w'hen going 12 knots. It is said to be a modification of an invention of Sir VV. Thompson's. \Vc subse- quently used this largely, and found it to be a most convenient and expeditious method of sounding to depths of 500 fathoms, with the ship almost stationary. The wire could be wound up again while the ship was under way. During the forenoon of this same day we saw, to our astonish- ment, a land swallow, which flew about the ship for a few minutes, and then went on his way rejoicing. He would have had to travel 254 miles to make the nearest land, which was the island of Porto Santo. An erratic fragment of gulfweed {Sargassnm Bacciferuvi) was entangled in the tow-net on the Sth of October, when we were 105 miles north-cast of Madeira, a circumstance which is of interest as regards the distribution of the plant, the locality cited being considerably beyond the northern limit of the great eddy between the Gulf Stream and the Atlantic equatorial current, commonly 8 Cruise of the ''AUrtr called the Sargasso Sea. It was encrusted with a delicate white Polyzoon {Meinbranipora), and among other organisms carried on its fronds a pretty little Spirorbis shell, and several entomostracous Crustaceans of a deep-blue colour. The phosphorescence of the sea is a trite subject, and one about which a very great deal has been written ; but nevertheless, of its actual cause, or of the purposes which it is intended to serve, really very little is positively known. The animals to which it would seem mainly due are the small stalk-eyed Crustacea, the Pyrocystis noctiliua, and the Tunicate Molluscs. I have sometimes observed, when occupied at night in sifting the contents of a tow-net, that these organisms, as they were being sucked through the nozzle of the dip-tube, emitted (lashes of light, so brilliant, that they could be distinctly seen even in a well-lighted room. During the voyage from England to Madeira, the wake of the ship was every night, with one exception, phosphorescent. The exception alluded to was on the night previous to our arrival at Madeira, when pro- bably tlie unusual brilliancy of the moonlight caused the light- emitting creatures to retreat a few yards from the surface, as happens in the day-time. I have often noticed that while the phosphorescence of the comparatively still water abeam of the ship and on her quarter usually seems to emanate from large spherical masses of about a foot in diameter (commonly called " globes of fire"), yet the luminosity of the broken water in the vessel's immediate wake comes apparently from innumerable minute points. I have rarely captured any of the larger jcllj-fishes in the tow-net ; and on those nights when I have observed the water lighted up the most brilliantly, the prevailing organisms have proved to be the small entomostracous Crustaceans. The morning of the 7th of October broke cool and hazy, as we steamed up and dropped anchor in Funchal Roads, on the south side of the island of Madeira. Crowds of native boats, with their half-naked occupants, quickly thronged around ; remaining, however, at a respectful distance, until the boat containing the Madeira. g haughty pratique officer came alongside. On the present occa- sion this portentous individual was contented with a very super- ficial inquiry into our sanitary condition, and after a few formal questions as to our tonnage, complement of crew, number of guns, and general condition, shoved off with the laconic exclamation, "All right!" We soon availed ourselves of this permission to visit the shore. The most conspicuous objects in Funchal, as seen from the anchorage, are the "Loo Rock" (used as a fort and lighthouse), on the west side of the town, and on the centre of the crescent-shaped beach which fronts the town a remarkable and lofty cylindrical tower of dark-brown stone. This tower, we were informed, was built about the year iSoo, and was intended as a support for a huge crane, which was to facilitate the loading and disembarkation of the cargo of merchant ships. The tower as it stands is about eighty feet in height, and as its base is now about forty yards distant from high-water mark on the beach, as an article of utility it is quite effete. Our surveyors have ascertained that the land has not been elevated since the first admiralty surveys. This they arrive at by a comparison of old and recent charts with known marks on the shore, and we are therefore inclined to believe that the beach has been silted up by accumulations ol basaltic rubble brought down by the two adjoining rivers, and here washed inshore by the sea. The tower is now without any appearance of the crane, and raises its plain cylindrical body in gloomy grandeur, reminding one of the old round towers of Ireland ; and, as in their case, its origin will probably some years hence be veiled in obscurity. Madeira was considered to be looking unusually dingy, on account of a long season of drought, rain not having fallen for nine months. But some two or three days after our arrival a great religious ceremony took place at the village of Machico, eight miles to the eastward of Funchal. The object was to offer up prajers for rain ; and, sure enough, two days afterwards, rain fell abundantly ! lO Cruise of the ''Alert:'' During our stay here the dredge was several times brought into requisition. On the Sth of October, a party, consisting of the captain, Lieut. Vereker, some seamen, and myself, started in the steam cutter on a dredging expedition to the bay of Santa Cruz, which is distant about eight miles from Funchal. As we steamed along the coast, we had excellent opportunities of observing the sections exhibited by the cliffs of the varieties of volcanic rock, of which the upper crust of the island is mainly formed. At Point Garajas (Brazen Head), of which Lieut. Vereker made a good sketch, the north-east face of the cliff presents a magnificent dyke — a nearly vertical scam of dark lava, about three feet in width and two hundred feet in height, extending from summit to water line, and sealing up this long fissure in the older trachytic rock of the head. Farther on, masses of basalt resting unconformably on variously arranged layers of laterite tuff and trachyte, the latter in many places honeycombed in weird fantastic caverns, afforded a fertile subject for geological reveries into the early history of this now beautiful island. On reaching the bay of Santa Cruz, we lowered the dredge in thirty-five fathoms, finding, as we had half anticipated, that it was altogether too heavy to ride on the mass of sand that here forms the sea bottom. It buried itself like an anchor, and it was not without great diffi- culty that we could succeed in dislodging it. On bringing it up, we found it to contain some shells of the genera Cardium, Pecten, Cypraa, Oliva, and Deutahum, a few small Echini, a Scrtularian Polyp, several Annelids — among others, a Nereis — and Alcyo- narians. We returned on board soon after dusk, having spent a most enjoyable, if not materially profitable, day. On subse- quently dredging in fifty fathoms in the same bay, our work was more satisfactory ; but besides some Crustaceans, an Ophio- coma, and an Asterias of a brilliant orange colour, obtained few specimens of any interest. On another day we tried the coast to the westward of Funchal ; and as we moved along in the steam cutter, obtained, by means of the tow-net, several specimens Dredging Operations at Funchal. 1 1 of gulfweed entangling small sponges. The dredge, being put over in seven fathoms, procured for us many specimens of a Cidaris, studded with black spines three to four inches long, and whose oblate spheroidal tests of about two inches diameter were of a beautiful smalt colour. Off the same coast, in forty fathoms, the bottom was found to consist of black basaltic sand crowded with tooth-shells. This fine black sand seemed to form, the sea-bottom along the south coast of the island as far out as the fifty fathom line, and from our experience docs not prove a favourable berth for our friends the Mollusca and Annulosa. Among the Crustaceans obtained in the above drcJgings was a species of Glaucotlide new to science, which has since been described by Mr. E. J. Miers, of the British Museum, under the title of " Glaucotlwe rostrata'.^ On the afternoon of the I2th of October, in company with Sir George Narcs, and under the guidance of Dr. Grabham, a British doctor for many years resident in Madeira, we had an opportunity of inspecting a " pinerj'," established within the last two years by a Mr. Holloway, and by which he expects to amass a considerable fortune. This establishment, which lies to the north-east of the town, at an altitude of about three hundred feet, consists of a series of long, low hothouses with sloping glass roofs, painted white, and facing to the southward, and is heated entirely by the sun's rays. The material in which the pines arc planted consists of the branches of the blackberry plant chopped to fragments, and spread out in a thick layer, and in this sub- stitute for mould the young pines are placed, at intervals of about eighteen inches apart. They grow to an enormous size, as we ourselves witnessed ; and being cut when they show the least sign of ripening, and packed carefully in well-ventilated boxes, are shipped to London, where they fetch prices varying from twenty-five to thirty shillings each. Dr. Grabham was kind enough to give us much interesting information concerning the natural history of the island, which, 12 Cruise of the '' Alert." from his long experience and constant observation, was most valuable. He pointed out to us a considerable tract of land in the vicinity of the town which used to be thickly planted with vines, but which is now only devoted to the cultivation of sweet potatoes. During the last seven jears the vine crops have been steadily decreasing, owing to the ravages of the Pliylloxera vastatrix, and wine-making is now at a low ebb. The number of trees in the island was also rapidly diminishing, owing to the demand for fuel ; and although efforts are made, by the cultivation of pine forests, to supply that want, the demand yet exceeds the supply. In a few years Madeira will no longer be, as its name implies, a land of ivood. Although so late in the season, numbers of flowers were still in full bloom ; the Bougain- villca with its dark red bracts, and the yellow jasmine adorning the trellis-work ; further up the hill the belladonna lily attracted attention, and on the heights were the old familiar furze blossoms, reminding us of the land we had left behind us. On October I2th we weighed anchor, and proceeded to the southward. All that night and the following day we steamed quietly along in smooth water, with a long, shallow ground swell (of which, however, the old craft took advantage to displa)- her extraordinary rolling powers), and late in the afternoon, just before dark, caught sight of Palmas, one of the Canary Islands, whose peak, 7,000 feet high, loomed conspicuously through a light bank of clouds. It was distant seventy miles. On the morning of the I5tli we experienced for the first time the influence of the north-east trade wind, which wafted us along pleasantly at the rate of about seven knots. Up to this the only sign of animal life had been a solitarj' storm petrel, but on the following day a shoal of flying fish {Exocctiis 'lOlltatis) appeared, to pay their respects and greet us en our approach to the tropical zone. During the night, the wind, which had hitherto only behaved tolerably, fell light; and as the morning of the 17th dawned, we found ourselves flapping about in alrr.cst a corrplete Ltfe at the Ocean Surface. 13 calm. There were several merchant vessels in sight, with one of which, a fine-looking full-rigged clipper ship, we communicated by signal, when the usual dumb interchange of civilities took place ; she informing us that she was the Baron Collinson, seven- teen days out from Liverpool, and we in return giving the latest news we were aware of, viz., the failure of the Glasgow Bank. During the afternoon, a shark, which seemed to be the Sqitalus glaitcus, hovered about our stern. It was accompanied by at least four "pilots" {Naucrates ductor), whose conspicuous dark- blue body stripes showed out in striking contrast to the sombre hues of the shark, whose body formed the background. It is during those tropical calms, usually so wearisome to the seaman, that the lover of natural history reaps his richest harvest. On the present occasion the tow-net brought up quantities of a minute conferva consisting of little bundles of delicate straw- coloured fibres, about one-eighth of an inch in length, and resem- bling, on a small scale, the familiar bundles of " faggots " as one sees them hawked in the streets. Under a high magnifying power the individual fibres composing these bundles were seen to consist of jointed segments marked with dots and transverse striae as a diatom. When placed in spirit, they at once broke up into a shapeless fluffy mass. The surface water was thickly impregnated with them, yet not so as to impart any obvious dis- colouration. About dusk the trade wind suddenly returned, and a heavy shower of rain brought to a close a day of great interest. On the I 8th of October, many of us fore and aft were diligently expending our ingenuity in fishing for bonitoes, of which several (apparently the Thinnus pelaniis) were to be seen about the ship ; but, to our great chagrin, only one, a small specimen, was captured. The tow-net still brought up quantities of the conferva before mentioned, and multitudes of minute unattached specimens of the Spirorhis nnininulites. On the following day, as we lay all but becalmed, the storm- petrels {jriialassidroma pelagicci) appeared in great numbers, settling 14 Cruise of the ''Alot." on the water close to our stern, in flocks of twelve or fourteen, and feeding greedily on the rubbish thrown overboard. It seems that the natural food of these birds (which probably consists of the minute surface organisms) is not within their reach when the surface of the water is unbroken, and hence during calms they are more than commonly anxious to avail themselves of any offal thrown overboard. It was most interesting to observe the neat and graceful way in which they plant their webbed feet on the water, as with outstretched wings and legs erect they maintain a stationary attitude while pecking at the object of their fancy. They appeared to scrupulously avoid wetting the tarsi, and still to use the feet as a means of maintaining a fixed position on the surface of the water. I had never previously observed those untiring little navi- gators at rest in mid-ocean, but on this occasion we all saw them, with wings closed, floating as placidly on the water as ducks in a millpond. The old idea of their following ships only before and during stormy weather is, I believe, now quite exploded. I think that within the tropics, at all events, they are most numerous in the vicinity of ships during calm weather. Finding animal life scarce at the surface, I tried the tow-net sunk to a depth of about three fathoms, and having previously raked the surface, was enabled to institute a comparison ; the result being that similar species were captured in both situations, but that a far greater number of individuals were present in the deeper water. During the day- time we obtained a number of Crustaceans, several Atlanta shells, Globigcriita bidloides, and the same con/a va as on the previous day. After dark I got a great quantity of highly phosphorescent Crustaceans, and one small cuttle-fish. On the 20lh the trade wind returned in full force, and the monotony of an otherwise uneventful day was varied by the appearance of a shoal of porpoises, which accompanied us for some time, moving along abreast of us and about two hundred jards off on our starboard beam, and making themselves con- spicuous by their usual frisk}- behaviour. Sf. Vincent, Cape de Verde. 15 On the afternoon of the 22nd the high land of San Antonio, the most northerly of the Cape de Verde Islands, hove in sight, far away on our starboard bow ; but the evening closing in thick and dark, and this group being almost without lighthouses, the captain decided on laying-to until next morning. When about twenty miles off, we received a visit from a good-sized hawk, evidently out on a foraging tour; he hovered for awhile about our mastheads, reconnoitring our decks, and then soared away. As we sailed along the east coast of San Antonio (the largest island of the Cape de Verde group), we observed a small outlying island rock, composed of closely packed vertical columnar masses of rock (probably basaltic), which, from their artificial appearance, reminded one forcibly of the Giant's Causeway, or of the Stafifa Columns. The hills of the main island, which sloped up majes- tically from a low rocky beach to peaks five or six thousand feet high, were clothed with herbage, whose varying tints of green, to which the shadows of the secondary peaks added dusky patches of brown, created a most pleasing landscape. We reached the harbour of Porto Santo, St. Vincent, on the afternoon of the 23rd of October, and soon after the anchor was dropped, those of us who could leave the ship proceeded to land. As we approached the beach, we were greatly struck by a con- trivance, new to most of us, for carrying coals from the yard where it is stowed to the shipping wharves, a distance of nearly a quarter of a mile, — a row of posts, like those used for telegraph wires, placed about four yards apart, and supporting on iron rollers a long endless wire, to which are hung at intervals large metal buckets containing the coal. There is an incline from the depot to the wharf, and consequently, as the full buckets travel down to the lower end of the circuit, and are canted so as to discharge their contents, the empty buckets pass up the incline back to the coalyard, and so a circuit is completed. Most of the large passenger steamers traversing the South Atlantic find St. Vincent a convenient place to stop at to replenish their 1 6 Cruise of the ''Akrtr blinkers, and it is to this coal trade that the island owes its importance. After a cursory inspection of the little town, which presented a very neat and orderly appearance, we strolled out into the country, following the direction of the western shore of the bay. The country exhibited a tolerably green appearance, and we were informed that vegetation had been exceptionally good during the previous two years, owing to the rainfall having been much above the average. Of trees of course there were none to be seen, and of siirubs only a few stunted representatives, scattered singly or in patches. A species of rank grass, however, flourished, and here and there a rather stately fungus raised its head as if in defiance of its otherwise sterile surroundings, the blown sand of the foreshore supplying sufficient nutriment for its humble wants. Of dead shells a great variety were picked up on the beach between tide marks, including representatives of the genera Area, Patella, Cardiiiiit, Hatfa, Littoriita, and Strovibns ; a very perfect Spirilla shell was also noticed. The blown-sand ridges above high-water mark were everywhere perforated by the burrows of a very active grey-coloured crab {Retniles sciitcllalits), whose feet terminated in sharp incurved claws admirably adapted for the creature's mining operations. Its burrows extended obliquely downwards, and to a depth of two feet from the surface of the blown-sand ridges. A couple of grasshoppers were tlie only other additions made on this occasion to our zoological collection. The afternoon of the next day (24th October) I was enabled to devote to dredging operations, working over the bay at depths varj'ing from two to twelve fathoms. From these I obtained some large and active specimens of a large wing-shell, the Strontbiis pitgilis, whose gymnastic performances, when subsequently placed in a vessel of sea water, excited general interest. Armed with his long powerful foot, he struck out boldly in all directions, the operculated extremity acting like a sword blade, and alarming me for the safety of the seaweeds and other more delicate Life on the Ocean Surface. 17 organisms which occupied tlic same vessel. Wlicn disposed to turn about, it protruded tlic foot so as to half encircle the shell, and by then rapidly straightening the organ the desired change of position was effected. It was very interesting to see the complete control which the animal thus exercised over its heavy and apparently unwieldy shell. In twelve fathoms of water we came upon a great quantity of blue-spined Echini, the tangles of the dredge in one short haul bringing up about two dozen. Fishing-lines were also brought into requisition, resulting in the capture of some fishes of a pale crimson colour, belonging to the bicnny family. In the evening of this day (24th October) we sailed from St. Vincent. Up to the 29th instant the north-east trade wind proved fairly propitious, but it now failed us completely ; and as we were at this time in latitude 8" N., and there were otherwise unmistakable indications of our having arrived at the "Doldrums " (the region of equatorial calms), steam was had recourse to. Under this artificial stimulus we proceeded at a rate of from five to six knots, a speed unfortunately too great for the use of the tow-net ; and on this occasion the circumstance was all the more vexatious, as the surface water seemed peculiarly rich in animal life. Ultimately, however, determining on sacrificing some bunting in the cause of science, I put a tow-net over the stern, and the captain aided me materially by towing from the end of the lower studding-sail boom a ten-foot trawl-net. Between tiie two we succeeded in capturing some water insects of the genus Ilalobatcs, several beautiful large lanthince, but unfortunately with their fragile shells partly broken and severed from their rafts ; also a Physalia, a small free-swimming Actinia, some discophorous Medusa;, and several Pteropod Molluscs of the genus Hyalea. For several consecutive days the surface water after dusk was thronged with the above-mentioned Medusae, whose tough gelatinous discs, of three inches diameter, continually clogged up the meshes of the tow-net. On the 2nd of November 2 i8 Crui:e 0/ lite ''Akrir we obtained some Globigcrina forms, several Crustaceans, some minute Pteropods of the genus Cuvicria, and a host of minute Confervs, of the kind met with previously to the northward ol Madeira. On the afternoon of the 5th of November, when we were about a hundred miles from St. Paul's Rocks, we noticed that the little petrels, which for weeks had accompanied us in great numbers, were now feebly represented, and in the evening were completely gone. Perhaps they had found out their pro.xi- mity to terra finiia, and were gone for a run on shore. It is very strange how these birds, which follow ships over the ocean for thousands of miles, can manage to time their journeys so as to reach land for their breeding season. That the same individuals do follow ships for such great distances we have good evidence ; for Captain King, in his voyage of the Adventure and Beagle, mentions a case in which the surgeon of a ship, coming home from Australia, having caught a Cape pigeon (^Dapteon capo/sis), which had been following the ship, tied a piece of ribbon to it as a mark, and then set it free. The bird, recognized in this waj-, was observed to follow them for a distance of no less than 5,000 miles. From the last date to the Qth of November, but little of interest occurred. One day a petrel {Thalassidroma pelagica) had been caught with a skein of thread ; and on opening the body the crop was found to contain a number of stony particles, bits of cinders, minute shells, and otolites of fishes. In the tow-net we caught a number of Rhizopods, of ^ inch diameter, which kept continually unfolding and shutting up their bodies in telescopic fashion. When quiescent, the animal is egg-shaped, and about the size of a mustard seed ; but when elongated, it is twice that length, and exhibits a tubular sort of proboscis armed with an irregular circle of vibrating cilia. We also obtained a Pteropod resembling the Criseis aciculata, an lanthina, and some hyaline amoibiform bodies, which were entirely bc)'ond my powers of recognition. On the following day we got more of the pretty Our Dredging Experiments. 19 violet shells {laiilhiiia fmgilis), several Crustaceans, including a large and perfect Glass-crab {Phyllosovid), and several large Salpa: and MedusjE. On the 1 2th of November we entered the north limit of our surveying ground, being in latitude 17° S., and in the vicinity of theAbrolhos Bank. Here, in latitude 17° 18' S., longitude 35° 34' W., we made a cast with Bailie's deep-sea sounding apparatus ; reaching bottom in 1,975 fathoms, and finding it to consist of " Globigerina mud," of a pasty tenacity, tinged with red, and containing a great mass of Globigerina tests, whole and frag- mentary. Later in the day, when in latitude 17° 32' S., longitude 35° 46' W., we again sounded, getting bottom in 700 fathoms, and bringing up a sort of light-grey ooze. Towards evening we struck soundings in thirty-five fathoms, over the Hotspur Bank. There we made a successful haul of the dredge, finding the bottom composed of dead coral encrusted with Nullipores, Polyzoa, and slimy Alg.x, and containing in its crevices some Crustaceans of the genera Acta;a and Corallana, and a few Annelids. The stony masses of coral which we brought up were pierced in all direc- tions by boring molluscs ; and one specimen of a long elaborately woven sponge (which has since been described by Mr. S. O. Ridley, of the British Museum, as a new variety of CladocJialina armigerd) was found attached to a lump of coral. The next day we sounded in latitude 1 8° 4' S., longitude 36° i' W., using the Lucas wire sounder. We reached bottom in 300 fathoms, the bulldog apparatus bringing up fragments of coral rock encrusted with calcareous Alga;. In the afternoon we passed into deeper water, sounding over the Globigerina ooze area, in 1,395 ind 2,025 fathoms. The surface water again exhibited the same conferva- like bodies wliich were so abun- dantly obtained near Madeira. The Pyrocystis noctiluca was also largely represented ; and in the evening the tow-net was found to contain small cuttle fish, some dead spirorbis shells, specimens of the Criseis ariculata, Cleodora p}ramidata, and of 20 Ciuise of the "Ahrt:' a species of Hylca, and a thick fleshy PteropoJ, a species of I'ncumodcrmon, small globe fishes, many long, transparent, stalk- cycd Crustaceans, and other minute members of the same class of Arthropoda. On the 14th of November we sounded in latitude I9°43' S., longitude 36° 5' W., the bottom consisting of a pale chocolate- coloured tenacious mud. Towards evening wc reached the position of the Montague Bank, which is indicated on the chart as a bank about three miles long, and in one part covered by only thirty- six fathoms of water. We sounded for this bank repeatedly, but in vain, nowhere getting bottom with 470 fathoms of line. The ship was now allowed to drift during the night-time, sound- ings being made from time to time ; and towards morning we filled our sails to a northerly breeze, and stood on for the Victoria Rank. In the afternoon we met with a large school of sperm whales {Physeter macrocephalus)^ displaying to advantage, as usual, their huge cylindrical snouts, and alternately their great spreading tails ; this circling exercise appearing to be a favourite amusement of theirs. On reaching the Victoria Bank, we hauled the dredge in thirty- nine fathoms, but dropping on a rugged coral bottom, the bag was torn to pieces ; however, the tangles contained numbers of an oval-shaped sponge, varying in length from a quarter of an inch to an inch, and studded with beautiful glassy spicules (determined by Mr. Ridley to be a new species of Chalina), and also numbers of the genera Vioa, Nardoa, Aphocera, and Grantia. Among Polyzoa, the genera Canda, Membranipora, Cribriilina, Gigantopora, Rhyncopora, Smittia, and CcUepora were represented. Our opera- tions in the Abrolhos region being now at an end, we shaped a course for Monte Video. On the 22nd of November, when we were a hundred miles from the Brazilian coast, and in about the latitude of Rio, great numbers of moths appeared, hovering about the ship, and settling on the rigging. The wind was at the time blowing freshly from the westward; but the moths appeared, strange to say, as if Vitality of ilie Sphinx JlJotli. 