On Wednesday The Twelfth September, Having Got To About 150 Leagues West
Of Ferro, They Discovered A Large Trunk Of A Tree, Sufficient To Have Been
The Mast To A Vessel Of 120 Tons, And Which Seemed To Have Been A Long
Time In The Water.
At this distance from Ferro, and for somewhat farther
on, the current was found to set strongly to the north-east.
Next day,
when they had run fifty leagues farther westwards, the needle was observed
to vary half a point to the eastward of north, and next morning the
variation was a whole point east. This variation of the compas had never
been before observed, and therefore the admiral was much surprised at the
phenomenon, and concluded that the needle did not actually point towards
the polar star, but to some other fixed point. Three days afterwards, when
almost 100 leagues farther west, he was still more astonished at the
irregularity of the variation; for having observed the needle to vary a
whole point to the eastwards at night, it pointed directly northwards in
the morning. On the night of Saturday the fifteenth of September, being
then almost 300 leagues west of Ferro, they saw a prodigious flash of
light, or fire-ball, drop from the sky into the sea, at four or five
leagues distance from the ships towards the south-west. The weather was
then quite fair and serene like April, the sea perfectly calm, the wind
favourable from the north-east, and the current setting to the north-east
The people in the Nina told the admiral that they had seen the day before
a heron, and another bird which they called Rabo-de-junco[1]. These were
the first birds which had been seen during the voyage, and were considered
as indications of approaching land.
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