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Fig. 28 — The Grand Piton, on the southwest coast of St. Lucia, where it is adjoined by the cliff-margined mud flow; looking northwest. The Petit Piton rises in the background.

Fig. 8 — Center Hill, on the northwest coast of Montserrat, showing the deeply incised inner valleys between sharply serrated ridges, the moderately dissected lower slopes, and the low cliffs of the shore. The higher cliffs in the left foreground are part of Silver Hill, Fig. 6.

Fig. 44 — The embayed island of Tortola and the near-by islands (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 3904).

Fig- 33 — The highest headland cliffs on the east coast of St. Lucia; the village of Dennery occupies a beach in the left foreground. An important sugar plantation lies on a delta plain between the low ridge in the middle distance and the higher ridge in the background.

Slope of a group of young volcanoes; looking northwest and north.

Fig. 56 — The western end of St. Croix at Fred

Fig. 24 — Cliff and stack of southernmost Martinique.

PL. IX — Mont Carbet and the cliff spur ends of Martinique, looking east.

Fig. 25 — The embayed and cliffed coast of southwestern Martinique (from British Admiralty Chart No. 371).

Fig- 53 — The embayed southeast coast of Grenada (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart No. 1316)

Fig. 3 — One of the Saints, south of Guadeloupe, with moderately cliffed headlands between well-developed drowned-valley embayments; looking west

Fig. 16 — Nevis, as seen from the southwest. The young cone is built are seen in Saddle and Cone mountains.

Fig. 27 — The mud flow of southwestern St. Lucia, by which several to the main island.

PL. VII — St. Kitts.

Fig. 19 — Morne au Diable (from U. S. Hydrogr. Office Chart N0. 1318).

Subdued volcanic mounts, formerly independent islets, are now attached

Fig. 18 — Morne au Diable, a maturely dissected volcano at the northern end of Dominica.

Fig. 61 — The subdued mountains of volcanic rocks in the southwestern quarter of Antigua. No shore cliffs are seen here.

Fig. 22 — Cliffed headlands of southwestern Martinique.

Fig. 62 — The subdued spurs on the south side of Willoughby Bay, southeast coast of Antigua, seen from a ridge on the north side of the bay. The slight amount of cliff cutting on the spur ends is notable.