21 comintj up from the south-eastward. Conspizuous among them by their great numbers as well as by their formidable appear- ance, were the Sphinx moths. These large insects seemed gifted with marvellous powers of flight; for although the wind amounte 1 to a fresh breeze, I noticed that they were not only able to hold their own, but even to make headway against it. We concluded, however, .that nearer in shore the wind was much stronger, perhaps reaching us so as an upper current, and that it had consequently blown them off the land. Later in the day tlie Lepidoptera were represented in still greater variety, so that altogether the ship exhibited an unusually sportive appearance; men and officers alike striking out with their caps here and there, as they pursued the objects of their fancy. In the course of the day I collected no less than seventeen species, of which fourteen were motiis, and the remainder butterflies. As illustrating t!ie great tenacity of life of the Sphin.x moths, I may mention that, in the case of one refractory individual, it was only after cmplo)ing all the deadly resources at the time at my command, viz., prussic acid, ammonia, o.xalic acid, chloroform, crushing the thorax, etc., that I could succeed in removing all the ordinary manifestations of life. However, as, after long incarceration in a bottle filled with the fumes of chloroform, he at length appeared to have succumbed, I proceeded to remove the contents of his large fleshy body. This done, I filled in the body with cotton wadding, and placing the specimen on one side, proceeded to operate on another. But no sooner had I put down the specimen thus prepared, than it pro- ceeded to kick about in a most vigorous way, and otherwise gave unmistakable signs of vitality. On turning it on its legs, it crawled about, clung to my finger, and seemed to imply that it could get on just as well with a cotton interior as with the whole complicated apparatus of intestine and so forth, which it had given me so much trouble to remove. It was a strange cuincidcncc, that among the contents of the tow-net on this occasion was a large black Chr)salis. It also 2 2 Cruise o/ the "Alerts contained a great number of little phosphorescent spheres, which, under a high magnifj^ing power, proved to be similar to the bodies described by Sir \\'yville Thompson, under the term Pyrocyitis noctiluca. On the same day we entered the Albatross region, one large white bird {Dioiiicdea cx-iilans) and several sootics {Diomedea fuliginosa) soaring around our ship. Some land birds were also seen, one of which, a species of finch (?) was captured and preser\'ed. On the 24th of November we approached within eighty miles of the Brazilian coast, and on getting soundings in forty-eight fathoms, immediately put the dredge overboard. The hempen tangles con- tained starfishes of three or four species, and the bag brought up a mass of bluish tenacious mud, which, on sifting, was found to contain some Crustaceans and tube-building Annelids, and many small shells, living and dead, of the genera Dentalium, Hyalca, Area, and others. About the same time a turtle was observed floating on the water. On the forenoon of the 26th, land — the coast of Uruguay — was in view on our starboard beam, a long low line of beach, whose uniform outline was broken by a conspicuous tall lighthouse, which stamped the locality as Cape Santa Maria. A few hours later we obtained a view of Lobos Islands, a bare-looking uninviting mass of rock, situated just off RIaldonado Point ; and as wc now fairly entered the estuary of the Plate, a number of large gulls (apparently of the genus Dominicanus) joined us, eagerly picking up any offal cast overboard. We arrived at Monte Video on the 27th of November, and stayed until the 14th of December, during this time making several trips into the countiy. On one occasion I went by train to a place called Colon, about ten miles to the N.W. of Monte Video. Starting from the central station of the Northern Railway, I took my seat in a clean well-fitted carriage, with two other passengers, one of whom, my vis-d-vis, might have realized one's ideas of a Guj' Fawkes. In the IVe arrive at Jllojife Video. 23 course of the journey, tin's individual somewhat surprised me by diving his hand into a back coat pocket, and producing therefrom a formidable-looking silver-sheathed dagger, which, however, to my relief, he quietly laid down beside him on the seat, perhaps that he might th^; more conveniently stretch himself out ; possibly because he thought me a suspicious companion, and wished to show in time that he was not unprepared in case of an attack. About Colon the country was open enough, presenting to the eye a great bare tract of weedy-looking land varied by gently undulat- ing hills, and studded with oxen innumerable; the farm-houses, low structures disposed about half a mile apart, hardly breaking the monotony of the landscape. Here and there a gaily capari- soned Gaucho cantered about, apparently without any fi.xcd object, except to enjoy his liberty, and gave a picturesque character to the scene. These Gauchos are really fine-looking fellows, well mounted, and most excellent horsemen. They have about them a certain air of well-fed contentment, which, in spite of their known ferocity, almost elicits admiration. It is a popular error to apply the term " Gaucho " indiscriminately to all the horse-riding com- munity of the lower classes, for the term is properly only appli- cable to those homeless wandering horse-riders whose sole worldly possession consists of a horse and its trappings, who roam about from place to place, picking up whatever they can appropriate by fair means or foul, and who, consequently, do not enjoy a very high reputation among the settled inhabitants. The word "Gaucho" is looked upon as a term of reproach, and an honest, self-respecting I^easant so addressed would reply, "No, Sefior, no soy Gaucho, soy I'aysano." By a clever stroke of policy the present dictator of Uruguay, Seiior Letore, has almost succeeded in putting a stop to the infamous practice of "cattle lifting," formerl)' so common among the " Gauchos." Their equipment usuall)' includes a long strip of hide, ostensibly carried as a tether for the horse, but frequently turned to account as a lasso. A law has now been enacted, and is rigidly enforced, restricting the length of this rope 24 Cruise of the '■^AkrL^' to five "brazcros," i.e., five arm spans; and as it is in consequence much too short to answer the purpose of a lasso, these mounted tramps are no longer able to capture stray bullocks for the sole pleasure of gouging out the tongue as a dainty dish. Indeed, a gcnt'cman of Durazno, for many j-ears resident in the countr}-, informed me that it was now no uncommon thing to see a Gaucho carrying a hempen rope instead of a thong, the want of a lasso leaving him without the means of helping himself to a cowhide. About Colon the prevailing plants were a large thistle and a purple-flowered Echiiim, and these so predominated as at a distance to seem to cover the entire surface of the ground. A light fall of rain, and a puffy breeze, combined to make it a bad day for insect hunting, and accordingly very few of these creatures were seen or captured. Of birds, the cardinal grosbeak, partridges, and pigeons, were abundant. Some days subsequently we received, through the courtesy of the directors of the railway company, permission to travel free to the extremity of their line, and of this indulgence we availed ourselves so far as to make a trip to Durazno, the northern ter- minus of the railway. Accordingly, a party consisting of the captain and four of us ward-room officers started by a train leaving the cen- tral terminus at seven in the morning. This railway, which has been 'for eleven years in existence, and for a long time struggling against unfavourable circumstances (rebellion and so forth), is now gradu- ally assuming a prosperous condition, and has been extended so far that it now pierces the republic of Uruguay in a northern direction, to a distance of 128 miles from Monte Video. As we emerged from the precincts of the town, and passed through a hamlet called "Bclla-Vista," on the shores of the bay, we noticed here and there woods of the eucalyptus tree growing in great luxuri- ance to a height of eighty and even a hundred feet, the foliage of adjoining trees being so interlocked as to afford considerable patches of shelter from the sun's rays. Sir George Nares, who has had some experience of these trees in Australia, where they are indi- Railway Trip to Durazno. 25 genous, said that he had rarely seen them clad with so dense a foliage. We were told that these trees had been imported and planted only twelve years previously; yet such is their rapidity of growth, that they are now of the magnitude of forest trees. On reaching a distance of about twelve miles from Monte V'idco, the number of trees (none of which, except the willows, were indigenous) had so far decreased, that the few solitary representatives which dotted the landscape served only to render the paucity of the race the more remarkable. The surface configuration of the land was everywhere the same — a gently undulating grass-covered plain, where the depths from crest to hollow averaged about thirty feet, admitting a range of vision of about twelve miles from the summit of each rise. Of ravines, fissures, or gullies, there were none; and as the railway track had evaded the difficulties of le\elling bj- pursuing a most meandering course, not even a cutting was to be seen to afford means for arriving at a geological examination of the district. About the station of Indepcndencia, rock was to be seen for the first time, consisting of a coarse-grained (apparently felspathic) granite, showing itself through the alluvial soil in the shape of low rounded masses, or as boulders disseminated in streams directed radially from the outcropping source. At the next station, appropriately named "Las Piedras" (the stones), the rock was in greater proportion ; and during the remainder of our journey north, perhaps ortcc in every ten miles, the wide expanse of grass-land would be varied b\' an odd-looking outcrop of granite. Stone was evidently a rare commodity in these parts, most of the huts being built of sticks and mud. As far as Santa Lucia, a station about forty miles from Monte Video, the land (di\'idcd into fields by hedgerows of aloe.s) was studded thickly enough with large prickly thistles of a very coarse description ; but to the northward of this position the prominent features of the landscape underwent a change. Trees disappeared altogether, and e.vccpt along the river banks, where some bushes resembling bog-mj-rtle eked out an existence, no 26 Cruise of the "Alette blirubs were to be seen. Thistles were still present, but in very small numbers, and indeed there was little to meet the eye but a wide expanse of grass-land dotted here and there with herds of oxen, sheep, and horses (which seemed in very small pro- portion to the acreage^, and exhibiting, at distances of about two miles apart, small one-storied huts. For ploughing and other agricultural work, oxen seemed to be used, to the exclusion of horses ; which is all the more strange, as the latter here exist in great abundance, and are so cheap as to create that equestrian peasantry which to a European visitor is, I think, the most striking characteristic of the country. As one of the up-trains passed by us at the station of Joashim Suarez, we noticed several trucks piled up with ox skulls and other bones, and on enquiry ascertained that they were for exportation to England, to be used in sugar-refining factories: the bones were piled up so high on the trucks as to tower above the engine, so that as the train approached us end -on, they formed a ghastly sort of figure-head. At Santa Lucia the train stopped iialf an hour for refresh- ments, and all hands adjourned to an hotel close by the railway station, where a good breakfast, consisting of many courses (including beefsteak and potatoes), was satisfactorily disposed of. The charge for this repast was moderate, being only six reals= 3s. 6d. a head. Of birds a great many were to be seen as we travelled along. Looking forward from the carriage windows, we could see ground doves of a dull slate colour, rising from the track, and sheering off to either side in great flocks, as the train advanced. A species of lapwing, with bluish-grey plumage barrcil with white across the wings, and displaying a pair of long red legs, kept us continually ali\e to its presence by its harsh double cry. Partridges were also abundant. These birds are strictlj' preserved all over Uruguaj-, and during the breeding season, from September to March, no shooting of any kind is allowed without special Bird-life at Ditrazno. 27 permission. VVc saw one flock of ostriches stalking about unconcernedly among the cattle. We were subsequently told that the ostriches in this district were all allowed to run wild, the value of the feathers not repaying the cost of farming. Of deer, the largest indigenous mammal, we saw only one individual, browsing quietly among a herd of cattle. They are allowed to come or go as they please, not being sought after or utilizbd by the inhabitants. On arriving at Durazno we were most hospitably received and entertained by Mr. Ware, the engineer of the railway, under whose guidance we inspected the sights of this dilapidated country town, and then proceeded to explore the banks of the river Yi, a tributary of the Rio Negro, where a great variety of animal life was to be seen. There was here a large lagoon bordered with low bushes, a favourite haunt of the largest living rodent, the capj-bara or " carpincho," as the natives call it, and also largely stocked with birds. Snipe and dottrel were here so tame as to allow one to approach within a few yards of them. In the course of the day we had the good fortune to meet a RTr. Edye, an Englishman, who, during thirteen years' residence in the Plate, had acquired a considerable insight into the natural history of the country. He told us that a great variety of birds inhabit the low bushes of the " Monte " (as they call the shallow valley of the river), including three species of the cardinal, one humming bird, the calandria or South American nightingale, etc. With reference to the tucutuco {Ctenoviys), he assured us, contrary to the opinion expressed by Dr. Darwin, in his " Journal of a Naturalist," as to the animals never coming to the surface, that the little rodents were commonly to be seen near their holes about the time of dusk, and that they invariably retreated to the burrows on the near approach of a human being. He considered it almost impossible to catch them, but had no doubt about tlieir habit of coming to the surface. As we strolled along the ri\-er banks, we saw and 28 Cruise of the ''Alcrtr captured a black snake about two and a half feet long, which was swimming gracefully from bank to bank, with its head elevated about two inches from the top of the water. We also got some living specimens of a river mussel, which is here used as fish bait. Everywhere among the English-speaking community we heard the same gloomy accounts of the dulncss of trade, arising from the yet unsettled state of the country. All agreed that the present Dictator was managing the country admirably, but ex- pressed their fears that he would some day be " wiped out," as others had been before him, and that the country would again relapse into a state of anarchy and brigandage. Some days later I had an opportunity of visiting Buenos Ayres, the capital of the Argentine Republic, situated on the opposite or south shore of the river Plate. Accompanied by Lieut. Gunn, I started from Monte \'idco on the evening of the 9th of December, taking passage on board one of the river steamers {ViUa de Salto), then plying daily between the two cities. The distance, I20 miles, is usually traversed at night- time, and in this arrangement sight-seers lose nothing, as, owing to the lowness of the banks and the great width of the river, the opposite shores are barely visible from a position in mid-channel. Our fellow-passengers, about eighty in number, represented Spanish, Italian, and English nationalities, and among the latter we were fortunate enough to meet two gentlemen residing in the country, to whom, as well as to the captain, a jovial, hos- pitable American, wc were indebted for much interesting infor- mation concerning the men and manners of the country. After dinner — a long, ponderous affair — had been disposed of, a general dispersion took place, the gentlemen to smoke, and the ladies to their cabins ; but in an hour or so the latter again appeared in the saloon, arrayed in evening dress of a more gay and airy character than that worn at dinner, and they now applied them- selves diligently to the luxury of matd drinking. The fluid lie visit Buenos Ay res. 29 known as mate is an infusion of the leaves of the li^x Para- gitayensis, commonly called Paraguay tea, and is usually sucked through metal tubes about ten inches long, from a gracefully carved globular wooden receptacle about the size of an orange. One stock of " j-erba " seemed to stand a great many waterings and SLigarings, the necessary manipulations for which furnished the ladies with a suitable occupation. It was amusing to watch the eagerness with which the latter sucked away at their mate tubes, the attitude reminding one of a boy using a decoy whistle. We anchored off the town of Buenos Ayres at an early hour the next morning, and here the inefficiency of the landing arrange- ments were made unpleasantly manifest. Three different means of locomotion were resorted to, in order to convey us from the steamer to the shore. We were pulled in a small boat for a portion of the way ; then, as the boat grounded, the rowers got out, and, wading alongside, dragged it on for a few hundred yards more. We were then transferred, with our baggage, to a high- wheeled cart, drawn by two horses, which brought us through the last quarter of a mile of shallow water fringing the shore. The cost of effecting a landing was no inconsiderable item in the expense of our trip, and was moreover one calculated to preju- dice unfavourably one's first impression of Buenos Ayres. After securing rooms at the Hotel Universal, and breakfasting at the Strangers' Club, where we were most kindly received by the secretary, Mr. Wilson, we proceeded in search of the museum, so celebrated for its collection of fossil remains of the e.xtinct South American mammals, arranged under the direction of Dr. Burmeister. We found the learned Professor enveloped in white dust, and busily engaged in restoring with plaster of Paris the spinous process of the vertebra of one of his specimens ; and on explaining the object of our visit, he kindly drew our attention to the principal objects of interest in his collection. This museum has already been fully described, and I need hardly allude to the splendid specimens which it possesses of the Gl\-[)todon, Machai- 30 Cruise c/ the '■'Alert." rodon, Toxodon, Mylodon, and other fossils ; its beautiful speci- mens of the Chlamydophoriis retusiis (a mole-like armadillo), the leathery turtle {Sphargis coriaccd), the epiodon, etc. The Pro- fessor pointed with great pride to a recent specimen of armadillo, with the young one attached to its hind-quarters in a peculiar manner. On the same day we inspected the Anthropological Museum, which is in a large building in the Plaza Victoria, opposite the old market, where we saw a fine collection of Tehuelche and Araucanian skulls, recently made by Seflor Moreno in his travels through Patagonia. Among others was the skull of "Sam Slick," a son of the celebrated Casimiro, the Patagonian cacique, so well known for many )-ears in the vicmity of Magellan Straits. We also saw a mummified specimen of a Patagonian, recently found in a cave at Punta Walichii, near the head waters of the Santa Cruz river. In the course of the day we called upon Mr. Mulhall, the enterprising and courteous editor of the Buenos Ayrean Standard, and from him we acquired much valuable information as to the condition of the country. On taking up the Standard next morning, we found ourselves treated to an editorial notice chro- nicling our visit to the Argentine capital, and referring to the past and present services of H.M.S. Alert. Coming fresh from so neat and trim a town as Monte Video, Buenos Ayres was not to be expected to impress one very favourably. It seemed, indeed, to be a great straggling town that, having arrived at a certain degree of civilization, had now for some years back considered itself entitled to rest on its laurels, and gradually fall into decay. Streets, plazas, and tramways were in a wretched state of neglect; and such were the great ruts which time and traffic had made in the streets, that baggage-carts might be seen brought to a dead lock, even in the principal thoroughfares. Buenos Ayres can boast of several fine old public buildings, among which the cathedral, with its classic The '■'■ Slone-runs'''' of the Falklands. 31 front, s*^ands pre-eminent ; and although there are some fine pieces of modern architecture, such as the Bolsa, or Exchange, the latter are so stowed away among lofty houses in narrow streets, that they require to be sjDecially looked for to be noticed at all. I must qualify the above observations by mentioning that these are the impressions of only two days' sojourn in Buenos Ayres. Some days later, His Excellency the Governor of the Falkland Islands (Mr. Callaghan) and his wife arrived at Monte Video, en route for his seat of government ; and as the sailing schooner, which was the only regular means of communication between Monte Video and the Falklands, was then crowded with passengers, the Governor gladly accepted Sir George Nares's kind invitation to take him as his guest on board the Alert. We left Monte Video on the 1 4th of December, and on the 26th, amid a furious storm of wind and hail, anchored in Stanley Harbour, Falkland Islands. Here we found that the great topic of conversation was a landslip of peat, which had occurred about a month previous to our arrival, laying waste a portion of the little settlement. On the summit of a hill above the east end of the town, a circular patch of turf, about two hundred yards in diameter, had collapsed ; and at the same time a broad stream, four feet high, of semi-fluid peat, flowed down the hillside to the sea, in its course sweeping away walls and gardens, and partly burying the houses. This phenomenon, occurring at night, caused great consternation among the inhabitants of such an uneventful little place ; but after the people had shaken themselves together somewhat, and recovered from their surprise, they found that after all no great damage had been done. The appearance of the peat avalanche, as seen from the ship, was very peculiar, and in many respects the whole occurrence resembled a lava flow. On the evening of our arrival, we were most hospitably enter- tained at Government House, where we had also the pleasure of meeting all the rank and fashion of this part of the colony. o- Cruise of the ''Alert:'' The next day, being fine, I determined to devote to .an inspec- tion of the " stone runs," wliich have been rendered so famous in the geology of the Falklands by the writings of Darwin, Wj-ville Thompson, and others. In this excursion I was fortu- nate in having the assistance of Dr. Watts, the colonial surgeon, a gentleman who, from his long experience of the group, was well acquainted with all the salient points in its natural history. The "run" which we visited lay in the hollow of a winding valley, situated about two miles to the westward of the settlement of Stanley. The rocks, heaped together confusedly, formed a so-called "stone river," varying in width from fifty to two hundred yards, and extending up the valley as a single "stream" for about one mile and a half, to a point where it seemed as if originated by a confluence of tributary streams flowing from the surrounding hills. The stones, composed of quartzite, presented a roughly rounded appearance, which was seemingly due to excessive weathering ; and they were so covered with lichens, as to appear of a uniform grey colour. Those which lay below the surface were of a rust colour, and, by all accounts, the upturned stones required an exposure of many years to assume the uniform grey tint of the surface layer. The margin of the "run" was distinctly defined by an abrupt edge of swampy soil, with its tangled vegetation of diddle-dee, tea-plant, and balsam' bog. Now, why are the stones of the " run " so entirely destitute of soil .' and why do they exhibit a margin so sharp and well defined, yet without the elevated, rounded appearance of a river bank .' Sir Wyville Thompson's theory, it seems to me, falls short of explain- ing this. I have- as yet seen too little of the country to justify me in forming a fixed opinion ; but I am, so far, inclined to think that these " streams of stones " are of a date anterior to the existence of peat on the island, and that the peat has been approaching the valleys from the elevated land by growth and slippage, and in its descent has encountered difficulty in obtaining a footing in those places where the stones are large, and being Growth of the Peat. 33 heaped to a great depth, act like a gigantic drain, and so prevent any soil from forming. As far as I can ascertain, no attempt has ever been made to estimate the rate of movement (if any) of these " runs," and there is no evidence whatever of their motion during the present century. There is not sufficient land com- prised by the watershed to form torrents capable of removing the dense mass of peaty soil, which, according to Sir W. Thompson's theory, would have been necessary for the transportation of the large blocks of stone that are here accumulated. The inhabitants remark, and I think with truth, that the summits of the hills and the upper slopes are as a rule more wet and boggy than the hollows below. This supports my view of the drainage being greatest in the valleys where the big stones were originally packed to a greater depth, and towards which the peat is now encroach- ing. It is worthy of remark that the surface of the stream is tolerably flat, and docs not indicate a process of accumulation by flow from either side. To Dr. Watt.s, my guide on this occasion, I was' also indebted for a skin of the Falkland Island fox, an animal now almost extinct, a skull of the sea elephant, and a dried specimen of the petrel, which is known here as the "fire bird," from its habit of dashing itself against the lantern of the lighthouse, at whose base dead specimens are occasionally found. CHArTER 11. EXPERIENCES IN PATAGONIA. WE left the Falkland Islands on the evening of the 27th, and sailed to the westward. On the morning of the ist of January, 1 879, we entered the eastern entrance of the Straits of Magellan, passing within easy sight of Cape Virgins and Dungeness Point. As we approached the latter, we noticed a herd of guanacoes browsing quietly near the beach, as if a passing ship were an object familiar to their eyes. This, our first impression of the famous Straits, was certainly favourable. A winding channel, the glassy smoothness of whose surface was only broken by the splashing of cormorants, steamer ducks, and other sea-birds, stretched away to the westward. On the north side were the low undulating plains of Patagonia, covered with their summer mantle of greenish-yellow vegetation ; while to the southward a few widely separated wreaths of blue smoke, ascending from the gloomy shores of Tierra del Fucgo, marked out the dwelling-place of one of the most remarkable varieties of the human species. Favoured by the tide, we passed rapidly through the first Narrows, and at 6.30 in the evening had got as far as Cape Gregory. Here the flood-tide setting strongly to the westward, fairly brought us to a standstill, so we steamed in towards the north shore, and anchored close under Cape Gregory. A party of us who were bent on exploring soon landed, and pro- ceeded in various directions in quest of game, antl in the few remaining hours of daylight we succeeded in getting several Sandy Poi7it and Port Famine. 35 ducks, some small birds, and a young fox. The ground was for the most part covered with a sort of rank grass, through wliich bushes of the Berberry, Evipctrinn ritbnnn, and Myrtus nuiiitnn- laria, grew luxuriantly. A very pretty dwarf calceolaria was also abundant. The only quadru[)cd seen was a fox, but the tucutucos {Ctenoinys) must have been very numerous, for the ground was riddled in all directions by their burrows. Some of our party, who strolled along the beach towards Gregory Bay, found a small settlement of Frenchmen, who, it seemed, had recently come out here to try their hands at farming. After our arrival on board, one of the men brought me a specimen of a Llyxine, which had come up on his fishing line, not attached to the Iiook, but adhering by its viscid secretion to the line at some distance above the hook. Of this curious fish I subsequently obtained many specimens in the western Patagonian channels. We got under way again before daylight, and about eight in the morning we arrived at Sandy Point. This interesting little Chilian settlement was established in the year 1843, and although a great portion of it was burnt to the ground during the mutiny of 1877, it yet shows signs of ultimately becoming a place of considerable importance. Great credit is due to the Chilian Government for their perseverance in maintaining a settlement in this wild region, notwithstanding the sad fate of the colony which was established by Sarmiento in 1580, at a bay to the westward of Sandy Point, which he named " Bahia de la Gentc." On Sarmiento's return, eight years subsequently, it was discovered that nearly all the colonists had perished of starvation. That bay has since been called Port Famine. Of late years the Straits of Magellan have been largely availed of by men-of-war and merchant steamers. Two lines of mail steamers, viz., the P. S. N. C. and the Kosmos line, now run bi-monthly through the Straits ; and as all these vessels touch regularly at Sandy Point, the colonists are kept in frequent communication with the rest of the civilized world. For some j'cars after 36 Cruise 0/ the ''A/ert." its foundation the population consisted mainly of convicts, under- going penal servitude, who were kept in control by a small garrison ; but since the mutiny of November 1877, the importation of convicts has ceased, and as a consequence labour has become scarce. At the time of our visit there were 1,100 inhabitants, including the garrison, which now consists of 120 men, rank and file, all of whom are armed with the Winchester repeating rifle. The country possesses at least two great sources of mineral wealth, viz., gold and coal. When the coal mines were first established, sanguine ideas were entertained of their success- ful working. But commercial difficulties arose. The company who were working the mines became involved in a lawsuit, which, whatever may have been the rights of the case, has at all events put a stop to mining operations ; and at the time of our visit the railway leading to the mine seemed to be going to decay ; and the rolling stock, in a disjointed state, scattered about the whan" and line, testified to the stagnant condition of affairs. I was here fortunate in finding a friend in the Government (Chilian) surgeon of the settlement — Dr. Fenton — with whose assistance and guidance I made some pleasant trips into the country adjoining Sandy Point. On our first day there he kindly provided horses, and took me for a ride into the forest, to the end of the settlement. There I saw for the first time the evergreen and deciduous beeches, the winter's bark as well as the berberry, diddle-dee, and other plants, of which we saw a great deal subsequently, during our Patagonian surveys. As we crossed a flat dreary plain which lay between the margin of the forest and the sea coast, we encountered a great number of very bold hawks, which alighted on the big thistles near our bridle path, and coolly stared at us as wc went by. We also saw flocks of Bandurria, a species of black and white ibis, which is common in these parts, but being sought after by the Incidetits at Sandy PouiL 37 Chilians as an article of food, has naturally become distrustful of the wajs of man, and is difficult to approach. On returning to the settlement, we found some excitement prevailing, for two of tiic inhabitants had just been drowned by the capsizing of a boat near the landing-place. With southerly winds, heavy rollers break along the beach ; and as there is no protection in the shape of a breakwater (for boats), communication with the shore is dangerous while these winds continue. It appeared that a party of five were returning from a hulk in the roadstead, where an auction was being held, and on nearing the shore the boat got broadside on to the rollers, and capsized. Two were drowned. The other three narrowly escaped a similar fate, and owed their preservation to the gallant conduct of two of our bluejackets, who, happening to be on shore near the scene of the disaster, plunged boldly in at the risk of their lives, and brought the survivors to land. On the following day two of us rode along the shore to the southward of the town for a distance of about six miles, when we struck into the woods, following a cart track which led us to a sawmill in the heart of the forest, belonging to Mr. Dunsmuir, the British Vice-consul. Here we shot a small owl, speci- mens of the Magellan thrush, and a diminutive bird of a general black colour, with a rusty-red collar, the Centrites niger. The beach was in places covered with dense clusters of mussels, and strewh with the dead shells of Volutes, Areas, and Patellas, the tests of crabs, and the calcareous remains of a small Cidaris. We were greatly struck with the sagacity of our little horses — requiring little or no management, going for the most part at an easy canter, and climbing over logs, trunks of fallen trees, and banks, with the agility of goats. On our dismounting, and leaving the bridles trailing on the ground, they remained quite patiently, without showing the least inclination to make off, although we several times discharged our guns close to their heads. We left Sandy Toint on the aflcrnoon of the 4th, and pro- 38 Cruise 0/ the "Alert:'' cneded under steam to Pcckctt Harbour, an anchorage about twenty-five miles to the north-east of the colony. Arriving about four p.m., all of us who could, landed, and set off in pursuit of game. Even here, so little to the eastward of Sandy Point, the aspect of the country was completely dilTerent. The land was entirely devoid of trees, and the only plants of any size were tne barberry and balsam bog, the latter growing as lu.