[126] See Francisco de Bolaños' explicit mention of the white cliffs in Drake's Bay as prominent landmarks (Wagner, Drake's Voyage, p. 498, n. 19). See also Davidson, "Identification of Sir Francis Drake's Anchorage," p. 31. Richard Madox refers to the California anchorage as "Ships Land," perhaps the name given to the place by the sailors themselves.
FOOTNOTES TO APPENDIX I.:
[A-1] Henry R. Wagner, Sir Francis Drake's Voyage around the World (San Francisco, 1926), p. 241.
[A-2] Ibid., pp. 287, 289.
[A-3] The World Encompassed account of Drake in California is reprinted in [Appendix II], below. It is printed in full in Volume XVI of the Hakluyt Society publications (ed. W. S. Vaux; London, 1854). The Famous Voyage is easily accessible in Drake's Plate of Brass, California Historical Society, Special Publication No. 13 (San Francisco, 1937), pp. 27-30.
[A-4] Wagner, Drake's Voyage, pp. 229 ff., n. 1.
[A-5] Ibid., pp. 61, 147, 245, 290.
[A-6] O. M. Dalton, "Notes on an Ethnographical Collection ... Formed during the Voyage of Captain Vancouver, 1790-1795," Internationale Archiv für Ethnographie, Vol. X. (Leiden, 1897), p. 235. A. L. Kroeber says, "The passage is a somewhat prolix mixture of narration and depiction...." (Handbook of the Indians of California, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bull. 78 [Washington, D. C., 1925], pp. 275-276).
[A-7] For details see Zelia Nuttall, New Light on Drake, Hakluyt Society, ser. 2, Vol. 34 (London, 1914), pp. 18-23. See also Wagner, Drake's Voyage, pp. 328-334.
[A-8] Nuttall, New Light on Drake, pp. 50-51.