[Journals Of Expeditions Of Discovery Into Central Australia And by Edward John Eyre]@TWC D-Link book
Journals Of Expeditions Of Discovery Into Central Australia And

CHAPTER XVIII
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For eight miles we traced round the beach to the most north-westerly angle of the Bight, and for two miles down its south-west shore, but were then compelled by the rocks to travel to the back, through heavy scrubby ridges for four miles; after which we again got in to the beach, and at one mile along its shore, or fifteen miles from our camp, we halted for the night, at a patch of old grass.

The afternoon had been hot, but the night set in cold and clear, and all appearance of rain was gone.

The native I had sent on before had not succeeded in getting a fish, though he had broken one or two spears in his attempts.
April 28 .-- After travelling along the beach for two miles we ascended behind the cliffs, which now came in bluff to the sea, and then keeping along their summits, nearly parallel with the coast, and passing through much scrub, low brushwood, and dwarf tea-tree growing upon the rocky surface, we made a stage of twenty miles; both ourselves and the horses greatly tired with walking through the matted scrub of tea-tree every where covering the ground.

The cliffs did not appear so high as those we had formerly passed along, and probably did not exceed from two to three hundred feet in elevation.

They appeared to be of the same geological formation; the upper crust an oolitic limestone, with many shells embedded, below that a coarse, hard, grey limestone, and then alternate streaks of white and yellow in horizontal strata, but which the steepness of the cliffs prevented my going down to examine.
Back from the sea, the country was rugged and stony, and every where covered with scrub or dwarf tea-tree.


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