\uriantly as at the Falklands. Walking was laborious, for the ground was every- where riddled with the burrows of the tucutuco, a curious rodent {Cteiioinys), which the Chilians call caroitru. There was a fresh breeze blowing, and the birds were consequently very wild, and by no means numerous. We obtained specimens of the crested duck {Anas cristata), upland goose [Chlocphaga Diagetlanicd), grebe, plover, soldier starling, snipe, sandpiper, and Cciitrites niger. The tucutucos here evidently differ in their habits from those described by Mr. Darwin, for they come out of their burrows occasionally (I believe at dusk), and one was caught by Lieut. Vcreker, and given to me. The next day we were again under way, and having taken on board some horses belonging to Mr. Dunsmuir, the British Vice- consul of Sandy Point, proceeded towards Elizabeth Island, a few miles off. This island has recently been rented from the Chilian Government by Mr. Dunsmuir, and proves of value for stock farming. Tucutucos have not yet succeeded in reaching it, a matter of no small importance as regards the value of the land, for their mining operations are almost ruinous to the pasturage. The island is about si.x miles long and four miles broad, and consists of an elevated plateau of undulating grass land, termi- nating at its margin in cliffs three hundred feet high, which front the sea. Mr. Dunsmuir has stocked it with four hundred sheep, who are left usually in charge of a shepherd and his family ; and he has also, for commercial purposes, adopted measures for the protection of the upland geese, \\hich breed in large numbers on the island. The object of our visit was to bring over fur him Elizabeth Island. 39 some horses, which were required for the working of the island. As we steamed round its eastern end, myriads of terns rose in a cloud from the low sandy pits, where they had their breeding place. After getting out the horses, and letting them swim on shore, we dropped our anchor, and soon afterwards many of us landed to explore. It was the breeding time of the upland geese, and the birds were consequently very tame, and afforded little sport in shooting. Along the beach below the cliffs a variety of birds were to be seen, including oyster-catchers, steamer-ducks, and a species of Cinclodes. As I walked by the foot of the cliffs, a steamer-duck would occasionally rush out from its retreat, and make for the water, cackling vigorously as it waddled over the shingle. As these birds steamed out seaward, they seemed un- doubtedly to flap their wings in unison ; but there was a sort of wabble in their swimming motion, arising probably from the alternate paddling of the feet. On the heights above, I shot several militarj' starlings, and otliers of our party obtained some brown ducks {Anas cristaid) and snipe. The cliff was apparently breaking away in many places, exposing fresh sections of its face, and exliibiting pebbles, rounded stones, and rocks imbedded in the clayey mass, a feature which is characteristic of this part of the coast Lines of stratification, of varying degrees of fineness, were to be seen ; and in several places, at about fiftj' feet from the summit of the cliff, streams of water oozed out from the seams. I could detect no trace of a fossil. Along the beach lay many dead shells of the genera Voluta, Area, Patella, Mytilus, and Trophon. During this walk I noticed about six different species of butterflies and a few beetles. The dredge had been laid out from the ship on anchoring, so that it might profit by the swinging of the ship ; and when we hauled it up in tlie evening, it contained a quantity of dead barnacles covered with ophiurids, and also shells of the genera Trochus and Trophon, Amphipod Crustaceans, Annelids, and 40 Crime of the ''Alerts some red, jcUj -like Gcphyreans. These were all entangled in a mass of red seaweed, interlaced with stalks of the Macrocystis. Early next morning (January 7th) we steamed back to Sandy Point. As we approached the anchorage, we noticed dense clouds of smoke rising from the woods some distance inland, and it soon transpired that the forest in the vicinity of the Consul's sawmills was on fire. In the afternoon I rode out with Dr. Kenton to the scene, and \vc found the troops of the garrison employed in felling trees, so as to make a sort of lane through the woods to leeward of the fire, in order, if possible, to limit its ravages. Dr. Fcnton afterwards came on board, and gave us an interesting account of the mutiny of 1877, in which he and his wife narrowly escaped being shot. His house, like most others, was burnt down on that occasion. Si.xt}- of the peaceable inha- bitants were shot by the mutineers, and nine of the latter were subsequently executed. Those of the population who escaped had fled to the woods, and there fortified themselves against an attack. Eventually the mutiny was quelled by the arrival of the Chilian gunboat AlagcUancs, at whose approach the mutineers fled away into the pampas. At two o'clock in the afternoon of the following day we weighed anchor and proceeded to the westward. We had scarcely l(.ft Sandy Point a few miles behind us, when the character of the scenery underwent a marked change. The straits narrowed, its shores rose in lofty hills, whose lightly inclined slopes were clothed with forest from the summits to the water's edge, and we e.xchanged the clear blue sky of Patagonia for an atmosphere of mists and rain squalls. As we passed by Port Famine, two Fuegian canoes pulled off to us from the southern shores, the natives hailing us vociferously (or " galleta iabac" (biscuit and tobacco). However, we could not spare time to interview them, and they turned back disappointed, and moreover evidencing signs of indignation. When abreast of Borja Bay, we experienced such a succession of heavy squalls from the westward, that we A Lonely Burial Place. 41 were compelled to put in for shelter, and accordingly anchored. On landing, we found the trees placarded in various places with wooden records of ships that had called there ; and on pushing our way through the bushes adjoining the beach, we were not a little surprised at stumbling across a coffin, which from its position seemed to have been hurriedly deposited there by a passing ship. It bore an inscription stating that it contained the remains of some person who had belonged to the Chilian man-of-war Almirante Cochrane. Animal life was at a dis- count ; only a few moths, a Cinclodes, a brace of duck, and a few gulls being seen. The vegetation was lu.xuriant, and the Philesia, berberry, and diddle-dee plants were in full bloom. We stopped for only a few hours ; for on the wind lulling we again proceeded on our course. Passing through the " Long Reach," the scenery became of a most imposing character ; several straggling, highly inclined glaciers creeping down on either side through the deep mountain gorges, their dazzling whiteness con- trasting strikingly with the richly verdured hillsides, and the lofty snow-covered mountain summits beyond fading away imper- ceptibly into a hazy sky. Later in the evening we anchored in Playa Parda Cove, a beautiful little land-locked basin, and most of us landed at once, to spend the last few remaining hours of daylight. A solitary steamer-duck was seen, but for the rest animal life was unrepresented. As at Borja Bay, several little billets of wood, attached conspicuously to trees bordering the shore, recorded the visits of previous explorers to these out- landish regions. On the morning of the lolh we left Playa Parda, and steamed northward through the Sarmicnto Channels. In the afternoon, as we were passing by Fortune Bay, we sighted and exchanged signals with the Chilian man-of-war Cliacabiico, a vessel which was now employed in surveying certain portions of the Strait.s. Our halting-place for this evening was at Isthmus Bay, where we anchored about six p.m. At the head of this bay, where a 42 Cruise of the "A/ertr narrow neck of lowland separated us from the waters of Oracion Sound, was the remains of a Fuegian encampment, which, to judge from the appearance of the shell heaps, could not have been left for more than a year uninhabited. Across the isthmus was a " portage " for boats, consisting of rudely-cut stakes laid on the ground parallel to each other, and a few yards apart, like railway sleepers. The aspect of the green forest encircling this charming little bay was variegated with a luxuriant display of really beautiful flowers, among which were conspicuous the Philcsia liixifolia. Fuchsia mageUanica, Gatil- theria antarctica, Berberis ilicifolia, and a number of composites of different species. A kind of cedar, the Liboccdriis tetragonus (" cipres " of the Chilotes), was here also very abundant, furnishing good straight poles suitable for various purposes. Its four-sided arrangement of leaves at once attracts attention. We got under way early in the morning, and proceeded up the Sarmicnto Channels, passing by the Chilian ship Chacabtico in the midst of a rain squall. No natives were to be seen. The channel here narrowed, and the scenery of the opposing shores became of a grand yet rather sombre character, the round-topped granite mountains which seemed to overhang us, with their streaky patches of forest creeping up the gullies, being enveloped in a hazy mist, and presenting a sort of draggled appearance, as if rain had been falling over their rocky faces for ages. About five in the evening we entered IMayne Harbour, a few cormorants and steamer-ducks sheering off with much splashing, as we slipped between the islets that almost block up the entrance. So we continued to wend our way through these desolate channels, looking into nearly every anchorage on the way, and usually anchoring for the night, until the 1 4th of January, when we reached " Tom Bay," which was to be our base of operations for the ensuing survey of the Trinidad Channel. Some hours after we had anchored, a native boat suddenly emerged from a narrow channel opening into the bay, and paddled towards the Our First II fee ting with the Fuegia7is. 43 ship, displaying a green branch in the bows of the boat, while one individual standing up waved a small white cloth, no doubt intended as a flag of truce. Our people on board made amicable demonstrations in response, by waving handkerchiefs and so forth, and then slowly and warily the natives approached. This was our first experience of representatives of the Channel tribe of Fuegians. There were altogether eight of them. But I must not omit to mention the dogs, five in number, as the latter formed by far the most respectable portion of the community ; for it would indeed be difficult to imagine a more diabolical cast of countenance than that presented by these savages. Their clothing consisted of a squarish scrap of sealskin looped round the neck, sometimes hanging over the back, sometimes resting on the shoulders, but apparently worn more by way of ornament than for any protection v.'hich it afforded ; and a very narrow waist- cloth, which simple garment was sometimes deemed superfluous. An elderly lady of a saturnine cast of countenance sat on a wisp of grass in the stern of the canoe, and manoeuvred the steering oar. They could not be induced to come on board the ship, and from their guarded demeanour would seem to have had rather unfavourable experiences of civilized man. After bartering their bits of seal and other skins, and getting some biscuit, tobacco, and knives, they paddled away, and established them- selves on an islet about half a mile from the ship, where we saw that the skeleton frameworks of some old huts were standing. On the following day a small party, consisting of North (the paymaster), three seamen, and myself, pulled over to the native camp. We were received on landing by four men with bludgeons in their hands, who did not seem at all glad to see us, and who seemed apprehensive of our approaching the hut, where the women had been jealously shut up. However, by a few presents of tobacco and biscuit, we established tolerably amicable relations, and were permitted to examine the canoe, which lay hauled half out of the water. It was composed of five planks, of which 44 Cruise of the '^ Alert." one, about twenty feet long and two and a half feet wide, formed the bottom, while the other four, each one and a half foot in width, formed the sides. The bottom plank was turned up at the ends, so as to form a flat bow and stern of nearly similar shape ; and to this plank, as well as to each other, the side pieces were secured by a lacing passed through rude square- shaped holes about an inch in area, which were made in an even row close to the edges of the planks. The lacing used for this purpose is the tough stem of a bignoniaceous creeper (the Campsiditm cliileiise), which is commonly seen twining round the tall forest trees, forming festoons from branch to branch, and again extending from the horizontal branches vertically downwards like the cordage of a ship. Caulking was effected by stuffing the seams with moss and strips of the winter's bark (bark of the Driuiys winteri), over \\hich the lacing was carried ; and the square-shaped holes were plugged with some pulpy vegetable matter, of which moss seemed to be the chief con- stituent. The oars were made of young stems of the Libocedrus ietragonus, to one end of which elliptical pieces of wood were lashed by way of blades. These oars were used in the ordinary way, the loom resting on crescentic-shaped crutches, fashioned out of a single piece of wood, and lashed to the gunwale. The everlasting Fuegian fire, from which Ticrra del Fuego derives its name, burned in the middle of the boat, resting on a bed of clay ; and the half-decomposed head of a seal, which either the natives or the dogs had recently been gnawing, completed the furniture of this crazy vessel. The hut in u hich the women were shut up was a haycock-shaped arrangement, composed of a skeleton framework of boughs, over which were thrown several old skins of the r.ea-lion {Otaria jubata). The chief of this party, who was, by the waj', the tallest Fuegian ever seen by us, we found by measurement to be five feet four inches in height. One hut accoinmodated the entire party, consisting, as I have said, of four men, four women, and five dogs. Climate of Patagonian Channels. 4 5 The greater part of the subsequent four months was spent in the vicinity of the Trinidnd Channel, which it was our special duty to survey ; and as our movements during this period were most erratic, and we frequently paid five or six different visits to the same parts, I shall for a time abandon all chronological order, and speak of events according to the places in which they occurred. But in the first place, in order to render my narrative more intelligible, I shall here give a brief general description of this region, referring to its climate, natural features, and inhabitants. The weather is peculiar, for the rainfall is excessive, and as a rule there is not more than one moderately dry day out of the seven. The peaks and ridges of the broken-up range of mountains, of which the i'^lands and coast are formed, intercept the moisture- laden clouds which are being continually wafted from seaward by the prevailing westerly winds, frequent and long-continued down- pours being the result. From observations taken with the rain gauge, we estimate the average daily rain^ill to be 0*4 1 inch, and that of the wettest month of which wc have had experience, viz., the month of April, o'5 22 inch. The annual rainfall, esti- mated from the mean of eight months' observations, we find to be I49'65 inches. The mean annual temperature, estimated simi- larly from observations extending over the months of January, February, March, April, May, (nine days of) October, November, and December, we found to be 49"2, the extremes of temperature being 36° and 60°. When wc reflect that the annual rainfall in London is about 23'S inches, while the yearly average of tem- perature is 469 Fahr., we can realize the extent to which rainy weather prevails in this land, and the comparative coldness of its nevertheless equable climate. We were told by the master of a sealing schooner that the climate of Western Fuegia varied but little throughout the )'ear, and that in his opinion the finest weather was to be found in mid-winter ; and, indeed, on entering the 46 Cruise of tht ''Alert:'' channels in the month of October — that is, in the caily spring — we ourselves found the appearance of the country- but little different from our recollections of the previous midsummer. There was, perhaps, more snow on the hill-tops, but there was none at all on the lower slopes of the hills, and the evergreen vegetation seemed almost as luxuriant as during midsummer. As might be expected from the large rainfall and comparatively equable temperature, this climate is very favourable to the growth of cryptogamous plants ; ferns, mosses, and Hepaticae abound, clothing the stems of dead and living trees, and occupying every shady nook and crevice. Among the ferns most commonly seen were several beautiful species of the genus Hymenophyllum. Of flowering plants there \\ere also some of great beauty, the most attractive of which were the Philesia buixfolia, the Desfontainea Hookeri, the Berberis ilicifolia, the B. empetrifolia, and the Embo- thrium coccineum. The former is a sort of under-shrub, of creeping habit, and is most commonly seen twining round the stem of the evergreen and antarctic beeches, to a height of si.x or eight feet from the ground, its lovely, rose-coloured, bell-shaped flowers showing to great advantage against the delicate background of ferns and mosses, which, growing from the bark of the tree, display the flowers, but almost conceal the branches of the twining Philesia. There is another beautiful plant, of the same natural order, met with in Southern Chili, which the people take great pride in, showing to stringers as the glory of their gardens. It is called the " Copigue" {Lapageria rosed). The only trees which attain to any reasonable size as such are the evergreen and antarctic beeches {Fagns aiitantica and /". bctuloidcs)^ the winter's bark {Driinys 'wiirUri), and the cj-pres [Liboccdrus tctragonus). The bark of the Driinys wi/itcri was formerly employed in medicine, but has latterly fallen into disuse, partly from the difficulty of obtaining the genuine article in Europe. It has tonic and stimulant properties. The infusion of the dried bark is so hot and peppery as to burn the tongue and throat ; but. Trees — Rock Formation. 47 strangely enough, the spirit tincture extracts the tonic bitter with but very little of the peppery principle. The summits of the low hills, which are usually bare of trees or brushwood, are covered with a sort of swamp formed of astelias, gaimardeas, and calthas, whose interlacing roots form a more or less compact sod, which, as one walks on it, shakes from the fluctuation of the bog water beneath. The rock of the district is a cross-grained syenite, intersected with dykes of greenstone, of very variable thickness. This is the prevalent rock ; but about Port Rosario, on the north side of " IVIadre dc Dios" island, there is an outcrop of limestone. The latter is of a pale-blue colour, in some cases assuming the character of marble ; and when much exposed to the weather, presents a curious honey-cornbcd appearance, due to the solvent action of the rain. This rock is unfossiliferous. The disintegration of the syenite from the usual atmospheric agencies is rapid enough ; but the resulting detritus does not contribute to form a good clay. If an artificial section be made of the soilcap, or if advantage be taken of a landslip to examine it carefully, it will be seen to be composed of a dense network of interlacing roots, containing in its interstices a small quantity of black mould, the latter increasing in proportion as the basement rock is reached. This spongy mass of tangled vegetation, ever saturated with moisture, is the soil on which the trees clothing the hillsides take root. On the little plateaus about the hill-tops, however, it only con- tains the roots of the marsh plants above mentioned, and those of an odd stunted bush. On first coming to this region, I was much struck on seeing that the forest approaches so close to the water's edge, and that the banks overhang so much that fre- quently the branches of the trees dip into the salt water ; and in some places a black snag projecting above the surface of the inshore water tells the fate of a tree that had perished from immersion. These phenomena, among others to be hereafter •I 8 Criiise of the ''Alert." alluded to, are, I tliink, to be attributed to a slow but steady sliding motion of the soilcap over its rocky foundation on the sloping hillsides, a motion which is in many respects analogous to the flow of a glacier. Of the natives inhabiting the Patagonian channels between the Gulf of Penas and Smyth's channels, very little is known ; and I am the more inclined to attempt a description of their physical characteristics and habits of life, because of all the savage tribes of whom I have had experience — including the Australian abo- rigines, who are generally credited with being of the lowest order — I believe that the people whom I am about to describe bear away the palm as the most primitive among all the varieties of the human species. They are certainly closely related to the Fuegians who live south of the main Straits of Magellan, from whom, however, they differ sufficiently to show a tribal distinction. Fitzroy, in enumerating six tribes of Fuegians, denominates those of whom I speak as " the Channel or Chonos tribe." They lead a wandering life, constantly shifting in their canoes from place to place, and travelling in families of about twelve individuals, all of whom stow in the same canoe, and sleep in the same hut. We have never been able to ascertain the precise relationship existing between the different members of these families ; but a party of twelve would probably consist of three men, five women, and four children. For the greater part of the year they live almost entirely on mussels and limpets, this simple fare being only varied occasion- ally by the capture of a seal, a small otter, or of an equally small coypu. That they get this kind of fresh meat but rarely is evident from our inspection of their midden heaps, hillocks of refuse in the vicinity of the huts, consisting mainly of shells. I must not omit to mention, however, that bones of the steamer- duck and cormorant are also found about the huts, but not in any quantity. During the months of December and January, the Magellan seals "haul up" to breed on the rocks of the outer Descriptio7i of Channel Fuegians. 49 coasts, and during this season there is a great gathering of natives about the " rookeries," as the scalers call them, so that for a short portion of the year these unfortunate wretches can luxuriate upon a diet of fresh meat. They are of low stature, the men averaging 5 ft. i in. in height, while the women are still shorter. Of eight men whom I measured carefully, the extremes were 4 ft. 10 in. and 5 ft. 3 in.; so that there is a strong contrast between them and their neighbours in the same latitude, the Patagonians, whose average stature (I speak of the men only) is 5 ft. 10 in. Their complexion is of an ochrey copper colour ; the eyes are dark, and placed close together ; the upper c\clid curving downwards abruptly as it approaches the nasal side, or inner canthus, in such a way as to give an appearance of obliquity in the eye, which reminds one of that feature in the face of a Japanese. The sclcrotics, or so-called " white" of the eye, have a yellow tinge, and in the adults the conjunctiva is injected or bloodshot, probably from their habit of sitting over a smoky wood fire. The upper lip is thin and curved; and when a grimace is made, it tightly embraces the teeth, so as to communicate, a peculiarly wicked expression to the countenance. The maxilla; are broad, and the teeth arc of glistening whiteness. In the female the front teeth present an even regular line ; but in the male adult there is usually a front tooth missing, as if knocked out designedly. The hair is long, black, and coarse, and is peculiar in growing sometimes from the temples, as well as from the scalp, a circumstance from which the forehead acquires a narrow pyramidal appearance. There are no whiskers, but on the lips and chin a ^Ue Byron's narrative of the loss of the Wager, Burney's Voyages). During the surveying cruise of H.M.S. i^assmi, in 1866-9, a diligent search was made for such burial places, but without success ; but, on the other hand, no signs were observed of any other method of disposing of the dead, either by fire, as in the case of .some of the southern tribes, or by covering the bodies with branches of trees, as described by Fitzroy. However, during our late survey of the Trinidad Channel, we found a small cave containing portions of two skeletons in a limestone islet, near Port Rosario, on the north side of Mad re de Dios Island ; anr! this would seem to have been used as a burial-place, at some very remote period. The remains have been deposited in the British Museum. It has been stated by the late Admiral Fitzro}-, on the autho- rity of Mr. Low, a sealing captain, that during times of great .scarcity of food, these savages do not scruple to resort to canni- balism, and that for this purpose tl ey select as victims the old women of the party, killing them by .squeezing their throats, while holding their heads over the smoke of a green wood fire. Mr. Low's evidence on this point is so circumstantial, being derived from a native interpreter who served on board his ship Treachery of Savages— Dialects. ^5 for fourteen months, that it can hardly be doubted. On this subject I can only add that we noticed a singularly small pro- portion of old people, whether male or female, among the parties of natives with whom we met. This circumstance may support Mr. Low's opinion, or it may be the natural consequence of the short span, of life which is allotted to these wretched people. Regarding the treachery of these savages, there can be no doubt. Their faces alone indicate it, but unfortunately further evidence is not wanting. We recently met with a small sealing schooner, the Annita, of Sandy Point, the master of which — a Frenchman, named Lamire — gave us a detailed account of an attack made upon his vessel about two years ago, when he was "sealing" at the north end of Picton Channel. He lay at anchor one night in fancied security, when he was surprised by a large party of natives who came alongside in seven canoes. A dreadful struggle ensued, in which his crew defended themselves with their guns against the axes, spears, sticks, and stones, of their savage assailants. The natives were eventually driven off, but not before five of the sealers had lost their lives. The sealers are now well aware of the anxiety of the natives to gain possession of their vessels, and consequently put no trust in their overtures of friendship. A white man is feared only so long as his party is known to be the strongest. Fitzroy has described six tribes of Fuegians who speak differ- ent dialects, and also differ somewhat in their habits. These are (i) the Vacanas, or inhabitants of the north portion of King Charles's South Land ; (2) the Tekeenicas, who live in south- eastern Fuegia ; (3) the Alikhoolips, who inhabit the South- Western Islands ; (4) the Pecherays, a small tribe of savages who hover about the middle and western part of the Straits of Magellan; (5) the lluemuls, so called from the Chilian name of a deer which has been found about Skyring Water and Obstruction Sound, the head-quarters of this tribe ; and (6y tho Fucc^ians who inhabit the shores and islands ol western I'ata- 56 Ouise of the "Alcrir gonia, between