Page:A Voyage to Terra Australis Volume 1.djvu/201

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East Coast, & V.D.'s Land.]
INTRODUCTION.
clxxix

Flinders
and Bass.
1798.

supplement was taken to the south, and gave the latitude 43° 27½′. A steep head which lies N. 79° E. four or five miles from the South-west Cape, then bore S. 74° W., three miles;[1] whence the latitude of the Cape should be 43° 29′, which is 10 less than given by captain Furneaux, and 8′ by captain Cook. This difference naturally excited some suspicion of an error in the observation, and I measured the supplement in the same manner on the following noon, when it gave 2′ 40″ less than the latitude determined by D'Entrecasteaux in Storm Bay. The South-west Cape is therefore placed 2′ 40″ further south than my observation gave it; that is, in latitude 43° 32′.[2] The longitude of the Cape, from the observations taken off Rocky Point and brought forward by the survey, would be 145° 47′; but its situation in 146° 7′, by captain Cook, appears to be preferable: D'Entrecasteaux places it in 146° 0′.

The nearest land, at noon, was a steep head bearing N. 66° E., one mile and a half; and between this, and the head which bore S. 74° W., the shore forms a sandy bay four miles deep, where it is probable there may be good anchorage, if two clumps of rock, which lie in the entrance, will admit of a passage in. After taking
  1. This head opened round the Cape at E. 14° N., magnetic, the sloop's head being E. by N.; and shut at W. 20° S., when the head was north. In the first case I allow 3½° east variation, and in the last, 8°; which makes them agree as nearly as can be expected from bearings taken under sail.
  2. Captain Furneaux says (in Cook's second Voyage, Vol. 1. page 109), that on March 9, 1773, at noon, the South-west Cape bore north, four leagues; and by referring to the Astronomical Observations, p. 193, I find that his latitude was 43° 45⅔′, which would place the Cape in 43° 33⅔′; nevertheless the captain says it is in 43° 39′, and it is so laid down in his chart. The observation by which captain Cook appears to have fixed the South-west Cape, is that of Jan. 24, 1777, at noon; when he says, "our latitude was "48° 47′ south" (Third Voyage, Vol. 1. p. 93). But the Astronomical Observations of that voyage shew (p. 101), that the observed latitude on board the Resolution was 43° 42½′; which would make the Cape in 43° 32½′ south. I consulted captain King's journal at the Admiralty, but found no observed latitude marked by him on that day.