Fig. 59 Ideal section of an atoll. |
Fig. 15 Nevis (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 1011). |
Fig. 4 Part of one of the Saints (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 362). |
Fig. 21 An embayed and cliffed part of the east coast of Dominica (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 1318). |
Fig. 14 Basseterre, the chief town of St. Kitts, on the shore |
Eriksted, showing the absence of shore cliffs. |
Fig. 41 The eastern end of St. Thomas and the western end of St. John (from U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey Chart No. 905). |
Fig. 51 Cannouan Island, one of the Grenadines (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 1640). |
Fig- 55 A lightly cliffed headland on the north coast of St. Croix. |
Fig. 17 The northern side of Nevis, looking east. |
Fig. 49 Diagram of a partly submerged cliff. |
Fig. 20 The southwestern coast of Dominica. |
Fig. 63 Rough plan of part of the west coast of Antigua, showing slightly cliffed headlands and beach-filled bays. |
Fig. 61 The subdued mountains of volcanic rocks in the southwestern quarter of Antigua. No shore cliffs are seen here. |
Fig. 66 The Island of St. Martin (from British Admiralty Chart No. 2038). |
Fig. 48 Cockroach Island, northwest of St. Thomas, looking north. |
PL. II The uplifted limestone island of Marie Galante. |
PL. VIII Isolated residual hills in the passage between St. Kitts and Nevis, looking east. |
Fig. 31 The low cliffs of the mid-west coast, St. Lucia. |