the parallels of 47" and 52°, and whom Fitzroy denominates the Chonos or Channel Fuegians. In Fitzroy's account of the Fuegians, he naturally selected as his type the people with whom he was best acquainted, viz., the Tekcenicas, who inhabit the shores of the Beagle Channel. These people build conical wigwams, which arc made of large poles leaning to from a circular base, with their upper ends meeting in a point. Their canoes arc built of bark, and are small and skiff- shaped. They also use bows and arrows, and stone slings, and in this respect are considerably in advance of the Channel Fuegians. In their methods of disposing of the dead, the Fucgian tribes differ somewhat strangely. Fitzroy tells us that among the Tekeenicas, Alikhoolips, and I'echerays, the bodies of the dead arc carried a long way into the interior of the forest, where they are placed upon broken timber, and then covered up with branches. On this subject some information has recently been obtained from the missionaries, who have now for some years maintained a settlement at a place called Ushuwia, in the Beagle Channel. We heard, on the authority of these gentlemen, that a form of cremation is now commonly practised among the Tekeenicas, and that charred human bones may often be found among the embers of the funeral pyre. The Fuegians of the Western Channels, as I have mentioned already, deposit their dead in caves. To continue with Tom Bay. The month of January is here the breeding season with most of the water birds. About the middle of the month the steamer-ducks {Tachycrcs cincrciis) and ihc kelp geese {Bcnticla antatxticd) were paddling about with their )oung ones ; and the oyster-catchers {Hccinatopus Icncopus, and atcr), with their young broods, occupied the small low rocky islets, where they made themselves conspicuous by their shrill piping cry. We remarked that the kelp geese, which, as a rule, ne\er wet their feet, except with the damp seaweed of the fore-shore, Our Bird Visitors at Tom Bay. 57 take to the water as soon as the young are hatched, being pro- bably induced to do so in order the better to protect their goslings from the hawks and rats. The male and female adult birds differ remarkably in plumage ; that of the female being almost black, with a few white dots and dashes, whereas the feathers of the male are perfectly white. Tiie sombre colour of the female is probably intended as a protection during the hatching time, when she remains almost continuously on the eggs, while the gander does sentry in some conspicuous position adjacent. Whenever at this time of the year a solitary gander is seen standing on a projecting point or headland, it may safely be inferred that his faithful consort is on her nest somewhere within sixty yards. Even under these circumstances it is by no means an easy matter to find the nest ; for the black plumage of the female assimilates with the dark wind-blown seaweed and rank grass in which her nest is made, and she lies so close that she will not stir until almost walked on. While the birds are immature {i.e., less than one year old) the sexes are scarcely distinguishable, the plumage of both male and female being an almost equal mixture of white and black colours. The ashy-headed brent goose {Chloephaga poliocephald), remark- able for the splendid chestnut colour of its breast, is the only other goose met with in these western channels. The common Magellan and Falkland Islands goose {C. Magcllanica) docs not, as a rule, extend its range to the damp western regions. About the islets adjacent to the Tom Bay anchorage were great numbers of abandoned huts, and at some the size of the shell mounds and the compactness of the bottom layers indicated considerable antiquity. These mounds are principally composed of mussel and limpet shells, the latter predominating ; and among the interstices were great numbers of insects and worms. There was one very old grass-covered mound near our anchorage, of which we made a thorough examination by digging cross- section trenches. Besides the usual shells, there were a few seal 58 Cruise of llu 'Alert r bones and sterna of birds, and at a depth of four feet from the surface we found a partly disintegrated bone spear-head, which was difierent in shape from any which we saw among the natives cither before or subsequently. Instead of being rounded, 'it was flattened from side to side, like a very large arrow-head. In most of the other shell heaps which we examined, bones of the nutria {Myopotamns coypii) and of the otter {Liitra felind) were observed. To the westward of our anchorage (/>., in the large island of Madre de Dios) was a long narrow inlet, partly overhung with trees, which communicated by a shallow bar with a brackish lagoon of about thirty acres in extent. At low water there was only about three feet of water on the bar, and we could then see that the bottom was covered with huge white sessile barnacles (the "picos" of the Chilians), growing closely together. During the ebb and flood tides the current ran fiercely over this bar, so as to render it an exceedingly difficult matter to pull through the channel when the tide was adverse. This lagoon was a fa\ourite haunt of the Magellan sea otter {Lutra felina), which is abundant in all these waters, but is very dilTicult to kill without the aid of dogs. Its "runs" are generally strewn with the shells of a large spiny crab (the Lithodes antarctica), which appears to form its principal food. I have seen an otter rise to the surface with one of these hideous crabs in its mouth, as unpalatable a morsel, one would think — for it is armed all over with strong spines — as a " knuckleduster." In the Alert, the great feat of sportsmanship was to shoot and bag an otter ; for if the animal be not struck in the head, and killed outright at the first shot, it is almost certain to make a long dive, crawl up the beach in the shade of the overhanging bushes, and escape. When exploring in a small boat the winding shores of this lagoon, we one day came upon a little sequestered cove, where there was a luxuriant growth of Dcsfontainca bushes, and on landing on the shingly beach we saw, by the way in which the larger stones had been moved aside, that the place had been used by the natives A Native ''Portage.'' 59 for hauling up their canoes. On walking through the long rank grass, which encroached on the beach, we tripped over some logs which seemed to have been arranged artificially, and we then discovered that we were at the extremity of a " portage," intended for conveying boats ovciland. On tracing it up, we found a sort of causeway leading into the forest ; and after following it for about three hundred yards, we ascertained that we had crossed a narrow isthmus, of whose existence we were previously unaware, and had reached the shore of an arm of the sea (probably Delgado Bay), which communicates with the Trinidad Channel not many miles to the eastward of Port Henry. It was evident that by means of this "portage" the natives were able to proceed from Concepcion Channel, via Tom Bay, towards the outer coasts, without undertaking the much longer and more hazardous journej- through the main channels round Point Brazo. The logs forming the "portage" were partly imbedded in the ground, and were arranged parallel to each other, like the sleepers of a railway, and at a distance of about two feet apart. There was, however, no appearance of the natives having recently visited the place. We had reason to believe that these " portages" were of frequent occurrence, and were largely used by the natives, and that it was owing to the facilities thus afforded them for crossing isthmuses and the necks of promontories that they were enabled to surprise sailing vessels at anchor, approaching them unobserved from the landlocked side of bays and inlets at a time when the attention of the sailors on "look-out" was naturally only directed towards the entrance of the harbour which had previously seemed to them to be untenanted. The " portages" are so concealed by a lu.xuriant growth of grass and brushwood that they readily escape observation. The brackish lagoons, which are fed continuously by fresh- water streams, and receive an influ.x of sea water while the flood tide is making, are a peculiar feature of this Patagonian archi- pelago, and we usually found that the outlets were excellent places for catching fish. Our fishing parties were in the habit of placing 6o Cruise of the '' Alert r a " trammel" net across the outlet while the tide was ebbing, and in this way entrapped great quantities of mullet and mackerel ; sometimes upwards of eighty, ranging in weight from two to eleven pounds per fisli, being taken at one haul. I collected some green flocculent matter from the surface of one of these lagoons, and found it to consist almost entirely of diatoms. One fine day in April we noticed a great concourse of gulls and shags, attracted by a shoal of fish, in the pursuit of which they ventured unusually close to the ship. This gave us an opportunity of observing that the common brown gull of the channels, the female of L. Doinbiicaiins, behaves towards the male bird in many respects like a skua. No sooner would one of the " black-backed " (male) birds capture a fish, and rise from the surface, than he would be attacked by one of the brown birds, and chased vigorously about the harbour ; the predatory bird not desisting from the pursuit until the coveted prize had been dropped by its rightful owner. This I noticed on more occasions than one. As a rule, however, the female was content to fish for herself. Several Dominican gulls in immature plumage were seen amongst the crowd, and were easily distinguished from the adults by the mottled brown plumage, and by the colour of the mandibles being green instead of orange, as in the males, and black as in the females. Now and then the whole flock of gulls and shags would rise on the wing, as they lost the run of the shoal of fish. Tlicy would then be directed to the new position of the shoal by the success of some straggling bird, when a general rush would be made to the new hunting ground. It was most amusing to witness the widely dilTcrcnt fishing powers of the shags and gulls, and the consequently unequal competition in the struggle for food. The shag in flight, on observing a fish beneath him, at once checks himself by presenting the concave side of his wings to the direction in which he has been moving, and then, flapping legs foremost into tlic water, turns and dives ; whereas the gull has Habits of Gulls and S/ngs — '' Sleamer-diuks.'' 6i first to settle liimsclf carefully as he alights on the water, and has then to tru.it to the chance of some unsopliisticatcd fish coming within reach of his bill. It was impossible to avoid noticing the mortified appearance of the poor gulls as they looked eagcrlj' about, but yet caught only an odd fish, whilst their comrades, the shags, were enjoying abundant sport. It is odd that the silly gull manages at all to survive in the struggle for exis.tence. Here is another instance of his incapacitj'. A piece of meat, weighing a few ounces, drifted astern of the ship one day, and for its possession a struggle took place between a dominican gull and a brown hawk. The gull had picked up the meat, and was fl>ing away with it in his bill, when he was pursued by the hawk — a much smaller bird — who made him drop it. Again the gull picked it up, and for a second time was compelled by the hawk to relinquish it. The latter now swooped down upon the tempting morsel, as it floated on the water, and seizing it with his claws, flew off rapidly into an adjoining thicket, to the edge of which lie was followed by the disappointed gull. Steamer- ducks {Tachycrcs cincrcHs) are very abundant at Tom Bay, as indeed they are throughout all the western channels. Their English name, " steamer-duck," has reference to their habit of moving rapidly along the surface of the water by means of a paddling motion of the wings, and leaving a wake of foam which resembles, on a small scale, that of a paddle-steamer. A great deal has been written about these remarkable birds, and I shall not therefore attempt any general description, which at the best would only involve useless repetition. There are a few remarks about them, however, which I should like to make. Although aware of the careful investigations made by Dr. Cunningham in I S66-9, and his conclusion as to their being but one species, I have yet some reason to believe that the fliers and the non- flying birds which I have seen belong to two distinct species, and my impression is — though I am by .no means sure — that C2 C)ui e of I he '' Alert r the volant species frequents tlie fresh waters in the interior of Patagonia, and in the western channels is only represented by an odd straggler. Mr. Co.v, of Talcahuano, who has travelled in Araucania and central Patagonia, mentions in his narrative, that in the fresh-water lakes of the latter district there are two different species of steamer-ducks, one of which possesses the power of flight. Immature specimens, although differing in the colour of the bill, and somewhat in plumage, from the adult birds, need not be confounded with a second species. The largest steamer-duck which I have come across weighed only 14 lbs., and although text books assign a much greater weight as the extreme limit, I think I am right in saj-ing that few heavier birds are met with either in the Straits of Magellan or in the western channels. The female forms a low, oval-shaped nest of twigs, lined with a thick coating of down, and deposits therein si.\ large cream-coloured eggs, 3f in. long, by 2 J in width. The nest is usually placed on the ground, at the foot of an old tree, some few yards from the beach, but in a place where the bush is almost impenetrable to a human being. Land shells must be exceedingly scarce. I met with repre- sentatives of only four species, of which one, a specimen of Helix, I found on the frond of a HymenophylluDi at Tom Bay. Two others of the same genus were taken from the rotten trunk of a tree in the same locality. At Port Henry, in the Trinidad Channel, and other parts in the neighbourhood, I collected several specimens of a species of Siicsinca, which clings to dead leaves and decayed pieces of driftwood l}ing on the shore just above liigh-water mark. These four species of shells have since been described by Mr. Edgar Smith, of the British Museum, as new to science. In a fresh-water lake, where I made some casts of a light dredge, I obtained from the bottom of .«tinking mud several examples of a large i'uio shell, and some small shells of the genus Cliilinia. I afterwards found species of Unto in a stream issuing from the lake. North of the English Narrows, FnJi-ivatcy Fish. 63 many pond snails of the yenus Chllinia were also found abun- dantly in the stream beds. I have found only two species of fresh-water fish, Haplochilon zebra, and a small Galaxias ; and they inhabit most of the upland lakes which are of any considerable extent. The former is a smooth-skinned fish, with the general shape and fin arrangement of a grayling, but with a dark scaleless skin. It averages lialf a pound in weight, ranging up to three-quarters ; and although it rose like a trout, we could not succeed in making it take the artificial fly, but caught it readily with worm-bait. These fish were also met with in mountain lakes far removed from the sea, whither their ova were probably, in the first instance, conveyed by cormorants. On one occasion Sir George Nares caught a specimen of this fish in a brackish lagoon, which com- municated with the sea at high tide, so that it may have been derived from a marine progenitor which possessed the power of adapting itself to a fresh-water existence. In the course of our survey of Concepcion Strait, we stopped for six days, in the month of March, at Portland Bay, an anchor- age on the east side of the strait, and nearly opposite to Tom Bay. On the forenoon of our third day, a party of natives pulled in from the westward, with their canoe well- provisioned with shell-fish, as if they were about making a long voyage. There were three men, four women, three children, and four dogs. They were provided with a good iron axe, bone-pointed spears, a boat-rope made of plaited rushes, and other rude implements. It was evident that this party had previously met with some friendly vessel, for they readily came on board, and poked about the ship. Two of us went on a visit to their camp on the following day, but were received very ungraciously by a villainous-looking old hag armed with a club, who depre- cated any attempt at landing on our part. We could only examine the canoe, which we fouiul to be twcntv-twu feet long, four feet in beam amidships, and in other respects of the usual 64 Cruise 0/ the "A/crtr construction. On the next day we pulled over again, but only to find the hut deserted, and the party gone. We inferred, from various circumstances connected with their disappearance, that they must have penetrated up the Bay to the eastward, wJiere there are unexplored channels which are supposed to extend towards the base of the Cordillera. On the next day (March 24), a strong westerly breeze, witli occasional rain-squalls, induced most of us to remain on board, and we were not a little surprised when, about 10 a.m., a boat under sail was reported standing across the Strait towards our anchorage. On nearer approach it turned out to be a native canoe, with a large sealskin hoisted in the forepart of the boat, so as to form a sort of square sail. As the natives came a4ong- side to beg for biscuit and tobacco, we found that the wretched - looking boat contained three men, five women, eleven children (mostly very young), and five dogs. Thcj- had shipped a good deal of water on the passage, as might be expected, and all the wretched creatures looked as wet as fishes ; indeed, to say that they were wet to the skin would be simply a truism in the case of the Fuegians. W'e had not previously noticed so prolific a family, the proportion of children being usually one for each woman. I use the word " family," because each of these canoe parties appears to constitute a sort of complicated family. One young mother did not appear to be more than sixteen years of age. I now inclined to the opinion, which subsequent expe- rience gave me no reason to alter, that the Channel Fuegians are a migratory tribe, passing the summer months about the outer islands, where at that time of the year they maj' get seals, and the eggs and young of .sea-birds, and in the autumn migrating up some of the fiords of the mainland, when the deer, driven down the hills by the winter snows, would be within their reach. There is no doubt that deer (probably the Ccrvns c/tileiisis) have been seen from time to time on this coast. A few j-ears ago the officers of one of the German steamers of the " Kosmos " Native Canoes under Sail. 65 line, stopping at Puerto Bueno about mid-winter, captured three or four in the immediate vicinity of the anchorage. We our- selves never met with any, although we saw doubtful indications of their presence ; but further south we obtained portions ol a deer from a native canoe. I was led to form the above- mentioned idea from comparing the great number of deserted wigwams which we encountered in our wanderings about these channels, with the small number of natives actually seen. The huts alluded to, moreover, bore indications of having been in use not many months previously, when they were probably inhabited temporarily by parties of natives on their way to the outer coasts. Fitzroy would seem to have entertained the same belief with reference to tribes about Smyth's Channel, from the fact that a party of men from his ship, when survey- ing Obstruction Sound in the summer-time, discovered a large deserted encampment containing many huts and canoes, and showing signs of its being the site of a great periodical gathering of the clans. FUEGIANS OFFERING THEIR CHILDREN FOR BA RTER (A 74). I CHAPTER III. EXPLOIT A TIOXS AV THE TRIXIDAD CIIAXXEL. N prosecuting the survey of the Trinidad Channel, we anchored, for short periods each time, at a great many ports on its northern and southern shores ; and in crossing and re-crossing the channel we ran lines of soundings which enabled us to ascertain roughly the general conformation of its bed. Across the seaward entrance of the channel, i.e., from Cape Gamboa on the north to Port Henry on the south, the soundings gave a mean depth of thirty fathoms, showing the existence of a sort of bar, while one mile inside of this the depth increased to two and three hundred fathoms. This was just as we expected ; the bar across the entrance representing the terminal moraine of the huge glacier which originally gouged out the channel, and whose denuding action is abundantly recorded in the scorings, planings, and stria- tions so palpable on all the hard rocks of these inhospitable shores. At Port Henry, on the southern side of the entrance to the channel, we anchored several times. The scenery here is very grand. A clay-slate rock enters largely into the formation of the hills, its highly inclined strata forming jagged peaks and ridges of great height ; while the low-lying rock about the coast is a friable sjenite traversed with dikes of greenstone. Imme- diately to the south of our anchorage was a lofty ridge of clay-slate hills, terminating above in a multitude of vertical columns of rock, which from our position on board reminded us of a cluster of organ pipes, and suggested the name which Fuegians at Port Henry. 67 now appears on the chart, of the " Organ-pipe Range." The aspect of the vegetation is also different from that of other ports in these waters, owing to the abundance of a veronica ( V. decussatd), which forms large glossy-green bushes, covered with a profusion of snow-white flowers, and so varies the other- wise monotonously green appearance of the beech forest. Only one party of natives was here seen. They at first approached us very stealthily, paddling between the small islands off the eastern entrance of the harbour, and after the usual interchange of signals (waving of green boughs and caps), they came alongside. The boat was similar in construction and size to those already examined at Tom Bay and elsewhere ; but we were now greatly struck at perceiving what a load it could accommodate ; for there were in it sixteen natives and six dogs, besides provisions, weapons, and camp furniture. The party consisted of three men, five women, and eight children ; and although they pulled only three oars (the women never taking part in this work), yet they managed to get along at a fair pace. On their arrival they were partially clad in seal skins ; but in their eagerness to barter with our seamen, for knives, tobacco, and such treasures, they soon divested themselves of all artificial garb, and appeared in a state of nature. It was noticed that the males, who conducted the barter, compelled the women to give up their scanty covering. In the way of provisions, the boat contained a supply of large trumpet shells {Concliolepas) in rush baskets, and the drinking water was carried in little bark buckets. They encamped near us for the night, but disappeared unaccountably the next day. On our exploring the islets just mentioned, we found a large deserted encampment, in which we counted the remains of nine native huts. The refuse-heaps contained a good many seal and whale bones, besides echinoderms, limpet and trumpet shells, the latter shell here taking the place of the mussel. The trumpet shell {Concltolepas) is found about the entrance of the 68 Cruise of the " Alert r Trinidad Channel, inhabiting rocky places immediately below low water mark on the weather (i.e, the west) side of islets which are exposed to the heavy wash of the outer ocean. I have not seen the shell south of this latitude. The brown duck (Anas cristata) was here tolerably abundant, and with the ashy-headed Brent goose, and the two species of oj-ster-catcher, were in great request with our sportsmen, being the only edible birds worth mentioning in the western channels. From Port Henry we shifted our base of operations to Wolsey Sound, the next inlet to the eastward. Here we anchored in an apparently well sheltered cove, surrounded by lofty hills, but which we soon found to our cost to be a sort of aerial maelstrom. A strong westerly gale was blowing over the hilltops, as we could see by the fast-flying clouds ; while below at the anchorage we experienced a succession of fierce squalls (williwaws) from various quarters, with intervals of complete calm ; so that the ship kept swinging to and fro, and circling round her anchors in a most erratic manner. Eventually one of the cables parted ; but with the other, aided by steam, we managed to ride out the gale, and to thoroughly satisfy ourselves that Wolsey Sound was not one of the anchorages to be recommended to passing vessels. From the translation given in " Burney's Voyages," (vol. ii., p. lo), of the journal of Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa, who discovered the Trinidad Channel in the year 1580, it would appear that this is the same anchorage which his sailors named " Cache Diablo " (devil's box-on-the-ear), from the boister- ous nature of the reception which they experienced. On the east side of Wolsey Sound the rock of the mountain masses is for the most part a hard grey unfossiliferous limestone, irregularly stratified, but sometimes showing a dip of 10° or 15° to the westward. The most striking peculiarity of this rock consists in its solubility under the influence of both fresh and salt water, and it is this property that so often causes it to present a jagged honey-combed appearance. I noticed that in Native Burial-place. 69 many places fresh water streams, running over bare patches of this rock, had eaten away narrow gutter channels, and that in other places where a broad sheet of water flowed slowly — as from a turf bank — over a long gently-sloping table of rock, an incrustation of hard calcareous matter had been deposited, presenting a sort of " ripple-marked " appearance, and reminding one of the effect produced when a film of slowly-moving water is submitted to the influence of intense cold. When viewed from a distance, the limestone hills presented a whitish bleached appearance, which contrasted strangely with the sombre hues of the other greenstone and syenite hills. Of this description was " Silvertop," a lofty and conspicuous mountain on the south side of the Trinidad Channel, which was frequently used by our surveyors as a landmark. The next port to the eastward is Rosario Bay. It was named by Sarmiento " Puerto de Nuestra Senora Del Rosario." The rock formation here is limestone, and of the kind above men- tioned, but the effects of frequent rain in washing away the more soluble parts of the rock were not only manifested by the honeycombed appearance of exposed surfaces, but also by the prevalence of caves of most irregular shape. Soon after we had anchored, Sub-lieutenant Bercsford and I, who had gone away in the skiff, were paddling around an islet with lofty and precipitous sides, when we noticed in the face of a bare rocky cliff a suspicious-looking dark opening, partly blocked up with stones, and situated about thirty feet above the sea level. We ran the boat alongside the rocks, and Beresford kept her from bumping while I climbed up the cliff to recon- noitre. On clearing away a heap of stones and rubbish, I laid bare a sort of niche in the rock, in which were portions of a human skeleton, the long bones lying together in a compact bundle, as if they had been so placed there when in the dried state. Not many yards from this crevice we soon discovered a small cave in the rock, and partly imbedded in the soil 70 Cniise of the '' Alert r which formed its floor were a human jaw-bone and fragments of smaller bones. On excavating the floor of the cave we found it to consist of a stiff pasty greyish-white marlclay, abounding in small shells, amongst which were species of the genera Patella, Fissurclla, Chiton, and Calyptma. On reaching a depth of about one foot, we came upon a nearly complete human skull of immature age, an otter skull with bones of the same, and the tooth of an Echinus. The human bones obtained were part of the skeletons of two individuals, one of whom must have been young, for the epithyses of the long bones were aot quite cemented to the shafts. I noticed that the skull presented a completely ossified frontal suture, although, from the nature of the teeth and alveoli, the person to whom it belonged could not have lived for more than twelve years or thereabouts. A tibia found in the first depot bore marks of having been chopped by some sharp cutting instrument. From the fact of these bones being found interbcdded with marine deposits, coupled with what we Icnow of these islands having been elevated within recent times — I here refer to the evidence afforded by raised beaches and old highwater marks in the faces of cliffs — there is reason to believe that these bones were deposited in the cave at a time when it was under water, that they thus became surrounded by and imbedded in an ordinary marine shallow water deposit, and that eventually, on the island being elevated so as to raise the cave to its present position — thirty feet above sea level — the surface deposit was reinforced by the percolation of lime-charged water from the rock above, thus resulting in the formation of the marlclay surface-layer above mentioned. We made different attempts at dredging, but as the bottom was everywhere very rocky and the dredge in consequence con- tinually getting foul, we were not successful in obtaining many objects of interest. However, among them there were specimens of a hydroid stony coral representing two species of the genus Dredging in (he Trinidad Chan7iel. 71 Labiopora — one of which Mr. Stuart Ridley of the British Museum has ascertained to be a species new to science — and a fine orange- coloured Astrophyton of a new species, recently described by Mr. F. J. Bell as A. Lyinaiii. On the north side of the Trinidad Channel we stopped for a time at an anchorage near Cape Gamboa, which forms the north headland of the entrance. At Cape Gamboa the rock is a clay- slate showing distinct stratification, containing concretions of a whitish sandstone, and dipping to the N. E. at an angle of about 45°. To the eastward of Cape Gamboa is a limestone similar to that of the south shore. We did some dredging here on a smooth sandy bottom, the principal results of which were specimens of the Chiincera [Callorhynchus aitstralis), and some curious Isopod Crustaceans of the genus Scrolls. Another day (March 28th) when sounding across the entrance of the Channel, we made a heave of the trawl in thirty fathoms with most fruitful results, obtaining a magnificent specimen of the orange-coloured Astro- phyton {A. Lymani), several small rays and flat fish, large Actinia, a new Crustacean of the genus Arctnnis, starfishes, and a Cephalopod Mollusc of the genus Rossia. On the evening of this day we were fortunate enough to witness a most beautiful sunset effect. As the sun disappeared from a western olive-tinted sky it seemed to be followed in its descent by several horizontal bands of delicate rose-tinted stratus clouds, which extended themselves in parallel lines over an arc of 45 , and finally tapered away into the most delicate threads of silvery light. In the east the dark purple-tinted clouds melted upwards into the grey gloom of approaching night, and foreshadowed to us the advent of another day of sunshine in this the only really fine and summer month in these western channels. At the head of Francisco Bay — which was the name subse- quently given to this anchorage — at the outlet of a small river, we one day made a very large " take " of fish in a somewhat singular manner. A trammel net had been placed across the mouth of the 72 Cruise of the ''Alert." stream at high tide, and on the tide falling had been examined and found to contain a fair number of fish (mackerel). Some hours later two of our people were wading up the river, and on coming to a depression in its bed, which was at about the limit to which the tidal salt-water reached, they found an immense collection of half-dead and living mackerel in a pool, in which — the tide being then rather low — the water was almost entirely fresh. Here they caught, with their hands, fish enough to fill a boat, amounting to a gross weight of 4 cwt. The probable explanation of this lucky "take" seems to be that the fish entered the mouth of the river with the flood tide — as is their wont — and on attempting to retreat with the ebb found their return to the sea barred by our net, and instead of endeavouring to pass through the meshes preferred to move back into the brackish water of the river. Here, as the tide fell still further and laid bare banks of sand stretching across the stream, they became shut off" altogether from the sea, and at dead low tide the flow of fresh water so predominated over the salt as to render them helplessly stupid, so that they fell an eas)- prey to our sailors. On the shores of this bay I came across a magnificent Winter's bark tree, the largest which I have ever seen in the channels. Its smooth and almost cylindrical stem was nine feet in circumference, and ran up without branching to a height of thirty feet from the ground. In cruising to and fro about the channel we frequently came across whales. They were usually either "finners" or "sperms"; more commonly the former. I saw only one one "right" whale during the many months which we spent in these waters. On the 17th of February we steamed by a school of about twenty "finner" whales, and shortly after we passed through a shoal of small red shrimps {Gaiat/icas), which were so densely clustered together as to give the water quite a scarlet appearance. This accounted for the great gathering of Cetaceans. Skeletons of whales in a very imperfect state were abundant about the shores Exploration of the Picton Chajinel. 