Survey of the Coast-line.

In the earlier portion of the work, i.e., north of latitude 24°, the work on the coast-line was confined to the fixation of prominent points such as spurs and tips of islands. Some of these were fixed as intersected points during the triangulation, while others were determined by observing the depression angle and azimuth to them from trigonometrical stations of known altitude. In this latter method, taking the mean coefficient of refraction as 0·13, the formula[78] employed was

d = 35·497 (θ − √ θ2 − 11621 h )

where d = distance in metres, θ = depression angle in seconds, and h = altitude of station in metres. This formula is rather tedious to work out, though the work is relatively not so great if a number of points are to be calculated from observations at the same station. Prominent points having been fixed in this way, the coast-line north of 24° was sketched in from the Admiralty Chart, adjusting the longitude to fit the points fixed.

It was sometimes a little difficult, however, to identify the fixed points on the existing charts, and hence I tried to find some process of surveying the entire remaining coast-line de novo in detail. Traversing along the coast was placed out of question by the great expenditure of time and money which it would have entailed. Eventually I was led to devise a new method, by which long stretches of coast-line could be mapped by polar co-ordinates from mountain stations with great speed and accuracy. The directions of a series of points sufficiently close together along the coast were taken by theodolite, and the depression angles simultaneously observed with the vertical circle. Then, instead of computing the distances to the points, they were plotted by a special scale graduated directly in angles of dip; by thus doing away with all calculation at the station, it was possible to lay down the points on the chart as fast as the observations could be taken, usually at the rate of four or five points a minute, and it was frequently possible to map thirty kilometres or more of coast-line in an hour with great accuracy. As I have given a full account of this new method in a separate publication,[79] I shall not go into it further here, but would refer those interested to the publication just mentioned.

With the aid of the new method the entire coast-line from just north of Ras Benas southwards to the parallel of 22°, a distance of over 200 miles, was mapped in detail on the 100,000 scale. I had frequent opportunities of testing the accuracy of the delineation of the coast, both by mapping the same stretch from two widely-distant stations of different heights, and by subsequently surveying small portions of the coast directly by plane-table and tacheometer from triangulation points on or near the coast; and in all cases I found the accuracy to be very high, the differences found rarely exceeding the thickness of a line on the map. The tides in the Red Sea are so small in range (generally only about a metre) that variations of sea-level were practically negligible during the operations. Bearing in mind the great difficulties attending the survey of so inhospitable a coast by the ordinary method of traversing, I believe the resulting outline of the coast on my maps is very much more correct than that shown on any previous charts. An accurate delineation of the coast-line in this region is of course chiefly of value as indicating the extent of land; it is of little importance to the navigator, for whom the positions of the outlying dangerous reefs, mapped by the Admiralty surveyors, are far more important.

Location of the Administrative Boundary between Egypt and the Sudan.

By an Arrêté of the Ministry of Interior issued in 1902 it was enacted that the boundary between the administrative divisions of Egypt and the Sudan should be as follows:—

Commencing at Bir Shalatein on the coast of the Red Sea, the limit runs to Bir Meneiga, thence to Gebel Niqrub, thence to Gebel Um el Tiur and to Deiga. From Deiga the line continues to Bir Esmet Omar, thence to Gebel Bartazuga, and finally to the Nile at Korosko.

This frontier was defined after a commission had sat, at the Mudiria of Aswân, to make enquiries as to the vested rights of the Bedouin tribes, the guiding principle being that all Bisharin tribes should be under Sudan administration, and all Ababda tribes (with one exception) under the Government of Egypt. A map accompanied the decision, but was of a very rough character, and the positions of the points specified were not known within several miles.