Page:Narrative of a survey of the intertropical and western coasts of Australia, Volume 2.djvu/291

 266 A. distinct islds, aid pethaps ns many more, for We Were not 8act. If. wiin tweJve miles  them. On the prcipi . t LINN PAK,  lamde  4 3 ,  1oat t. 1; it  seven or eight hundd ft high. b on n ]r Isld than y to  ud; it hundred d one feet high. e gr e islands; it is sedated om e next  the now by n anl five mi wide. In the   NT LAND, a rekable rock, risg abtly sea to the height ff elev hundr a ' feet. e rthern oup ff the Cumland ls are high d apter to be betr fushed with wo,  than e southern oups, partieully  the wem s. e principal ak,'in !atitade 2 lff lff' d Io 148  SS , is fiea hundr d elghty-r ft high, aud aituad on e lgest island, which is ten miles long, from three  nine broad: it h ser bays on eider d off i outh-eastem end are four small islds yond em is a ran of rky iale. e isld o( is fge is the exemi  e Isds, as well as e uo-e k  Psage: it fos a high, bluffnt,  la longitude 148 �3, d is of bold amh: on wsm side of e isld are me low isle. REPUTE AY is a dp gM; i shor �e hills rise to a went ight. e oxity w not disety traced, but it h pro.re, n ni i that a fresh-r rivulet may  found; and re may be a communication wi mbe Bay.

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