73 of this channel; and many were of large size. On the shore of Francisco Bay I saw lower jaw bones which measured eleven feet from condyle to symphysis. I looked, but in vain, for remains of the Ziphioid Whales. Some few miles to the eastward of Francisco Bay a deep inlet pierced Wellington Island in a northerly direction. We were anxious to explore it, as we thought it not unlikely that it might prove to be a navigable passage, connecting Trinidad Channel with the Gulf of Penas. At length an opportunity occurred, and on a fine morning in the month of March we steamed into this un- surveyed inlet. On fairly passing the southern entrance, we found ourselves traversing a lane of water of such glassy smoothness, and bordered by such straight running shores, which were not more than half-a-mile apart, as to seem more like an inland canal than (which it eventually proved to be) a strait leading through a nest of breakers to an inhospitable ocean. Its eastern shore exhibited the kind of scenery prevailing about the Guia Narrows; viz., round-topped hills with great bare patches of rain-worn rock extending from the summits to a talus, which was covered with an uniform mantle of evergreen forest, the latter encroaching upon the sea-beach. But the country to the west presented a more pleasing variety, being composed of low undulating slopes of grassy-looking land, with here and there fissures or landslips exhibiting what seemed to us, as we scrutinized them with our glasses, to be sections of a sedimentary formation. We had hitherto seen nothing like this anywhere among the western channels, and consequently I for one was extremely anxious to land. However, the captain had to make the most of daylight for the surveying work in hand, so that our conjectures as to the nature of this formation remained unverified. When we had attained a distance of twenty-five miles from the southern entrance of the Strait, the western shore was found to be broken up into a chain of low islets, which in time dwindled away into a great arc of submerged rocks, over which the swell of the broad Pacific broke with great fury. 74 Cniise of the "AlerL"' This then was the end of what is now known as the Picton Channel, and bold would be the mariner who would attempt to traverse it, and thread his way through such a maze of reefs and breakers. Among the islets at this, its northern extremity, we found an anchorage, where we decided on stopping for the night. As we cast anchor, a native boat approached, carrying no less than twenty-three inmates, most of whom were males, and of a most savage and treacherous appearance. They had with them several young fur seals, recently killed, which they were glad to barter for tobacco or bi.scuit. After stopping alongside for about half-an-hour, they paddled away and were seen no more. On the following day we steamed back. The rocky shores and islets of the Trinidad Channel bear abundant indications of old ice action. These marks are not very apparent on the coarse-grained friable syenite which is the common rock of the district, but on the dikes of hard green- stone, with which the sj-cnite is frequently intersected, scorings and striations of typical character may be seen. Close to the anchorage in Port Charrua, on the north side of the channel, there is a broad band of greenstone on which 1 observed very perfect examples of " crosshatchings," where the prevailing cast to west strijE were intersected by those of another system at an angle of about 40°. These rock erosions, coupled with what we know from the sounding-lead as to the contour of the scabottom, lead us to infer that the Trinidad Channel was at some remote period the bed of a huge glacier, which flowed westward from the Cordillera. That most, indeed, of the other straits and channels of Western Patagonia were also at one time occupied by glaciers is clearly testified by the markings on the rocks. There is a peculiar form of syenite rock not uncommon in exposed situations on the hilltops, which is composed of quartz, felspar, and hornblende, the quartz occurring in crystals of about the size of large peas. The felspar, being of a very ^'Hailstone'''' Rock. 75 friable nature, rapidly succumbs to the disintegrating influence of the weather, and crumbles away, taking with it the small particles of hornblende, so that the big quartz crystals, when in the last stage prior to being dislodged, are seen standing out in bold relief from the matrix. When this rock is seen projecting in round bosses, through the turfy soil of a hilltop, it looks at a short distance as if strewn with hailstones ; and the illusion is heightened on observing on its leeward side heaps of loose quartz crystals, which have been completely weathered out from the parent rock, and have been drifted by the wind into this comparatively sheltered situation, as would be the case with hailstones under similar circumstances. But the most characteristic feature in the sceneiy of the western shores of Patagonia is owing to the phenomenon of " soil motion," an occurrence which is here in a great measure due to the exceptionally wet nature of the climate. This slippage of the soilcap seems in this region to be continually taking place wherever the basement rock presents a moderately inclined surface. Some of the effects of this "soil motion" arc apt to be confounded with those due to glacial action, for the soilcap takes with it in its downward progress not only its clothing of trees, ferns, and mosses, but also a " moraine pro- fonde " of rock, stones, and stems of dead trees great and small, wherebj^' the hills arc being denuded, and the valleys, lakes, and channels gradually filled up. When we first entered the Western Channels my attention was at once directed to this subject on noticing that the lower branches of trees growing in immediate proximity to the sea-shore were in many places withering from immersion in the salt water, and that in some cases entire trees had perished prematurely, from their roots having become entirely submerged. On looking more closely into the matter, I noticed that sodden snags of dead trees, mingled with stones, were often to be seen on the bottom of the inshore waters, and that the beds of fresh water lakes were 76 Crtiise of the '' Alert r plentifully strewn with similar fragments of wood, the remains of bygone forests which had perished prematurely. These cir- cumstances are fully explained by the occurrence of soil motion, for as the soilcap by its sliding motion, imparted by gravi- tation, and aided by expansion and contraction of the spongy mass, reaches the water's edge, the soluble portions are re- moved, while its more durable contents are left to accumulate at the foot of the incline. In this way rocks and stones may sometimes be seen balanced in odd situations near the sea beach, simulating the " roches perchees " which arc dropped by a melting iceberg or a receding glacier. These circumstances are all the more interesting from their occurring in a region where the effects of old and recent glacial action are exhibited to a marked degree. Planings, scorings, striations, and " roches moutonn^es " may, one or other, be almost invariably found wherever the rock is sulTicieiitly impervious to the disintegrating action of the weather to retain these impressions. Thus they are nowhere to be seen on the coarse-grained friable syenite, which is the common rock of the district ; but where this rock is intersected by dikes of the more durable greenstone, the above-mentioned signs of former glacial action may be seen well developed. I speak now of old glacial action, because we have not found any glacier existing in the neighbourhood of the Trinidad Channel, from whence they seem to have entirely receded ; but they are yet to be seen in the fiords of the mainland further north ; and in the main Straits of Magellan we had opportunities of studying fine examples of complete and incomplete glaciers, exhibiting in all its grandeur that wonderful denuding power which these ponderous masses of ice exercise as they move silently over their rocky beds. There are, therefore, in this region, ample opportunities of comparing and differentiating phenomena, which have resulted from former glacial action, and those which are due to soil- motion — a force now in operation. Soil ]\Iotio7i here and t?i the Falklands. 77 Sir Wyville Thompson (vide " Voyage of Challenger," vol. ii., p. 245) attributes the origin of the celebrated "Stone Runs" of the Falkland Islands to the transporting action of the soilcap, which among other causes derives its motion from alternate expansion and contraction of the spongy mass of peat, due to varying conditions of moisture and comparative dryness ; and this hypothesis is to a certain extent supported by the occur- rences which I now endeavour to describe. Here, in Western Patagonia, an evergreen arboreal forest, rising through a dense undergrowth of brushwood and mosses, clothes the hill-sides to a height of about 1,000 feet, and this mass of vegetation, with its subjacent peaty, swampy soil, resting — as it frequently docs — upon a hill-side already planed by old ice action, naturally tends, under the influence of gravitation, combined with that of expansion and contraction of the soil, to slide gradually down- wards until it meets the sea, lake, or valley, as the case may be. In the two former cases the free edge of the mass is removed by the action of the water, in a manner somewhat analogous to the wasting of the submerged snout of a " com- plete glacier" in the summer lime; whereas in the last instance a chaotic accumulation of all the constituents of the transported mass gradually takes place, thereby tending to an eventual ob- literation of the valley. It appears to me that the conditions which are said to have resulted in the formation of the " Stone Runs " of the Falklands here exist in equal if not greater force. There is a thick spongy vegetable mass covering the hill-sides, and acted on by varying conditions of extreme moisture and comparative dryness ; there are the loose blocks of disintegrating syenite to be transported ; and there are moun- tain torrents, lakes, and sea- channels to remove the soil. That motion of the soilcap does actually take place we have at least strong presumptive evidence ; but anything resembling a " stone run " remains yet to be discovered. It would naturally suggest itself to the reader that the above phenomenon attributed to 78 Cruise 0/ the ''Alatr soil motion might be accounted for by a slow and gradual depression of the land, and I have carefully sought for evidence favouring this view, but have found no reliable sign whatever of subsidence ; while on the other hand one sees raised beaches and stones testifying to the ravages of stone-boring molluscs at heights above the present high-water marks, which indicate that even elevation of the land has taken place. On May 6th, the winter season having then fairly set in, we bade adieu for a while to our surveying ground, and commenced our northern voyage to Valparaiso. Our course lay first through the sheltered channels which separate Wellington Island from the main- land. As we rounded Topar Islands and entered Wide Channel, the heavy mist which had been hanging around us all the morning, almost concealing the land from sight, lifted at intervals like a veil, and exposed to view the noble cliffs of bare greenstone rock which hemmed us in on cither side, — here and there streaked down their faces by long slender cascades of water, extending from summit to base, and seeming to hang over us like glistening threads of silver. On passing the southern outlet of Icy Reach, we saw shining in the distance the sloping tongue-shaped extremity of one of the Eyie Sound glaciers, whose bergs float out through Icy Reach in the winter time and sometimes prove a serious obstruction to navigation in these gloomy and mjsterious channels. In Chasm Reach, which we next traversed, the hills on cither side rose nearly perpendicularly to a height of 1,500 feet, their snow-capped summits contrasting grandly with the sombre tints of their rocky sides ; so scantily clad with vegetation as to seem at a distance mere sloping walls of rock. In the narrowest part of this " reach," where the width was only about half-a-mile, three native huts were seen established on low projecting shelves of rock, and situated about a mile apart. To these our attention was attracted by the long curling wreaths of grey smoke ascending from their fires. As darkness was coming on, The English Narrows. 79 we did not stop to examine them, but steamed on towards Port Grappler, where we anchored for the night. We got under way early in the morning of the following day, and proceeded through the channel as far as Hoskyn Cove, an anchorage just to the northward of the famous English Narrows. The morning had been hazy and showery, but towards noon the mist cleared away, and as we passed the English Narrows, a burst of sunshine completed the dispersion of the hazy vapour and lighted up a scene of surpassing splendour. The scenery here contrasted strangely with that of Chasm Reach, for the steep hillsides now were richly clothed with a luxuriant growth of primeval forest, and rising to a greater altitude, had their summits capped with a broad mantle of snow, which showed to great advantage against the deep blue of the sky. In the narrowest part of the channel, where the flood tide was making southward in a rapid stream, numbers of fur seals were gambolling in the water, and the energetic movements of the cormorants testified to the abundance of the fish. Formerly the vessels of the Pacific Steam Navigation Company were in the habit of running through these "Narrows," but of late years the practice has been discontinued, on account of the difficulty of managing the long vessels which are now in vogue. Therefore, excepting an occasional man-of-war, the only vessels which at the present day make use of the channels leading to the Gulf of Penas are the steamers of the German "Kosmos" line. The deciduous beech {Fagus antarctica) here formed a great proportion of the forest growth, and as its leaves were now withering, their autumn tints gave a variegated character to the wooded scenery, a feature not observed farther south, where the evergreen beech [Fagus bettiloidcs) predominates. The Cavipsidimn chikiise, a large trailing plant, was abundant and in full bloom, its flowering branches usually depending in lathcr inaccessible places from the upper parts of the trees to which it clung ; and here we obtained for the first time specimens 8o Cruise of tJu ''Alcrtr of the loveliest of South American ferns, the Hymenophyllum crucntmn. The morning of the 8th May broke wet and gloomy as we got under way and initiated the next stage on our journey. All day long the rain fell in torrents, and a ficsh northerly breeze, blowing right in our teeth, raised a heavy, chopping sea, which made the old ship heave uneasily, and gave us a sort of foretaste of what we should have to encounter next day on emerging from the Gulf of Peiias into the troubled waters of the Pacific. Steaming thus against wind and sea, we made such slow progress that night had fairly come on us when we crept under shelter of the lofty hills which overshadow Island Harbour. On the following morning we entered the open sea, and steered for Valparaiso. CHAPTER IV. ON THE COAST OF CHILI. ON anchoring at Valparaiso on the i6th May, the first news we heard was that the country was in a great state of excitement, ancnt the war in which Chili was then engaged with Peru and Bolivia. All the available troops and men-of-war had been despatched to the seat of war in the north, leaving t'le capital in almost a defenceless condition, so that great fears were entertained lest one of the Peruvian cruisers should take advan- tage of this to bombard the town. The last detachment sent off consisted of the town police, and at the time of our visit the maintenance of order in the streets, and the manning of the guns of the forts, had been entrusted to the corps of "Bomberos" (fire brigade). The principal part of the town is built on a plateau about ten feet above high-water mark, which forms a margin to the curving shore of the bay, and reaches inland for a few hundred yards. Beyond this the outskirts of the town are disposed irregularly over a number of steep ridges, which converge radially on the town from the mountain range behind. There was one principal street running more or less parallel with the shore, and containing fine-looking shops well supplied with everything needful, but the second-rate ones were very dingy in comparison. Owing to the great stagnation of trade brouglit about by the war, and the 6 82 Cttiise of the ''Alert:' consequent scarcity of money amongst consumers, the prices of provisions were very moderate, although under normal conditions Valparaiso is famous among Europeans for its high prices. Fruit also and vegetables were in great abundance, and large bunches of delicious grapes were to be had for almost a nominal price. One remarkable feature of Valparaiso is that within the pre- cincts of the town a considerable number of people of the very lowest grade live in a sort of gipsy encampment. The buildings which they here occupy are filthy nondescript hovels, constructed out of a patchwork of mud, bits of tin, old planks, discarded doors, pieces of sackcloth, etc., all stuck up together anyhow. Even in the respectable quarter of the town these filthy dens were some- times to be seen occupying blind alley's, or the site of razed buildings. Sir George Narcs left us here to return home by mail-steamer, on appointment to the Marine and Harbour Department of the Board of Trade, and was relieved in command of the Alert by Captain J. F". L. P. Maclear. After wishing him good-bye on the i8th of .May, we got under way and steered for Coquimbo. On gaining an offing of about ten miles, and looking in towards the Chilian coast, to which we were then pursuing a parallel course, we saw the lowlands partially veiled in a thin stratum of mist, above which towered magnificently the snowy summit of Aconcagua, 23,220 feet in height. As wc approached the Bay of Coquimbo, we passed through immense shoals of fishes, which sheered off in great confusion to either side of our bows with the parting waves. On subsequently hauling in the " patent log," it was found that the revolving blades had disappeared, the towing-line having been chopped in two just above its attachment. This was probably the work of some hungry and indiscriminating shark, whose stomach must have been put to a severe trial in endeavouring to digest this angular and unwholesome piece of metal. The port of Coquimbo, where we stayed from the 1 9th of May Coquimbo Copper Trade — Shell Terraces. 83 to the 1 6th of July, derives whatever importance it has got from being one of the best (if not the very best) of the anchorages on the Chihan coast, and from its connection with the copper trade. It is brought into communication with the mines and smelting works by means of a line of railway, which, independently of its collateral branches, pierces the copper-producing country to a distance of sixty miles. The copper, either in the form of ingots, bars, or regulus, is shipped to Europe — principally to England — in steamers or sailing vessels. The country, as far as the eye can reach from the anchorage, is a mere sandy desert, dotted here and there with an odd oasis of cultivated land, which has been rendered productive by means of artificial irrigation. Trees arc rare ; but within the last few years the eucalyptus has been intro- duced, and with great success. In properly irrigated localities it thrives and grows with great rapidity, — in half-a-dozen years rising to a height of sixty feet, — and forming masses of foliage, which, by the shade it affords, increases the productiveness of the neighbouring soil. Coquimbo has been rendered celebrated for its shell terraces by the writings of Darwin, Basil Hall, and others. These arc long plateaux of variable size, sometimes a couple of hundred yards, sometimes a mile in width, with their sharply defined free margins running more or less parallel to the curved outline of the sea beach, and extending inland by a scries of gradations, like the tiers of boxes in a theatre. There are five or si.x of these terraces ; that furthest inland being about 250 feet above the sea-level, and its free margin being about six miles from the beach. They are of entirely marine origin, and abound in shells of existing species, and they testify to the different periods of elevation to which tliis part of the continent has been subjected. On the night of the 2nd of June we felt a slight shock of earthquake. The cable rattled in the hawse-pipe as if it were being violently shaken below by some giant who had got -hold of the other end ; and the ship vibrated and surged up and down 84 Cruise of the ''Alerts as if she had been struck by a wave coming vertically from the bottom of the sea. The shock lasted about ten seconds, and then all was again silent. Earthquakes of this magnitude arc of common occurrence in Chili. One day a large party of us went on a shooting excursion to Las Cardas, an estate occupying a mountain valley thirty-si.x miles from Coquimbo, and belonging to Mr. Lambert, an English gentleman. For this trip we were indebted to Mr. Weir, the courteous manager of Mr. Lambert's mines, smelting works, and estate, who not only provided a special train to convey us to the shooting ground, but entertained us there most sumptuously. The estate of " Las Cardas" lies at the termination of the southern- most part of the two valleys which open into the Bay of Coquimbo, and beyond this station the railway pursues its further course over the brow of a hill called the " Cuesta," which it ascends by a series of zigzags. Although its route here appears, at first sight, circuitous enough, the gradient of the incline is an average of one in thirty feet, ranging as high as one in twenty-five. We found it interesting to stop for a while at the station and watch our departing train trailing along its zigzag course up the hillside, as it steamed on towards the inland terminus of the line, viz., " Rio Grande," which was some thirty miles further on. The "Rio Grande" station is 2,ooo feet above the level of the Coquimbo terminus at the other end. In the bed of a broad valley, and in the gullies communicating Avith it laterally from the hills, we expected to get a good many partridges ; but owing to the thickness of the brushwood, and the absence of dogs, we saw very few, and shot fewer still. However, we were assured that the birds were there, and only wanted proper stirring up to make them visible ; so that as we were every minute expecting that the next moment a great covey would start up from the bushes, and consequently kept our guns ready for action, we managed to keep up the requisite amount of excitement for several hours without materially violating the Birds at Las Caida, — Island of St. Ambrose. 85 spirit of the regulations of the Prevention of Cruelty to Anirr.ah Society. In the evening we assembled at a clump of trees, which seemcJ to be a favourite roosting-place for doves ; and as the birds came down from the hills to take up their quarters for the night, they afforded us some very nice shooting while the daylight lasted. The most interesting birds which I noticed in the valley were two species oi pteroptochus, the smaller of which was almost identical in general character with the tapacola of Coquimbo, where it inhabits the low rocky hills, and attracts attention by its barking noise, and by the odd manner in which it erects its tail. Although the barking noise is heard frequently, and some- times within a few yards of one, j-et the bird itself is seen comparatively rarely. The bird of Las Cardas, however, might with a little care be seen, whilst uttering its odd programme of noises, as it stood under the overhanging branches of some large bush. On being startled it makes off in a peculiar manner, taking long strides rather than hops, and moving in a scries of sharp curves in and out among the bushes. In adapting itself to these curves, the body of the bird is inclined considerably to the inner side, so that in this position, with its long legs and great clumsy tail, it forms a truly grotesque object. Examples of the larger species of pteroptochus (/*. alhicoUis) were generally to be seen in pairs, perched on the summit of a tall bush, the white throat and white stripes over the eye showing conspicuously. We sailed from Coquimbo on the i6th of July, and shaped our course for the Islands Felix and Ambrose, which lie about five hundred miles to the north-west of Coquimbo. The object of this cruise was to take some deep-sea soundings between the mainland and the above-mentioned islands. The weather was, for the most part, very unfavourable, the ship rolling and kicking diabolically, and making our lives very miserable. On the afternoon of the 20th, St. Ambrose, the eastward island of the two, hove in sight, bat as the day was too far advanced to admit of our landing, wc 66 Cruise of the ''Alertr " lay-to " about six miles to windward of it. Viewing the island at this distance from the eastward, it presented the appearance of a roughly cubical flat-topped mass of rock, leaning slightly to the northward, and bounded — so far as one could see — by perpen- dicular cliffs of a gloomy and forbidding aspect, which rose to an altitude of 1,500 feet. As we approached the island on the fol- lowing morning its appearance by no means improved, and nowhere could be seen any break in the rampart of lofty cliffs, which seemed to forbid our disturbing their solitude. We looked in vain for the " sheltered cove," where, as the sailing instructions say, " there is good landing for boats at all times of the year." After making the circuit of the island, wc " lay-to " about a mile from the N.E. cliff", and two boats were sent to reconnoitre, in one of which I took passage. After pulling a considerable distance along the foot of the cliffs, we at length succeeded, though with great diffi- culty, in landing at the foot of a spur of basaltic rock, which sloped down from the cliffs at a high angle. The first thing that attracted our attention was a grotesque-looking crab {Grapsiis variegatns), of a reddish-brown colour, mottled on the carapace with yellow spots. It scuttled about in a most independent way, and seemed quite indifferent as to whether it trotted over the bot- toms of the rock pools, or ran up the steep face of the rock to a height of forty feet above the water-line. Sea-birds innumerable flew about us in all directions, but on careful inspection we could only muster up three different species; viz., a large white-winged gannet(.S«/rt), a plump dark-coloured petrel {Aestrclata dcfilippiana), and a slender white and grey tern {Anous).