Page:Narrative of a survey of the intertropical and western coasts of Australia, Volume 2.djvu/551

 there ie another gnus almost equ11 di; which hoer, on e No.*west Cot rud to e Th is oa, whose mimum is cery in N Sou Wales, in and ond the pie, u   d ery in e in  e co, tng a]  �e souem extmi  Van Diem's d. Our v !imid knowled of the H of i9 vt ut (exfin of a p et of 1onOtude o,  included n e parallels of 31' d 3 in N South Wales) Is enfi!y confined to e vegefion of i immedh sho, un ery distinct cot of which, in, more or less equent, d under vaous cidre- duces, have b ed; ough of , ve esid= able ons remain unexplored, d of' the llne of We t, (pearly so dominated,) e shores of She's Bay, and some few pa sou of it, have alone been titleally investing. e indoor within e opic re ntlrel in obscuty the connen deft of a t of iar ss having a dist source, to aid a penefion  the internal parts o the cot, ther wi oer effectual obscles, draw at prent a veil, d orbid  reh in its Nal Histo d charr, which will not  removed for ve eonsidele riods (rhaps ) et to me  It w the genes] remark made during a former dition in e in.riot of ew Sou Wes, that no ab- lutely entire change es place in the vemfion east of e meri&an of e new setdement nam thurst; but that the p!an of the cot were more or less frequent at �hundred d 6y mi! from e sea, ough in a eount estimad at aut two thousd feet ave i level. Havin to this circumsce added a rarkable and obvio samens (sing from  extsi

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