Fig. 52 Diamond Island, a cliffed stack in the southern Grenadines. |
Fig. 7 Montserrat (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 1011). |
Fig. 65 The Island of St. Bartholomew (from British Admiralty Chart No. 2038). |
Fig. 21 An embayed and cliffed part of the east coast of Dominica (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 1318). |
Fig. 51 Cannouan Island, one of the Grenadines (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 1640). |
Fig. 20 The southwestern coast of Dominica. |
Fig. 66 The Island of St. Martin (from British Admiralty Chart No. 2038). |
Fig. 48 Cockroach Island, northwest of St. Thomas, looking north. |
Fig. 45 The embayed island of Virgin Gorda (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 3904). |
Fig. 20 The southwestern coast of Dominica. |
PL. III The younger volcanic cones of Montserrat. |
Fig. 47 Cockroach Island, northwest of St. Thomas, looking east. |
Fig. 9 Statia (from British Admiralty Chart No. 487). |
Fig. 44 The embayed island of Tortola and the near-by islands (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 3904). |
PL. XV Island of St. Thomas: north coast from the crest, looking northeast. |
Fig. 3 One of the Saints, south of Guadeloupe, with moderately cliffed headlands between well-developed drowned-valley embayments; looking west |
Fig. 27 The mud flow of southwestern St. Lucia, by which several to the main island. |
Fig. 5 A rough outline of the residual island of Redonda, north of Montserrat; looking north. |