* The petrels were nesting in the rock crevices. The nest consisted of a few withered twigs and dirty feaLhers, forming a very scanty bed on the hard rock, and containing a solitary white egg. The birds stuck bravely to their nests, and would not relinqui'h their charge until, with bill and claws, they had gi\en an account of themselves, calculated • These and other birds collected during the cruise have been described and determined by Mr. R. Bowdler Sharpe, the distinguished ornithokigisl of the Uritish Museum. Geologic St rue tut c — Habits of Petrels. 87 to rather astonish an incautious intruder. Nevertheless, I subse- quently ascertained, by dissection of specimens taken from the nests, that both male and female birds take part in the duty of hatching. The rock in this locality was almost completely sterile; only three or four plants (stunted undershrubs) were found, which eked out a miserable existence among fragments of crumbling rock. The island is of volcanic formation. The cliffs which we examined displayed a section, fully 1,000 feet deep, of various layers of tuff, laterite, and scoricne, which, for the most part, stretched out horizontally, and were intersected in every conceivable direc- tion by dykes of basalt. In some places ridges or spurs of rock projected like buttresses from the vertical cliff; and where we landed the spur was composed of a vertical djke of basalt flanked by a crumbling scoriaccous rock, which latter was being worn away by the action of waves and weather much more rapidly than its core of basalt. The columnar blocks of which the basalt was composed were bedded horizontally ; i.e., at right angles to the plane of the dyke, so that the appearance of the whole was strikingly suggestive of an immense stone staircase. After a stay of an hour and a half we were signalled to return on board, as Captain Maclear was obliged to get under way, and accordingly at half-past twelve we were sailing away to the southward, leaving this comparatively unknown island as a prize for future explorers. In the course of this cruise we were followed by great numbers of petrels, among which were the giant petrel {Ossifraga giganted), the Cape pigeon {Daption capensis), and two species of T/ialassi- droma (I think T. leucogaster and T. Wilsoni'). I noticed on this, as on several subsequent occasions, that the little storm petrel is in the habit of kicking the water with one leg when it is skimming the surface in searching for its food. This mo\emcnt is usually seen most clearly when the sea presents a slightly undulating surface ; and when the bird strikes the water in performing a slight cur\e in its flight, one can see that it is invariably the outer 88 O-utse of the "A /at." leg that is used. The object of this manccuvrc seems to be to give the body sufficient upward impulse to prevent the wings from becoming wetted in rising from near the surface. I have often observed the Atlantic storm petrels steady themselves on the water with both legs together, but have never seen them perform this one- legged "kick," like their congeners of the Pacific. There are contradictory statements in natural history works as to whether petrels do or do not follow ships during the night time. Those who adopt the negative view of the question maintain that the birds rest on the waves during the night and pick up the ship next morning by following her wake. For a long time I was in doubt as to which was the correct view to take, although I had often on dark nights, when sitting on the taffrail of the ship, fancied I had heard the chirp of the small petrels. At length I became provoked that after having spent so many years at sea I should still be in doubt about such a matter as this, so I began to make systematic observations, in which I was assisted by the officers of watches and quartermasters, who were also interested in the matter. The result is that I am now quite certain that the storm petrel and Cape pigeon do follow the ship by night as well as by day, and that, moreover, the night is the best time for catching them. Eveiy night, for a time, I used to tow a long light thread from the stern of the ship; it was about sixty yards long, and fitted at the end with an anchor-shaped piece of bottle wire, which just skimmed along the surface of the water and yet allowed the thread to float freely in the air. I found this device a great improve- ment on the old-fashioned method of using several unarmed thread.s, and in this way I caught at night-time, and even on the darkest nights, both storm petrels and Cape pigeons; the latter, however, usually breaking my thread and escaping. If I sat down quietly and held the line lightly between my finger and thumb, I would feel every now and then a vibration as a bird collided with it. Oi moonlight nights, moreover, one could ahva)'.s, by watching care- fully, see the big Cape pigeons flitting about the stern of the ship. Flight of the Albatross. Sg My experience of petrels and albatrosses is that whenever they are having a really good meal, .they invariably sit down on the water. This is especially noticeable about noon, when mess garbage is thrown overboard, and in perfectly calm weather I have even seen a flock of storm petrels settle down on the surface as if meaning to rest themselves, and remain as still as ducks on a pond, basking in the sunshine. One day also in moderately fine weather I thought I saw a Cape pigeon dive. This surprised me so that I watched, and saw the manoeuvre repeated again and again. Some refuse had been cast overboard which scarcely floated, and this petrel, being desirous of possessing some morsels of food which were submerged, dived bodily down, apparently without the least inconvenience. Before quitting this subject, I shall say a few words on a somewhat hackneyed but still open question, viz., — "the flight of the albatross." I have had many opportunities of watching the yellow-billed species {D. Melanoplirys), and I have noticed that it sometimes uses its wings to raise or propel itself in such a manner that to a superficial observer it would then appear to be only soaring with wings stationary. It does not "flap" them, but depresses them rapidly towards the breast, so that it seems as if the body were being raised at the expense of the wings, whereas, in reality, the entire bird is elevated. The movement does not resemble a flap, simply because the return of the wings to the horizontal position is accomplished by a comparatively slow movement. By resorting to this manoeuvre occasionally, it is able to maintain a soaring flight for periods which, without its aid, might be considered extraordinarily long. Of course, V, hen it wants to gain a fresh stock of buoyancy and momentum, it gives three or four flaps like any other bird. During our return stay at Valparaiso from the ist to the 2 1st cf August, 1 made a trip to Santiago, the capital of Chili. Santiago is built on the great plateau which lies between the coast range of hills and the Cordillera, and is 1,500 feet above the sea go Cruise of the \'Alcri:^ level. The dist.incc by rail from Valparaiso is about 120 miles, but as the railroad makes the greater part of the ascent within a distance of 50 miles, the average gradient of the incline is con- siderable. The train follows the line of the seashore for a distance of about 3 miles to Ihc northward of Valparaiso, when it reaches the mouth of a wide valley running inland, the windings of whose right bank it follows until a station called Llallai (pronounced "Yayai") is reached. It then makes a steep ascent along the side of a mountain, and here on one side a precipitous wall of con- glomerate rock faces the carriage windows, while on the other the eye gazes into the depths of an ever-receding valley, above which the train seems poised as if by magic. While one is still lost in contemplation of this abyss, a short tunnel in a buttress of the mountain is traversed, and the train suddenly sweeps round a sharp corner, and crossing the valley by a light iron bridge which here spans a part of it, constricted to a narrow chasm, enters a highland defile on the opposite side. This place is known as the "Mequin Paso." The train now pursues a meandering track among the hills of Montenegro, where the summit level of the railway is reached, and then inclines gradually downwards to the great plain of Santiago. After establishing ourselves in the Oddo Hotel, which is situated in the middle of the city, close to the "Plaza De Armas," we commenced our cxjiiorations, and first proceeded to the Natural History Museum. It lies on the outskirts of the town and occu- pies a spacious building which was originally constructed for the Exhibition of 1S75, and to which the Natural History collections were transferred in 1 877. Favoured b)' a letter of introduction, we were here fortunate enough to make the acquaintance of Dr. Phillipi, the distinguished naturalist, who has for many years had charge of the museum ; and to whose courtesy and good nature we were much indebted. The collections illustrative of South American ornithologj- and ethnology were particularly fine. The herbarium seemed to be very e.xtensive, and was so excellently Sania Lucia. 91 arranged as to afford ready access to any groups of specimens. In the spacious hall devoted to this department, we saw a section of a beech tree from Magellan which was more than seven feet in diameter, and the silicified trunk of a tree fifty centimetres in diameter, which had been found near Santa Barbara. The mam- malian collection included two specimens of the Huemul {Cerviis Chilcnsis), one of which was said to be the original figured by Gay in his "Historia Physica y Politica de Chile." Among the human crania were some very curious specimens illustrating the extremes of dolicocephaly and brachjxephaly. It is to be regretted that the subsidy voted by the Chilian government for the maintenance of this admirable museum does not exceed ;^ioo a year, and Dr. Phillipi may well be congratulated on the results of his self-sacrificing labours. About the centre of the town of Santiago is a remarkable hill called Santa Lucia, whose summit affords a very extended view. It is a mass of columnar basalt rising abruptly from the plain to a height of about 300 feet, and presenting on all sides boldly scarped faces in which several flights of stone steps have been ingeniously cut, so as to lead by various labyrinthine routes to the summit. We made the ascent towards the close of daj-, and were well repaid for our trouble by the really magnificent view. The town lay extended at our feet with its various buildings and monuments standing up in bold relief. As we raised our eyes, its outskirts dwindled into the broad plain of Santiago valley, which here seemed to form an immense amphitheatre, surrounded in the distance by a chain of lofty hills whose snowcapped summits were at this hour illumined with the lovely roseate colours so charac- teristic of sunset in the Cordilleras. On the following day we visited the site of the church of La Compania, where the fire took place in the year 1863, when some 2,000 people, mostly women, were burnt to death. The church was never rebuilt, but in its place now stands a handsome bronze monument to commemorate the victims of this dreadful calamity. 52 Cruise of ihc ''Alerts Immediately adjoining arc the splendid buildings in which the sittings of congress arc held. The morning of our return was cold and frosty, and the plain of Santiago was enveloped in a dense mist, from which we did not emerge until the train had entered the mountain valleys, through-which it wound towards the heights of Montenegro. Here we rose above the gloomy mists, and were gladdened bj- the bright and warm raj's of a sun whose beams were as yet screened from the lowlands. Wild ducks were to be seen in the marshes near the railways, scarcely disturbed by the passage of the train ; flocks of doves rose from the bushes here and there ; owls hovered about in a scared sort of way, as if ashamed of being seen out in the honest sunlight ; and on many a tree top was perched a solitarj' buzzard or vulture. Later in the forenoon small flocks of the military starlings wcic frequently sighted, their brilliant scarlet plumage showing to great advantage against the pale green bushes of the hill sides. After passing the summit level we rattled down the incline towards Llallai, at what seemed to me to be a very high speed. I kept looking out of the window at first, watching the engine disappearing from sight as it suddenly swept round an abrupt curve and entered a cutting, and admiring the wriggling of the train as it swiftly threaded its w-ay in and out among the liills. Sometimes our route would seem to lead us into a cul-de- sac of the hills, and when apparently almost at the end of it, the engine would abruptly alter her course and sweep away in a direction nearly at right angles to its former course, dragging the docile and flexible chain of carriages away with it. I had missed all this on the upward journey — I suppose because our slower speed then made curves and cuttings look less alarming. After a while, I began to reflect on the probable consequences of our suddenly coming upon a flock of heavy cattle in one of these nasty cuttings, and the more I pondered the more I became convinced that although the cow-catcher of our engine was well able to cope with a single bullock or even two, yet that in the Floral Fly-traps — 3Tines of Brillador. 93 case of our colliding with a flock of half-a-dozen or so, somcthinfj unpleasant must surely happen. This was not a cheering subject of thought, so I turned away from the window and tried to interest myself in the contents of a Chilian newspaper. A few days previously, I heard that a single bullock had been met with on this same incline, and had been satisfactorily accounted for by the "cow-catcher." The body was smashed to pieces and thrown off the track, but the people in the train (one of whom was my informant) experienced only a very slight shock. Ac Llallai station we stopped for breakfast, for which the cold air of the morning had sufficiently prepared us, and in the afternoon wc arrived comfortably at Valparaiso. We again stayed at Coquimbo from the 23rd to the 30th of August, having been obliged to return there on account of a court-martial. The appearance of the country had changed very much since our previous visit. Bare tracts of sand had given place to an uniform coating of verdure, and a great variety of flowering plants were visible in full bloom. There was a species of Aristolochia very common on the rocky hills, whose large pitcher-shaped perianth frequently imprisoned a number of flies of different species, and I found that I could add materially to my entomological collection by examining these plants, and despoiling them of their living prey, for most of the pitchers contained living flies, and some of them the remains of insects apparently in a half-digested state. This flower constitutes a very effectual fly-trap ; and I once noticed a great bluebottle- fly endeavouring in vain to work his way over the " chevau.x- de-frise " of white hairs, which, with their ends pointing inwards, studded the interior of the tube. During this stay I made a trip to the copper mines of Brillador, which are worked in connection with the smelting houses at Compaiiia. Both establishments are the property of Mr. Lambert, an English gentleman residing at Swansea, whose Chilian manager is Mr. Weir, to whom I have already 94 Cruise of the '' Alert r alluded. I went by train to Compania, which is the terminus of that branch of the line, and spent the night at the resi- dence of Mr. Weir, by whose kind invitation I was enabled to make this interesting e.KCursion. On the following morning we started on horseback, and rode over the hills to Brillador. The mines are eight miles distant from Compania, and are situated at an elevation of 1,500 feet above the sea level. Here we put ourselves under the guidance of Mr. Richards, the courteous engineer, who clothed us in canvas mining suits, and supplied each of us with an oil lamp hung on gimbals at the extremity of a long stick; and thus equipped we entered one of the adit levels opening on to a steep hillside, and bade adieu for some Jiours to the friendly daylight. One of the peculiarities of a Chilian mine is that the ordinary ladder of civilization is replaced by a notched pole, and that, by means of a succession of these poles, the descent and ascent of the shaft of the mine is accom- plished. Another is that the ore is conveyed from the works at the bottom of the shaft in sacks of hide, each man thus carrj-ing on his shoulders the enormous weight of 200 lbs. The miners whom I saw employed in this work were naked to the waist, and exhibited splendid muscular development of chest and arm. I examined one of the sacks of ore, and found that I could barely raise it off the ground. These fine athletic fellows are fed principally upon maize, figs, and bread, few of them eating meat. Three kinds of copper ore are found in this mine. Near the surface is a light green carbonate of copper which is easily smelted, and when rich in metal {i£. free from extraneous mineral matter) is in much request ; but even when of low percentage it can be advantageously used for the manu- facture of sulphate of copper. Ne.xt in order of depth is found a purple ore, which is a double sulphide of copper and iron ; and at the bottom of the lode is the yellow sulphide of copper, commonly known in Chili as " bronce." Here we saw a most ingenious "rock drill," working at the end of a new level cutting. A Rock-Diill. 95 The apparatus, which is simple and most effective, consists of a solid piston working in a very strong cylinder and driven to and fro by compressed air, whose action is regulated by a slide valve. The drill is fitted directly into the end of the piston rod, and by an ingenious arrangement it is made to perforin a partial movement of rotation during each backward motion, so that it may strike the rock in a new direction each time. The working pressure of air was 50 lbs. per square inch. We noted the time while a boring was being made, and found that it took exactly nine minutes to make a hole nine inches deep, through the hard rock. The power is originated by a double-acting steam-engine, situated at the inner extremity of the main adit level, from whence a supply of compressed air is convejxd in flexible pipes along the various tunnels in which boring is being done. In subsequently blasting the rock, gunpowder is used in preference to dynamite or other explosives, I believe on account of the toughness of the ore, which therefore yields more satis- factorily to a comparatively gradual explosive. In the evening we rode back to Mr. Weir's residence at Compaiiia, and on the following day I returned on board the ship, which weighed anchor the same afternoon, and proceeded southward towards Talcahuano. Talcahuano, where we lay from the 4th of September to the 4th of October, is the most important seaport in southern Chili, and possesses an excellent and roomy anchorage. It is situated in a fertile and picturesque country ; and it is in direct com- munication by rail, not only with Conccpcion and all the more important towns of the south and central provinces, but also by branch line with an extensive grain-producing territory bordering on Araucania, whose produce it receives. Conccpcion, which takes rank as the third city in the Republic, is nine miles from Talcahuano, and lies on the bank of the 15io Bio, a broad, siiallow, and sluggish river. The houses and public buildings there have the appearance of considerable antiijuity, although in reality the greater number must have been rebuilt since the great earthquake 96 Cndse of the '' Alert r of 1835, when the city was reduced to ruins. Penco, tlie old Spanish capital of the province of Conccpcion, was situated in the eastern extremity of the Bay of Concepcion ; but when it was destroyed by a tidal wave in 1730, tlie people moved inland and established themselves near the site of the present city. However, by the cataclysm of 175 1, the newly-founded city of Concepcion shared the fate of Penco, but was soon rebuilt, as it was again, in great part, after the earthquake of 1835. We had intended to make only a short stay at Talcahuano, but on the day preceding our arrival there, a case of smallpox appeared among the crew, followed by a second and third, and we were therefore obliged to remain in this harbour until our patients should be sufficiently well to return on board. There was a long, low, sandy island (Isla dc los Reyes) lying across the head of Talcahuano Bay, and inhabited only by a couple of shepherds who were looking after a herd of cattle and horses. There being no available hospital to which our patients could be sent, we obtained leave from the Chilian autho- rities to establish a temporary quarantine station on the island. Accordingly, on the day of our arrival we set up tents on an unfrequented and particularly airy part of the island, and having supplied them with provisions and all the necessary ap[)liances, we installed our patients in their new quarters. They made good recoveries. My medical duties required me to make frequent visits to this little establishment, and I found it con- venient to make it the centre of my afternoon rambles. On the mainland immediately adjoining the island, I found a great marshy plain of many miles in extent, and intersected in various directions by deep muddy ditches which communicated with the sea, and at high tide brought supplies of sea water to a chain of broad, shallow lagoons, the home of multitudes of waterfowl. Pintail ducks, widgeon, herons, curlew, flamingoes, turkey-buz- zards, gulls, lapwings, and sandpipers found here a congenial h)me. The shriil, harsh cry of the spur-winged lapwing (the Home of tlie Watcr-Birds — The "■ Coypoy 97 " terotero " of the Pampas so graphically described by Darwin) was for ever scaring the other peacefully-disposed birds, and at the same time invoking maledictions from the sportsman. The plumage of this bird is very handsome, and the bright crimson colour of the iris and eyelid during life gave it a strange fasci- nating appearance, which can hardly be realized from a stuffed specimen. When the first ebb of the tide left bare the mudbanks in the lagoons, the gulls and curlews collected in vast numbers for their diurnal meal. Of the gulls only three kinds were seen, viz., L. Doininicanus, L. Glaucodes, and L. Macitlipeiinis. The latter were in various conditions of plumage ; some birds having a deep black hood, and others with a head almost entirely white, while between these two extremes, there was every gradation. The turkey-buzzards derived a plentiful supply of food from the bodies of fish stranded on the beach. For some reason or other dogfish were constantly coming to grief in this way, bodies of fish, two and three feet long, being met with sometimes, all along the beach, at average distances of about one hundred yards apart. One day we made an excursion up the river Andalicn, which flows into Talcahuano Bay, near the village of Penco, and which at high tide is navigable for boats to a distance of seven miles from its mouth. Our main object was to see something of the nutria — a large rodent {Myopotauuis coypii), which is common in some of the rivers of southern Chili, and which the natives call " Coypo." In a deep, narrow, ditch-like tributary of the Andalien, we came across several of these animals, swimming and diving about, some half-immersed clumps of bushes. At first sight their manner of swimming and diving would lead one to imagine that they were otters, but on closer inspection the broad muzzle with its long bristly whiskers, and foxy-red hair, reveal their true cha- racter. The " coypo " is distinguished from its northern ally, the beaver, in having the scaly tail round instead of flat, and from the 7 98 Cruise of the " Akrt" Chilian river o,. It contained sulphur and iron, burned with very little smoke, and produced a rust-coloured ash, which formed Aitiinai Life. 133 a proportion of 1 8 per cent. When used in the furnace, it formed large caky masses of a hard tenacious clinker, which adhered to the fire-bars, and so clogged the fires that it was found impossible to raise steam to more than thirty pounds' pressure. In an open grate it burnt freely enough, but without giving out much heat. It was, therefore, unsuited for engines using high pressure steam such as ours. We were much disappointed on learning that game was now very scarce in the immediate vicinity of the settlement, and that as a matter of fact the miners were victualled on salt and pre- served meats. Beyond a range of five miles, deer, guanacoes, ostriches, and wild cattle might be had, but could not be taken without the aid of horses, with which useful animals the settlers were at present (apparently through pecuniary embarrassments) unprovided. Foxes were abundant in the forest, and at night time prowled about the 'settlement, while recently a puma had paid it a nocturnal visit, to the great alarm of the pigs and other domestic animals. We walked into the " camp," to a distance of about five miles from the settlement, and were surprised at the scarcity of birds. We saw, however, a flock of black-necked swans, numbering about sixty, in the water near the seashore, but found them too wary for us. A paroquet, a few starlings, a finch, a wren, a buzzard, and the ubiquitous cinclodes were the only land- birds seen. On subsequently penetrating into the forest in the rear of the settlement, I saw many examples of a bird of the "tree-creeper" family, which the Chilians call " carpintero," from its habit of making a "tap-tap" sound when digging its bill against the bark of trees, in pursuit of the insect-larva on which it feeds. These birds behave in many respects like wood-peckers, producing a similar noise, using the same food, travelling over the boles of the trees in a spiral fashion, and creeping with ease along the under surface of horizontal branches. I shot two of them when in the position last-mentioned, and noticed that for some seconds after they had been shot they remained suspended by the legs, 134 Cruise of the "A/erl^ with the heads hanj^ing vertically downwards, until the complete relaxation of the muscles allowed them to fall. The toes, of which there are three directed forwards and one backwards, are furnished with long and sharp claws. The bill is long, stout, and pyramidal, and the shafts of the tail-feathers project bcj-ond the webs. On the 7th of March, a small party of us got the use of one of the steam-cutters, and made a trip to Altamirano Bay, an anchorage about seven miles to the westward of the " bay of the mines," which was originally explored and sur\'eyed by the Chilian vessel Magellaiies. We reached the bay after steaming for two hours against a westerly breeze and chopping sea, and landed on its western shore. Here we found an open grassland interspersed with clumps of low trees and bushes, among which the most abundant were an embothrium, a panax, an escallonia, a berberis, a chcilobothrium, and the black currant of Magellan — the Ribes Alagcllauica. The tree-clumps showed evident signs of their being the resting-places of wild cattle and horses, of which we saw also numerous tracks in the open ; none, however, being of recent date. We could find no fresh water of any kind, and therefore concluded that the deer, guanacoes, ostriches, and horses, which were reported to be abundant here, had gone up the hills during this dry season, and only resorted to the lowlands hereabouts during the winter time. There was certainly splendid pasturage for them, and I was much struck by the abundance and variety of the grasses. The land-birds were similar to those noticed previously in the neighbourhood of the coal-mines. The plain of grass-covered land over which we walked seemed to extend for a long way to the westward, but from the head of the bay a dense forest of beech- trees stretched away to the northward. Skirting the shore of the bay, although overgrown with scrub and forest, were two distinct terraced levels, which testified to an upraising of the land. The rock formation, as far as could be judged from the rock /'// situ visible on the foreshore, was a clayey Prospects of the Settlement. 135 sandstone, devoid of fossils, and bedded horizontally. Erratic boulders of syenite and gneiss — some of considerable size — lay scattered about the beach. The shores of the bay indicated a scanty littoral marine fauna. Shells of a small mussel were sparsely strewn about, and were the only molluscan remains noticed. The debris of a small, reddish alga was strewn along the beach in undulating lines ; but no kelp was seen at all, either on the shore or adhering to submerged rocks. During our four hours' stay, very little change was noticed in the level of the tide, an argument rather against the likelihood of a channel existing to connect Skyring Water with the ocean to the westward. In the meantime those on board the ship were engaged in coaling. We purchased twenty-five tons of the new coal at £ I a ton, a quantity quite sufficient to enable us to test practically its value. The mining engineer. Monsieur Arnaud, was of opinion that on sinking deeper into the coal-seam a better quality would be met with. The present workings are at a depth of only thirty- six feet from the surface, and as the angle of dip is about 45°, it is not improbable that on sinking a deeper shaft his expectations may be realized. Should this be the case, the long-cherished scheme of establishing tug-steamers in the straits to tow sailing vessels from ocean to ocean, will probably be revived, and a great impetus will thus be given to the Straits of Magellan as an avenue for commerce. Moreover, should a permanent settlement be established at the Skyring Water coal-mines, intending colonists will find in the surrounding country a splendid field for their energies. The soil of the pampas is of excellent quality, for from its proximity to the Cordillera, where the eastern drifting Pacific clouds deposit their watery contents, it receives enough moisture to remove from it that arid dryness which has rendered the eastern part of Patagonia unsuited for the agriculturist. There is at present excellent pasturage for cattle, and from all that we know 136 Cruise of the ''Alert." of the climate, I see no reason why cereal crops should not flourish. The day, I trust, is not far distant when this part of Western Patagonia will prove a fertile field of labour for the stock farmer and the agriculturist. On the afternoon of the 8th of March we again weighed anchor, and steamed over to the Fitzroy Channel, anchoring for the night at a place in the fair^vay about five miles from the north entrance. Some of our officers were now employed for an hour or two in sounding out the channel, while others, more fortunate, amused themselves by waging war against the brown ducks {Anas cristatd), and black-necked swans {Cygnns nigricollis), which were abundant enough, but more wary than on our first meeting them. I did not see a single specimen of the Cygiins coscoroba. On the western, or Fuegian shore, the recent tracks of a deer were seen by one of our party. We got under way early on the following morning, and after passing through the Fitzroy Channel, recrosscd Otway Water, and re-entered the Jerome Channel. On the south shore of this latter we noticed a large fur seal " rookery" {i.e., breeding place), and stopped to examine it for some minutes. There were about thirty large seals hauled up on the rocks, besides a large number that were swimming about in the adjoining water. Some of those on the rock were hauled up about thirty feet above the sea-level. We fired a shell into their midst at about 800 yards range, which had the effect of making them tumble off hurriedly into the water, where they made a great tumult, turning somersaults and jumping clear out of the water, after the usual manner of fur seals. The seals in this rookery were probably congregated for the hair- shedding season. Later in the evening we reached our former anchorage in Tilly Bay, where we came to an anchor for the night. Swalloiv Bay, wih to 2^tk of March. — We steamed over to this anchorage, which lies a few miles to the west of Tilly Bay, in continuation of our surveying work. A most curious and inte- A Widely- Distributed Fish. 137 resting fish {Neophrynicthys latiis) was here obtained. It was brought to me by one of our seamen, who found it lying dead on the beach, and bearing marks of having been torn by vultures. Of this fish, which was discovered by Mr. Hutton a few years ago in New Zealand, Dr. Giinther says that it only differs from the New Zealand specimen in colouration, and in the presence of small tentacles, which are developed over the eye and on some parts of the body. One day, when paddling round a small rocky islet, we saw perched on a stone, and apparently sleeping, as it remained motionless with bill resting on the stone, a large snipe [Galliuago stricklandi), one of the very few examples of the species which were observed during our cruise. It was shot and preserved. Two mammalians were also obtained at Swallow Bay. One was the common Magellan otter [Lntra fcUnd), the other a nutria [R'lyopotainiis coypii). On March 25th, our supply of coal running short, it was decided to conclude our survey of Magellan Straits, and to proceed north- wards, vi& Smyth's Channel, to Puerto Bueno. There we took on board the residue of a depot of coal which had been made for us during the previous season, and continued to pursue our way northwards, stopping for the nights at various anchorages. On April 2nd, we passed our old cruising ground in the Trinidad Channel, and entered Wide Channel, proceeding from thence vid Indian Reach. As we passed the entrance of Icy Inlet, we saw large patches of loose berg-ice floating tranquilly over its surface, and evidently derived from the glacier at its head. Contrary to our expecta- tions. Eyre Sound was almost clear of ice, only a single small floating piece being seen ; but to repay us for this disappointment we had a fine view of the magnificent glacier at its head. Port Riofrio, yd to lOtk of April. — We were detained for a week at this port, while our surveyors were occupied in exam- ining the rocks and islets of the neighbouring " Covadonga 138 Cruise of the "Alerir Group," of which the survey — commenced by the Chilians — was as yet incomplete. Port Riofrio is situated on the eastern side of Wellington Island, and derives its name from a large moun- tain torrent which pours its water into the bay nearly opposite to the entrance, for which it also forms one of the principal leading marks. On the western side of the anchorage, and form- ing a sort of mighty dam across the valley through which this torrent flows, is a remarkable raised beach, whose brow stretches horizontally from ridge to ridge, its continuity being only broken by a narrow fissure through which the torrent rushes, descending thence by a series of cascades to the sea. Inside this barrier the land slopes gradually but slightly downward to an extensive plateau, which forms the bed of the valley between the two moun- tain ranges. Opinions differed on board as to whether this barrier was a raised beach or an old terminal moraine ; but I inclined to the former view, from the fact of its brow being so regular and horizontal, from its stretching evenly from hill to hill, from the absence of any vestige of lateral moraine on the hill- sides, and from the slight difference in actual level between the brow of the barrier and the general surface of the plain within. It was covered with the usual swampy soil-cap, and the plain was for the most part occupied by an extensive swamp. Here I collected fine fruiting specimens of a handsome velvety moss, Tetraplodon mnioides, of a rich green colour, which I have before alluded to as forming curious tufts on the summits of boulders, on rocky pinnacles, and on the stumps of dead trees. On the shores of this anchorage grew several plants which we had not previously seen in the Straits. Among these was the Mitraria cocciiiea, a climbing shrub, easily recognised by its dark- green glossy ovate-acute leaves, and short tubular scarlet flowers. Another was the Weinmannia trichosperma, a tall erect shrub with serrated pinnate leaves, and jointed petioles winged in a curious rhomboidal fashion. I was in hopes of finding here the beautiful Hymenophyllum crucnttim, which we obtained last year at an island A New Frog — Gray Harbour. 139 in the English Narrows, some miles to the northward, but was disappointed, its range probably not extending so far south. Two animals new to science were here obtained, viz., a small frog of a dirty yellow colour, which has since been described by Dr. Giinther as a new species of " Cacotus" and an Uncinated calamary, which has since been examined by Mr. Edgar Smith, and found to represent a new species, to which he assigns the name " Onycliotcutlus iiigcns" The last-mentioned specimen was found stranded on the beach. The body, from oral aperture to extremity of caudal appendage, measured fifteen inches, and the total length from caudal appendage to anterior extremity of tentacles was two feet nine inches. The tentacular hooks were very formidable. No other example of this species of squid was encountered. Having completed the survey of the Covadonga Group, we again proceeded on our way northwards. On the first night we stopped at Gray Harbour, a port immediately to the northward of the English Narrows. As soon as we had anchored. Lieutenant Rooper and I took advantage of the few reinaining hours of twilight and started off in the skiff, directing our course towards the head of the bay, where a fair-sized river entered the sea. We proceeded up the river for about a quarter of a mile, finding its banks composed of a bluish clay, and passing at its mouth a low triangular island, which seemed to be a delta formed of clay and sand washed down from the hills, and piled up here at the outlet where the fresh water flow was dammed up in a measure by its contact with the sea. On the pebbly shores of the river we picked up several specimens of a pond snail — a species of Chilinia, I believe ; and on working a light dredge in mid-stream, we obtained many more specimens of the same. The location was one eminently suggestive of the haunts of otters, nutria, and water-fowl, but not a solitary animal of the kind was to be seen. The disappointment, however, was one which our experience of similar and equally tempting localities had taught us to be 140 Cruise of the ''Alert:' prepared for. The surrounding country bore recent signs of having been devastated by a great fire, the mountain sides for miles being covered with the charred remains of a dense forest. Owing to its proximity to the English Narrows, Gray Harbour is probably frequently used as a stopping place by passing steamers, whose occupants amuse themselves by firing the forest. It 's rarely indeed in this habitually wet region that the forest is suiificiently dry to allow a fire to spread over any great extent of country. We got under way at an early hour on the following morning (April I ith). It was a fine clear day, and the channels showed to great advantage, so that we were able once more to confirm the remark of old Pigafetta, that in fine weather there is in no part of the world scenerj' more lovely. At about four o'clock in the afternoon we anchored at Hale Cove, a port situated close to the northern outlet of the Patagonian Channels, and here for the last lime we anchored in Patagonian waters. Rain awnings were now stowed away, top-gallant masts were sent up, boats were topped and lashed, and all other requisite arrangements were made for our final departure from the Magellan region, and for encounter- ing the long heavy ocean swell which we were sure to find await- ing us to seaward. I had a run on shore for a few hours before nightfall, and was much gratified at finding two plants which I had not previously met with in these channels. One was a tall branching fern of the genus Alsopliila, whose long slender woody stems, rising obliquely from the ground to a height of six feet, were crowned with a magnificent spray of dark-green glossy fronds. The other was a shrub of creeping habit, probably of the family I'acciiiiacea, with smooth ovate-acute leaves resembling those of the laurel, and bearing clusters of an egg-shaped fruit. No flowering specimens were seen. The trunks of the large trees were clothed with the beautiful fronds of the delicate Hymcnophyllum cruaitum,\\\i\K.\v here grows in great abundance. On the morning Small Pax. 141 of the 1 2th of April we bade a final adieu to the Patagonian Channels. During our passage northwards along the Chilian coast, sea- birds of various kinds hovered round us. Of these our most constant companions were the Cape pigeons {Dapteon Capensis), albatrosses of two species {Diomedea fuliginosa and D. Mclano- phrys), a small storm-petrel {Oceanitcs grallarid), a Fulmar petrel {TJiallascEca glacialoides), and a white-breasted petrel {CEstrdata defippiand). A brown skua {Lcstris antarcticd) appeared on the scene now and then, creating consternation among the smaller petrels. We arrived at Talcahuano, one of the most interesting of the Chilian ports, on the morning of the 20th of April, and were surprised and grieved to hear that a severe epidemic of small pox prevailed at the town of Concepcion, some nine miles inland. The epidemic had begun in January, and we were informed by Mr. Elton, the British Vice-Consul, that since then no less than 1,500 deaths had occurred, the mortality of those attacked having been at the extraordinarily high rate of 90 per cent. Ominous rumours reaching us as to the epidemic having already extended to Talcahuano, our stay was wisely cut short, and the vessel was moved on to Valparaiso, and subsequently after a short stay to Coquimbo. The passage from Valparaiso to Coquimbo occupied two days. As we were sitting at dinner on the evening of the 3rd of May, the officer of the watch reported that the ship was moving through patches of light-coloured stuff resembling shoal water. On going on deck, we saw wavy bands of straw-coloured water, about one hundred yards in length by twenty in width, which were plainly visible through the gloom of the night, the light-coloured patches having distinctly circumscribed margins, which showed out clearly against the surrounding dark water. At the same time, the sea in our wake was brilliantly phosphorescent. On plying the tow- net for a few minutes, I obtained a quantity of entomostracous 142 Cruise 0/ the "AkrC'' crustaceans, and mingled with them a number of milk- coloured annelids, a species of tomopteris, about one-eighth of an inch in length. A fringe of lateral appendages bordered its long, slender body, from whose anterior extremity projected two long antennae, curv'ing gracefully upwards and backwards. There were fifteen pairs of parapodia, the ends of which were furnished with tufts of cirri, which acted as swimming paddles for propulsion. Our stay at Coquimbo this season extended from the 4th of May to the 14th of June, ha\-ing been somewhat prolonged owing to the occurrence of a case of small-pox on board. Our principal amusement consisted in shooting excursions after the golden plover, or " pachuros," as the Chilians call them. These birds frequent the sandy plains, which form an elevated table land, fringing the bases of the coast range of hills. One of our shooting-grounds was on a rather bare plain, encircling the base of a pyramidal hill called the Pan de Azucar, which lay at a distance of about eight miles from Coquimbo. It was a great undulating plain of waste sandy ground, with stunted shrubs growing here and there, but not affording any cover. Walking over it was laborious, for the ground was almost everywhere riddled with the burrows of the upiicertJiia, a sort of ant-thrush, which seems to make extensive underground tunnels in search of insect larvie. I obtained a specimen, and found its stomach crammed full of insects. This bird is smaller than the U. diime- toria, and has a much shorter bill ; moreover, in flying, the secondary feathers, which are of a brick-red colour, are very conspicuous. Sometimes, when walking over a riddled patch of ground, one heard a curious half-smothered " took, took," not unlike the cry of a ctenomys ; and on treading firmly over the place from whence the noise seemed to issue, no sound would be audible for a minute or two, when the same noise would go on again from a place a yard or so away. The bird, of course, had moved along, for the tunnels communicate so that it is able to travel underground over a considerable area. The burrows of Habits of Aid- Thrush. 143 the ctenomys are larger and otherwise different from those now referred to. At the time of our visit the birds were not at all shy, allowing one to approach within a few yards of them. These are gregarious — at least at this time of the year — moving in flocks from place to place over the sandy plain ; and it was sometimes rather astonishing to see a flock suddenly emerge from a number of burrow openings, and rise on the wing from a bare sandy patch of ground, where a moment previously there had been no sign of life. ^ Y'1 \ ll 1.1 yl q^ m~ \ ^W FISH-HOOKS OF ONION ISLANDERS (»«/. 157). CHAPTER VII. TAHITI.— NASSA U ISLAND.— UNION GROUP. WE sailed from Coquimbo on the 14th of June; and after a somewhat uneventful voyage across the Pacific, which was considerably prolonged by sounding operations, and which lasted fifty-three days, we arrived at Tahiti. Tahiti was discovered, in the year 1606, by a Spanish exploring expedition, which set out from Peru under the command of Pedro Fernandez de Quiros, a navigator who had previously acquired some renown in Mendana's exploration of the New Hebrides group. One of his vessels anchored for a short time off the island ; but as a landing could not be safely effected by means of the ship's boats, an adventurous young Spanish sailor stripped and swam to the shore, where he was well received by the natives ; so that the honour of having discovered Tahiti and communicated with the natives is justly due to this expedition. The name then given to the island by Quiros was "La Sagittaria." In 1767 Tahiti was visited by an English exploring ship, the Dolphin, commanded by Captain Wallis, who, unaware of the visit of Quiros, and imagining himself to be the original discoverer, set up an English flag at Matavai Bay, took possession in the name of King George III., and named the island "King George's Island." The account given by Wallis of this visit (published in Hawksworth's "Voyages") is full of most curious and interesting information, and perhaps in this respect equals the well-known WOMAN OF TAHITI (/ I47N \Tl> fMi p. 144- Early History of Tahiti. 145 narrative subsequently given to tlic world by our greatest navi- gator, Cook. In the following year (1768), M. de Bougainville, of the French frigate Boiidense, arrived independently at Tahiti, and, being in ignorance of the priority of Spanish and English explorers, gave to the island its third name, " Nouvelle Cythere." On the 1 2th of April, 1769, the expedition sent out from England under the command of Captain Cook, to observe the transit of Venus, arrived at Tahiti, and anchored at Matavai Bay. To protect the astronomers from the intrusion of the natives, a small fort was erected on the north shore of the bay, and from this position the transit was observed on the 3rd of June of the same year. Through a misconception of the native pronunciation, the name of the island, " Otaheitc," was now brought into general use by Cook ; and although it was clearly pointed out by Ellis — the missionary who wrote in 1832 — that Tahiti was really the native name, the term "Otaheitc," erroneously assigned by Cook, remained in use for many years subsequent to the time of Ellis. About the beginning of the present century the English mis- sionaries, who had previously established themselves in Western Polynesia, extended their labours to Tahiti, where they met with great success in their efforts to Christianize the inhabitants. They retained their influence over the natives until the year 1838, when two French Catholic missionaries arrived at Tahiti, with the intention of preaching the doctrines of their Church. They were not, however, allowed to obtain a footing on the island, but were forcibly expelled. They accordingly sought the protection of the French admiral, Du Petit Thouars, then commanding the frigate La Venus in the Pacific, and in the year 1842 he demanded satisfaction in the name of his government; and on Queen Pomare of Tahiti refusing to accede to his demand, he declared war against the Tahitians. The islanders were compelled to submit to the superior power of the French ; and on coming to terms 10 146 Cruise of the ''Alerts with their conquerors, it was agreed that the Taliitians should be allowed to retain their own form of government, but under a French Protectorate, and that freedom should be given to all persons to practise or preach whatever religion they pleased. The Protectorate continued in force until July i8So, when, at the request of King Pomare V. and the native chiefs, the island and its dependencies were definitely ceded to France, so that they now form an integral part of the French Republic. Our visit to Tahiti took place a few weeks after the French annexation. At daybreak on the 6th August, 1880, we sighted the south-eastern extremity of the island, and on closing the land skirted along its north-east coast, having thus on our port hand a magnificent panoramic view of this lovely island. As we passed abreast of some of the deeper valleys, we got glimpses of the famous Diadem Peak, which rises to an altitude of 7,000 feet. Its summit is jagged, so as to present a very distinct resemblance to a royal crown, and hence the name "crown" or "diadem" so aptly assigned. I was much struck by the resemblance which the scenery here presented to that of Madeira. The conformation of the volcanic peaks and ridges is very similar, but the vegetable covering is of a sap green tint, whereas that of Madeira, seen from a similar distance, appears of a bronze hue. At the distance from the land which the barrier reef obliged us to maintain, the belt of cocoa- nut trees which covers the shore platform was only visible through the telescope. In the harbour of Papi^td, where we anchored, were the French flagship Victoriensc, an ironclad, and a wooden sloop the Dayot. Here we had abundant evidence of the extreme care taken by the French Government to render the harbour and its surroundings as perfect in every respect as a lavish expenditure of money could effect. A solidlj'-built seawall, alongside of which merchant vessels were landing and shipping cargoes, fronted the settlement; a neatly-kept alameda, shaded by the luxuriant foliage of large Hibiscus trees, covered what was formerly the coral foreshore ; A'atives of Tahiti. 147 broad streets running in at right angles to the wharf traversed the town ; a dockyard with spacious sheds and storehouses covered a low point jutting out on the northern side of the harbour ; and on a small picturesque island lying near the entrance was a gun battery nestling under tall cocoa-nut trees, and yet so constructed as not to detract from the romantic appearance of this beautiful and marvellous work of nature. The Tahitians still retain and deserve their old reputation for great amiability of disposition and extraordinary good humour. One is greeted by almost every native passed on the road with the friendly salutation "Yoronha" (meaning "good-day"), accompanied by a merry smile. Indeed, one cannot help being struck by the number of smiling, laughing faces seen at Tahiti, and to my mind there is nothing more charac- teristic of the Tahitians, as distinguished from all other islanders, than the ever smiling face reflecting genuine good humour for which there is no apparent cause. In many respects, however, they seem to have improved but little since the time of Wallis. Morality is still at a very low ebb, and the abuse of intoxicating drinks is an evil which seems likely in time to create sad havoc among them. For unfortunately, since the I'rench annexation, spirit shops have been thrown open to the natives, although, under the old missionary regime, the possession of spirit of any kind was forbidden by the command of Queen Pomare. Of late years the population has been increasing, owing to the abolition of infanticide, which was formerly the fashion of the country. The principal products of the island are cotton, sugar, cocoa- nuts, oranges, and vanilla. These articles are sent to San Fran- cisco, with which port there is monthly communication by means of sailing vessels ; the cocoa-nut trade being perhaps in this, as in most other Polynesian islands, the most reliable industry. Usually the sun-dried kernel, known commercially as "Copra," is exported, but sometimes the nuts are shipped entire. The cultivation of the cocoa-nut tree does not require much trouble. The ripe nuts, if exposed on the ground in places where thev' are free from the 148 Cruise of the '' Alert." depredations of land crabs and centipedes, readily germinate, and on being planted at distances of about five yards apart, they take ■ root and require no further care. However, those plantctl in good soil give, as might be expected, an earlier and more productive yield than is afforded by trees grown in the poor land which usually adjoins the coral sea-beach. A cocoanut planted in average soil commences to bear fruit in about the fifth year of its existence, and from that time until it has attained the age of a hundred years, — when it is probably blown down, — it yields about twelve dozen nuts per annum. A large trade is also done in oranges. They are packed up in boxes and shipped to San Francisco, and although about half of the cargo decaj-s during the voyage, the profit derived from the other half is found to yield a sufificient remuneration. The cultivation of vanilla^an introduced plant — requires great care, artificial aid being necessary to ensure the proper fertilization of the flowers. Samples of the cured bean which we saw seemed to be of very fair quality, and likely to command high prices in the European markets. These are now sold at Tahiti at the rate of 4J. per pound ; — I should rather have said at the rate of a dollar a pound, because, strange to say, the currency at Tahiti is in Chilian silver dollars, whereas in Chili itself the currency is now almost entirely in paper, a hard dollar being very rarel)' encoun- tered there. The great war canoes are now things of the past, even the single outrigger canoes being only used by the poorer classes who cannot afford to buy boats of European build. The manu- facture of pandanus mats and native cloth is also becoming obsolete, and it is said that the art of making these things is almost unknown to the rising generation. At present the favourite occupation of the natives, if we exclude dancing and lolling in the sunshine, is fishing ; and a well-to-do native, who can afford to provide himself with an European fishing net, makes plenty of dollars to spend in drink and gay-coloured clothes. The fishermen FISHERMAN OF TAHtTT- 1 /. I48 Point Venus. 149 of the poorer class paddle out on the reef at night, and spear fish by torchlight as of old, so that every night the reefs outside the harbour are gaily illumined by these torch fires. A few days after our arrival at Papiete, I made an excursion to Joint Venus, the northern extremity of Matavai Bay, in com- pany with a party of our surveying officers, who wished to take sights at this station for chronometric measurements of longitude ; Point Venus being one of the secondary meridians to which lon- gitudes in the Pacific are referred. The distance from Papiete is about six miles. We went in one of the ship's steam cutters, taking a small boat in tow ; and after a somewhat hazardous passage among the reefs, which here form an irregular barrier along the coast, we reached Matavai Bay. We landed easily upon a smooth sloping beach of black volcanic sand — the detritus brought down from the hills by a neighbouring stream ; and while the* observers established vhemselves and their instruments on a grass plot near the base of the lighthouse, I took a stroll into the surrounding country, having at my disposal about five hours. The French keeper of the lighthouse, who was most obliging, pointed out to us a square slab of coral rock imbedded in the ground, and bearing on its surface a deeply-chiselled groove. It was placed there some ten years ago, to replace one which had been fixed there in the year 1839 by Captain Wilkes, of the United States Exploring Expedition, and was, I understand, in- tended to assist in determining the exact position of a submerged coral knoll, some 100 yards from the shore, on which measure- ments were made for determining the rate of growth of the coral. We were also shown a large and venerable tamarind tree near the lighthouse, which is said to have been planted more than 100 years ago by our own great navigator, Cook. Cocoanuts, bread- fruit, oranges, bananas, and mangoes, grew in great profusion, and the greatest and most good-natured eagerness was shown by the natives in putting these delicious fruits at our disposal. Wc also saw a large extent of cleared land devoted to the 150 Cruise 0/ the "Alert:' cultivation of cotton plants, and near one of the native huts vanilla was growing successfully. Nothing could exceed the civility of the natives in pressing food upon us, and in furnishing us with information. . They know very little English, but many of them speak French, which the rising generation are taught in the government schools. In one of the larger and more pretentious style of native huts, apparently that of a district chief, we read a proclamation, printed in French and Tahitian on opposite columns, announcing to the inhabitants the definitive annexation of the island and its de- pendencies ; and, after pointing out in glowing colours the great advantages accruing to the natives from the complete establish- ment of French rule, it wound up with, "Vive la France. Vive Tahiti:' One is much struck by the great scarcity of birds in Tahiti. There are, in fact, not more than six species of indigenous birds, and of these an average day's walk will only afford examples of the swallow ; although in the mountain valleys, paroquets, pigeons, and kingfishers are met with, though rarely. In the course of an afternoon's walk about the environs of Papicte, we were accosted by a portly native dressed in European clothes, who, sitting in a four-wheeled bugg)', and accompanied by three native attendants, pulled up abreast of us. At his feet he had a large demijohn of wine, from which he had evidently been imbibing freely, for by way of salutation he greeted us with a volley of most disgusting oaths and imprecations. This seemed to be all the English he was acquainted with. A bystander in- formed us that the name of this native gentleman was "Tamitao," and that he was no less a personage than the brother of King Pomare V., the present monarch. The latter now only possesses a nominal sovereignty ; for on ceding his possessions to the French, he relinquished all monarchical authority, and receives instead an annual stipend of 8,000 dollars, a pension which, wc were told, would not be continued to his heir. It is said but A Royal Prince — Annexation Fcstiviliis. 151 I know not with what truth, that one of the principal reasons which induced him to sell his birthright was a desire to exclude from the succession his nominal son, whom he believes to be illegitimate. Our conference with the royal brother was not an agreeable one, for he presently gathered up the reins, and amid a volley of imprecations delivered in the coarsest style of Billings- gate English, this tatterdemalion prince of an ancient dynasty flogged his horses into a gallop, and rattled away on his drunken career. On the evening before our departure we were present at a ball which was given at the royal palace by the French inhabitants of Tahiti. It was intended to celebrate the annexation of the island by France, and was supposed to be the occasion for mutual congratulations between King Pomare and his chiefs on the one hand, and the Governor and French Admiral on the other. Pomare was attired in a gorgeous dress richly embroidered with gold lace, and the French officials appeared in full dress. The native chiefs were, however, very shabbily turned out in faded European clothes, and although for the most part very fine men, yet they looked very much as if they were ashamed of them- selves, and were by no means at their ease in the richly-decorated ball-room. Among the quasi chiefs was " Paofai," an old gentleman who did duty as our washerman, wearing a black alpaca monkey- jacket, and carrying under his arm a large white sun-helmet, which he seemingly thought a becoming addition to his otherwise somewhat incongruous attire. He and his confrb-es would have shown to much more advantage in their ordinary native costume. Supper began about midnight, and it was then, and not till then, that the roj'al family and chiefs seemed to flourish in their proper element, the quantity of food and drink which they stowed away in their huge carcases being something prodigious. A few days before the close of our visit to Tahiti, I received, through the kindness of Monsieur Parrayon, captain of the French inan-of-war Dayoi, a large coral of the Fungia group, which had 152 Cruise of the ''Alert r just been removed from the bottom of his ship as the copper was being cleaned by native divers. The occurrence is interesting as illustrating the rapidity of the growth of coral in these waters There was the following history : — The Dayot had entered ths tropical waters of the South Pacific about seven months previously, having come directly from the coast of Chili. She visited some of the islands, but made no long stay in harbour until she reached Manga Reva (Gambler Islands), where she remained for two months in the still waters of a coral basin. On entering this basin, she touched the reef slightly, and without sustaining any damage. From Manga Reva she sailed to Tahiti, where she arrived about the same time as the Alert. Several specimens of living coral were found attached to the copper sheathing, that which I received being the largest. It was discoidal in shape, with its upper and under surfaces respectively convex and concave, and near the centre of the under surface there was a scar, where the pedicle by which it was attached to the copper sheathing appeared to have been broken through. The disc measured nine inches in diameter, and the weight of the specimen, when half drj', was two pounds fourteen ounces. On examining the under surface, another disc, three and three-quarter inches in diameter, was visible, partly embedded in the more recent coral growth. Of this old disc about one-sixth part was dead and uncovered by new coral, and was stained of a deep blue colour from contact with the copper, while the outline of the rest of this old disc was plainly discernible, although partially covered in by plates of new coral. It is probable that on touching the reef at Manga Reva nine weeks previously, a )oung Fungia was jammed against the copper, became attached, and subsequently grew until it attained its present dimensions. About midday of the 27th August we arri\ed off Nassau Island, in latitude 11° 31' S., longitude 165° 25' W. It is of coral formation, about half a mile long by a quarter of a mile Nassau Islajid. 153 broad, and somewhat elliptical in general outline. It was thickly wooded with tall screw pines, rising from a scrub of matted brush- wood, and at the northern end of the island some cocoa-nuts were seen. It was discovered in the year 1835 by an American whale- ship, the Nassau, from which circumstance it derives its name. There were then no inhabitants on the island. When about three miles off we lay to and sounded, getting bottom at 1,000 fathoms, on coral sand. At the same time a party of us started off in a whale boat to land, but this we soon found to be no easy matter, for the island was encircled by a broad fringing reef, on the sharp outer edge of which the surf everywhere broke heavily. Over our heads were flying and screaming great numbers of seabirds, among which I noticed a dusky brown tern with a white forehead patch, and a large brown gannet, of both of which I obtained specimens. While we were vainly looking out for a landing-place, a white man, accompanied by two Polynesians, launched a small outrigger canoe from the reef edge, and paddled out to us. From the white man we learned that the island belonged to a Mr. Halicott, an American gentleman, for whom he had been acting as care-taker for the previous five years, and that he and his native assistants were engaged in planting cocoa-nuts, and hoped in time to do a remunerative trade in copra. There were, he said, only three or four trees bearing nuts, and the bread-fruit did not grow on the island. The present population amounted to six, viz. — the white man and his wife, and two natives from Danger Islands, with their wives. As for live stock, they had only two dogs and two pigs, and regarding the latter our informant remarked, with much con- cern, that they were not in a condition to multiply. For supplies of food, excepting fish, which was of course abundant, he depended on a sailing vessel, which visited the island once a year, bringing rice and meal. Water, fortunately, was plentiful. Continuing on our course, on the following morning (August 28th), we sighted the Tema Reef, in latitude 10" 7' S., longitude 154 Cruise of the ''Alert." 165° 32"5' \V., and steaming up to and around it, we made a series of soundings, which occupied our surveyors for lialf the day. The reef, a submerged one, is indicated by a circular patch of breakers about a quarter of a mile in circumference, from one part of which a long tapering line of surf extends in a north-east direction, making the entire alTair have some resemblance in out- line to a tadpole. A cloud of white spray overhung this great mass of seething water, and the frightful tumble and confusion of the crests of the breakers as they uprose in pyramids twenty feet in height, made one shudder to think of the consequences to an ill-fated vessel striking on this reef. Its position is given correctly on the old charts. On the same evening we passed about four miles to the north- ward of the Danger Islands, a low coral group, which is found to be about si.x miles to the eastward of the position assigned to it on the charts on the authority of the Tuscarora (U. S.) Expedition. In the forenoon of the 3rd September we sighted Fakaata, or Bowditch Island, and some hours later Nukunono, which lies in latitude 9° 24' S., longitude 171° 27' W. These two islands, with Oatdfu, which lies further to the westward, constitute the Union Group. They are all low lagoon-islands. At 3.30 p.m., when abreast of Nukunono, we altered course and stood in towards the land, and when about three miles off observed an outrigger canoe with three men in it, paddling towards us. The crew consisted of one white man and two Polynesian natives. The former came on board, and proved to be a Portuguese, in a very attenuated condition, and sadly in want of provisions. He told us in broken English that he had lived on the island for si.xtccn years, that he was the only white man there, and that the native population amounted to eight}-. A conspicuous white building which we had noticed on the island was, he informed us, a church, presided over by a native missionary teacher, there being at present no clergj-man on the island. He besought us to give some biscuit, salt meat, and nails, for which he tendered payment in dollars, which was of Nukunono — Oatdjii. 1 5 5 course refused ; but his heart was gladdened by a free gift of the stores he required, as well as other useful articles. He said that he very rarely saw any vessels — not more than once in ten months —and that no "labour ships" visited the island. The latter are small vessels whose owners make a living by conveying Polynesian natives to the Australian colonies, where they are employed as labourers, under — usually — a thiee years' contract. The only native production was "copra," which was taken away by trading vessels that made visits at long intervals. Fish were at times abundant, and they had a good many pigs, which were allowed to run wild. The natives, he said, were a very friendly, well-disposed people, of whom we saw two very promising examples in the canoe alongside. We were obliged to get under way after only half an hour's stay, when our Portuguese friend shoved off, heavily laden with presents, and bidding us an affectionate farewell. On the following morning (September 4th) we reached Oatafu, the most westerly island of the group, and the ship was hove to at about three miles distance from that part of the island where the native settlement is situated. A boat was then sent in, from which a party landed, but not without some difficulty, it being found necessary to anchor the boat outside the line of breakers, and obtain the services of a native canoe to bring us through the surf We were received by the natives with every demonstration of good-will, and were at once conducted to the house of the native missionary teacher, who seemed to a great extent to occupy the position of a chief We found the worthy old gentleman seated on a mat in the corner of his hut, a position from which he never stirred during the time of our visit. After drinking cocoa-nut milk, aid e.xchanging some ceremonious remarks with the teacher through the imperfect medium of a native interpreter, we extricated ourselves from the crowd of natives that hemmed us in, and started on a stroll of inspection through the settlement 156 Cruise 0/ the '' Alert r The men are fine specimens of the Polynesian race, well-built, and with frank, open countenances ; but the women are much inferioi to them, both in good looks, and, as it seemed to me, in manners. A great number of both sexes were affected with a rather unsightly skin-disease, evidently of a parasitic character, which they call " pcetcr." It begins on the chest and shoulders in small circular patches somewhat resembling " ringworm," and eventually extends over the entire cutaneous surface, causing desquamation of the cuticle, and giving rise to a very distressing itching. When the disease has become well established, the skin exhibits grooves of the "snail-track" pattern, which intersect each other in various directions ; so that on examining at a few yards distance a man who is extensively diseased, he seems at first sight as if covered with artificial cicatrices, arranged so as to represent some hierogl)'phic device. They possess no remedy for this disease, and were therefore extremely anxious to obtain from us some treatment for it In other respects they seem to be a very healthy people. We crossed the narrow strip of land — only a few hundred yards wide — on which lies the settlement, and then found ourselves on the margin of an extensive lagoon, on the smooth sandy beach of which outrigger canoes in great numbers were hauled up. The island is an irregular atoll, that portion on which we were being continuous for about three-fifths of the circle, while the remaining portion was made up by a straggling chain of islets. During our subsequent stroll through the settlement, I obtained some information from an intelligent native who spoke a little English, and seemed to be one of the principal people. He seemed to be very proud of his small stock of knowledge con- cerning " Britannia," as he called Great Britain, and was very particular in explaining that he was a Protestant, and disapproved strongly of Catholicism, which he looked on as the height of infamy. He was therefore surprised and much crestfallen at hearing that all Englishmen were not Protestants. Religious Scruples. 157 Wc were unable to obtain many curiosities in the way of native implements, as according to the calendar of the island it was the Sabbath day, and was as such strictly observed ; although with us, keeping eastern time and longitude, it was of course a Saturday. However, by a judicious distribution of a few plugs of tobacco, which I emphatically called "presents," and by bestowing on my native friend a surgical lancet, which he was very anxious to possess, I received — also as " presents" — a few implements, viz., a large wooden shark-hook with rope snooding made of cocoanut fibres, a small fish-hook, the stem of which was made of pearl shell and the hook of turtle shell, a fish-hook made of cocoanut husk, neatly carved, and the blade of an old native adze fashioned out of a clamshell. I was very glad to get these articles, for since the introduction of iron tools the ancient stone and shell implements have been thrown away and lost sight of, so that it is now exceedingly difficult to procure any of them. No weapons of any kind are used, and the spear is not used even for fishing. I entered one of the better class of native huts, and found it clean and neatly arranged ; and as in the hut of the missionary teacher, pictures cut from the London illustrated papers were stuck against the walls, and pointed out to us as objects of special pride. The entire population at this time numbered 260, and was presided over until a few weeks prior to our visit by a king. The late monarch, however, having shown himself to be a good-for-nothing sort of person, was deposed by his subjects, who now get on very well without any form of government excepting that of the missionaries. There was one white man living on the island, a Scotchman named Adam Maync, who collects cocoanut-oil on behalf of the firm of Henderson and Macfarlanc, of Auckland. He receives supplies every three months or thereabouts from a trading vessel ; but as the latter was now three months overdue, he was very glad to receive from us a present of biscuit and medical stores. The Christianizing of the island has been undertaken b\^ the 158 Cruise of the "Alert,' London Missionary Society, who send at long intervals a mis- sionary clergyman to inspect the settlement, and confer with their delegate, the native missionary. The natural products are very limited, consisting solely of cocoanuts and fish. The latter commodity abounds. Pearl shell is obtained, but not in sufficient quantities to be an article of commerce. Adam Mayne told us that sharks were very numerous, and were caught with the hook and line ; but no case had ever occurred of a native being injured by them, although they were accustomed to swim in the open sea outside the reef, a fact of which we ourselves had ocular proof. At the same time, curiously enough, many instances had occurred at the Windward Islands, Nukunono and Fakaata, of natives being taken down by sharks. Turtle are ocasionally caught, and of these the shell of the carapace is used for making hooks for fishing, which native-made hooks are, by-the-bye, preferred to our English ones. Indeed, they say that the fish will not take our metal hooks at all. On the afternoon of the same day (September 4th) we again got under way, and continued on our course to the westward, fixincr the positions of islands and taking negative soundings frequently. On the 13th of September we obtained soundings on the Lalla Rookh bank in latitude 13° 5' S., longitude 175° 26' W. the depth ranging from twelve to seventeen fathoms. With the snap-lead a sample of the bottom was brought up, consisting of a lump of dead coral incrusted with red nuUipores, and riddled in all directions by the borings of annelids. CH APTE R VIII. FIJI AND TONGA. THE harbour of Levuka, in which we anchored on the iSth of September, is situated on the north-east side of the island of Ovalau, and from its central position in the Fiji Group has for several years been the principal seat of commercial .activity and the favourite anchorage for men-of-war. Since the annexation in 1875, Levuka has been the seat of government for the colony, and the official residence of the High Commissioner for the Pacific. During our stay in harbour the ship was refitted and reprovisioncd, and our boats were occupied in making some additions to the survey of the port. A few days after our arrival I received a visit from the youngest son of the redoubted King Cacobau, a fine-looking man, twenty- three years old, whose proper designation is the " Ratu Joseph Celua" (" Ratu" meaning prince), but who is more generally known in Fiji as " Ratu Joe." It seems that soon after we had anchored, he came on board accompanied by some other native sight-seers, and as I had then shown him some slight civility, he now came to express his gratitude by presenting me with a large mat, made from the split leaves of the screw-pine. He surprised us all by speaking exceedingly good English, and possessing an intimate knowledge of the ways and manners of civilized life. It appears that when Fiji was ceded to Great Britain in 1875, he was taken to Sydney, in H.M.S. Dido, to be l6o Cruise of the '^Aleri." educated, and accordingly spent three years at the university there. There was no topic of general interest on which he did not possess a fair amount of knowledge. He wore his hair in the fashion of the country, /.t-. in a mop frizzled out to an immense size, and in other respects he was got up as a native chief of distinction. He spoke favourably of British rule, although, as we were otherwise informed, he himself had recently acquired a practical experience of the unpleasant consequences attending the commission of an indictable offence, in having to undergo a sentence of three months' hard labour. On the 25th of September a party of us made an excursion in one of the ship's steam-cutters to Bau, the old native capital of the Fiji Group. \Vc started from Levuka harbour at nine o'clock in the morning, accompanied by our friend the Ratu Joe, who most kindly and hospitably volunteered to pilot us over, and to entertain us in his hut at Bau. We steamed along in smooth water inside the barrier reef which, protects the S. E. side of Ovalau for about three miles, when we passed out into the open sea through a narrow opening in the reef. We then steamed for about five miles through deep water, until we entered an intricate system of channels which wind among the submerged reefs extending across the Strait between Ovalau and Viti Levu. The distance from Levuka to Bau is about twenty-four miles, and after a pleasant passage of five hours we reached our destination and anchored the boat in smooth water at about forty yards from the shore. After deposit- ing our baggage in Joe's hut, we went in a body to pay our respects to King Cacobau the "Vunivalu" (kingly title mean- ing the "Root of War"), to whom we were formally introduced by Joe, the latter also acting as interpreter, for Cacobau docs not speak English at all. We were received in a small smoky hut, in which the aged monarch spends most of his time during this, the cold, season of Fiji. He seemed to be a feeble old man, aged about seventy, and almost entirely blind, yet evidently possessing <> <> King Cacobau. i6i his mental faculties in full vigour, for he put to us many shrewd questions concerning the work of our ship, and then, after a pause, during which he seemed to be pondering over her name, asked if we could give him some information regarding her previous work of exploration in the Arctic regions. On this subject he seemed to take much interest, and like many other people, did not fail to put the rather puzzling question as to what could be the use of exploring the uninhabited and inhospitable polar regions. During the conference he sat cross-legged on a large mat, crouching over a smoky wood fire. His hair was grey, and his upper teeth seemed to be gone. From time to time messengers came into the hut, who after assuming a respectful posture on the floor, asked for his orders concerning various municipal affairs. To these function- aries his replies were short, sharp, and decisive, and were acted upon with such alacrity that it was fully evident to us that he still retains no small part of his former control over his subjects.* It happened, by chance, thaC on the day of our arrival at Bau, a feast was to be given by Cacobau to a tribe of natives who had just brought to him a tribute offering, consisting of eighteen large green turtle. As we were landing we saw the feast, which con- sisted of eight good-sized pigs roasted whole, and several huge piles of yams, spread out on a sort of common outside the en- closure of the native town ; but on the king being apprised of our visit, he gave orders that the feast was to be transferred inside the town palisades, and it was accordingly removed and spread out on the grass in front of the small hut wherein he received us. Then, at a signal from him, conveyed in the form of a fierce growl delivered from his seat by the fire, the members of the stranger tribe assembled round the roasted pigs, which were quickly cut up into joints, and then carried by certain representatives of the tribe into various huts, to be there quietly consumed. During all this time the large trough-shaped wooden drums, called " Lalis," * The news of Cacobau 's death has just reached England (April 1883). "Cacobau" is pronounced ' Thackombow." II 1 62 Cruise of the "Akrf" were being vigorously sounded to summon the people to the feast. Subsequently the old king shook himself together, came out from the hut, and standing in the open surrounded by a large and picturesque assemblage of his subjects, and assisted by his three big sons, distributed large rolls of " tapa" (native cloth made from the inner bark of the paper mulberry) to several leading person- ages of the strange tribe. These presents were valuable, for some of these pieces of " tapa " measured eighty yards in length by about one yard in width. About two months before the time of our visit, there had been a great fire at Bau, which destroyed and reduced to ashes about one-third of the town, and compelled some of the inhabitants to move over to the main island of Viti Levu. Among the buildings destroyed by this fire was the great Bure Kalou, or native temple, where even so recently as thirty years ago the great cannibal feasts used to take place. Close to one angle of the square mass of earthwork on which the temple was raised, we saw a stone slab projecting from the ground in a nearly upright position. This was one of the famous stones — incorrectly stjlcd " sacrificial " against which the unfortunate people who were to be cooked for " bakola " (human meat) had their brains dashed out. This inter- esting relic of cannibalism has not escaped the ravages of modern vandalism, numerous fragments having been chipped off as curios. Indeed, wc were told that quite recently one of the white traders of Levuka had been endeavouring to carry off this stone alto- gether, with a view to making money by exhibiting it at Sj'dney and such places. We saw another and somewhat similar stone near the water side, and close to the remains of the Bure Kalou of the tribe of fishermen, where the bodies of prisoners of war, brought in by the " Lasikaus," or fishermen, were landed and mutilated. The upright slab was worn quite smooth on one side, presumably by the friction of human heads. Certain honeycombed slabs of coral here formed a pavement Double Canoe. 1 63 of a few square yards in extent, and until recently it was usual to find human teeth imbedded in the pores of the coral. They have probably all been removed by curiosity hunters, for we looked in vain for a single specimen. In a few years hence the old Fijian double canoe (consisting of two canoes placed side by side, and connected by a bridge) will be seen no more ; but we were lucky in having an oppor- tunity of seeing one good specimen at Bau. It was hauled up on a slip beneath a large thatched shed, and although by no means one of the largest of its kind, yet it greatly exceeded my expectations. The depth of hold was about five feet, so that standing on the bottom of either canoe, my neck was just on a level with the edge of the hatch, and the total length of each canoe was 72 feet ; but what most surprised me was the enor- moijs size of the mast, which lay alongside the vessel. It was about the size of the Alert's spanker boom. This canoe was intended to carry 250 men, and I have no doi'.bt it would hold that number. Single outrigger canoes are still largely used. We saw several in course of construction on the small recessed slips which indented the sea-wall of the island. The genuine old native implements and weapons are now getting very scarce, the demand for these articles in Europe having created a trade which has almost exhausted the supplies of the country. I inquired for stone adzes, and, after some difficult)-, obtained one, for which I paid a shilling ; but on subsequently groping for myself amongst the ruins of the burnt huts, I succeeded in finding several perfect and imperfect specimens. In the evening we witnessed the ceremony of angoiia drinking in the king's state residence, where our friend the Ratu Joe pre- sided on this occasion instead of his father. The performance began with a long monotonous chant, which was maintained alternately by an elderly man, who seemed to hold the office of master of the ceremonies, and by a body of elderly men, amounting 1 64 Cruise of the ^' Alert." to forty or fifty, who squatted close together on the floor. In the meantime some boys were engaged in a gloomy corner of the hut in chewing the angona root, and in spitting the pulpy masticated mouthfuls of fibre into the large wooden bowl which was destined to contain the liquor. Suddenly the chant ended with a simultaneous and abrupt clapping of hands on the part of the singers ; and now the angona bowl was brought forward into the clear space in the centre of the room, water was poured over the chewed pulp, and finally the liquor was rudely strained by sponging it up with a handful of hibiscus fibre, and filling the drinking cup with the squeezed contents. Great respect was throughout shown to Joe, the presiding chief; and on his emptying the bowl of angona, which was handed to him solemnly by the cupbearer, all the natives exclaimed in a loud \o\ct," Atnadtha" (meaning, "It is emptied "). Subsequently similar draughts were politely handed to each of us guests by the official cupbearer, but notwithstanding the historic interest attaching to this famous South Sea beverage, and the impression made on us by the great concourse of native dignitaries gathered together in solemn awe, few of us were inclined to imitate the chief's example and do justice to the flowing bow-1. However, we tasted it, and thought it rather nasty, giving one the idea of a mixture of pepper and soapsuds. The Fijians spoke very favourably of British rule, and it would seem that the Governor (Sir Arthur Gordon) had ver>' wisely and successfully adopted the policy of retaining, so far as was practi- cable, the old native laws, only modif\ing them as much as was necessary' for the establishment of a reasonable degree of civiliza- tion. Thus the old feudal power of the chiefs has been retained, and in man\- instances those among them who were well-behaved, and displayed a suitable amount of administrative ability, have been invested with magisterial power over the districts to which they belong. We slept for the night in Joe's hut, stretching ourselves out on Across Ovalau — Livoni. 165 the mats which covered the floor, and excepting a little trouble from mosquitoes, were comfortable enough. Our return journey to Levuka on the following evening was accomplished without any incident worthy of note. Some days later, I took part in a walking excursion across the island of Ovalau, accompanied by Mr. Parr, an English gentleman residing in the colony and the owner of a large plantation in the Rewa River district of Viti Levu, and under the guidance of two natives, who carried our small parcels of baggage. Starting from Levuka on the morning of the 30th of September, we proceeded up the Totoonga Valley, which stretches inland from the back of the settlement, and after about two hours' hard walking, discovered that our guides had lost their way, and had brought us up to the summit of a thickly-wooded conical hill. Here, however, we were compensated for our disappointment by finding several graves of the Kaicolos, an old hill-inhabiting tribe of Fijians, who for a long time held out against the aggressive policy of Cacobau.and struggled vainly to maintain their independence. We had now to descend from this hill to the main valley below, from whence our guides made a fresh departure, by means of which we were enabled, after a stiffish climb up the face of a rather steep hillside, to attain a ridge 1,700 feet high, which separates the watersheds of the east and west sides of the island. After a brief stay here, we descended the other side by a steep and almost obliterated track for about three hours more, when we reached Livoni, the site of an old Kaicolo stronghold. Here, amid the ruins of the town, we found a farmhouse of recent con- struction, the property of a Mr. McCorkill, who had obtained a three years' lease of the land, and was about to try his hand at stock-farming. He had two hundred head of cattle, for which he obtained a ready sale at Levuka, but the difficulties of transit were considerable, and he did not seem hbpeful as to the success of his enterprise. He was, moreover, appreh ensive that his house, which was built close to the bank of a mountain torrent, was on a 1 66 Cruise of the *-'A!erf." rather insecure site, and that the next heavy flood in the rainy season would sweep away ail his household belongings. He pointed out close to his own house the characteristic raised foundations of an old native temple (Bure Kalou), and told us that his workmen, in clearing the ground for his garden and paddock, frequently turned up human skulls and other bones. He also very kindly promised to send me some Kaicolo crania on the first opportunity ; a promise which he amply redeemed some weeks later by presenting me with two excellent specimens. After a short stay in his house, and refreshed by a drink of delicious milk, we continued our walk down this valley, following the course of the river, which, as we advanced, rapidly increased in size, and pursued so sinuous a course that we were obliged to cross and recross it five or six times before we arrived at Burcta — a native village on the west side of Ovalau — which we gained just before nightfall. A further walk of about a mile brought us to the residence of a friend of Mr. Parr's (Captain Morne), a retired merchant captain, and now the owner of a large estate, by whom we were most hospitably entertained and lodged for the night. This gentleman was doing a large trade in pine-apples, of which he has about twenty acres under cultivation. He sends the produce periodically to Sydney by steamer, pacl