[Federal Register Volume 69, Number 46 (Tuesday, March 9, 2004)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 11064-11124]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 04-4744]



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Part II





Department of Commerce





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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration



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50 CFR Part 660



Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; Fisheries Off West Coast States and in 
the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Annual 
Specifications and Management Measures; Final Rule

  Federal Register / Vol. 69, No. 46 / Tuesday, March 9, 2004 / Rules 
and Regulations  

[[Page 11064]]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 660

[Docket No. 031216314-4068-02; I.D. 112803A]
RIN 0648-AR54


Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; Fisheries Off West Coast States 
and in the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Annual 
Specifications and Management Measures

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: NMFS issues this final rule to implement the 2004 fishery 
specifications and management measures for groundfish taken in the U.S. 
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off the coasts of Washington, Oregon, and 
California. This final rule includes the levels of the acceptable 
biological catch (ABC) and optimum yields (OYs). The commercial OYs 
(the total catch OYs reduced by tribal allocations and by amounts 
expected to be taken in recreational and resource survey compensation 
fisheries) in this rule are allocated between the limited entry and 
open access fisheries and between different sectors of the limited 
entry fleet. Management measures for 2004 are intended to: Achieve but 
not exceed OYs; prevent overfishing; rebuild overfished species; reduce 
and minimize the bycatch and discard of overfished and depleted stocks; 
provide equitable harvest opportunity for both recreational and 
commercial sectors; and, within the commercial fisheries, achieve 
harvest guidelines and limited entry and open access allocations to the 
extent practicable.

DATES: The amendments to 50 CFR part 660 are effective March 1, 2004, 
except for amendments to Sec.  660.370, which are effective April 8, 
2004. These specifications and management measures are effective from 
March 1, 2004, through December 31, 2004.

ADDRESSES: Copies of the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) 
for this action are available from Donald McIsaac, Executive Director, 
Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council), 7700 NE Ambassador Place, 
Portland, OR 97220, phone: 503-820-2280. Copies of additional reports 
referred to in this document may also be obtained from the Council. 
Copies of the Record of Decision (ROD), final regulatory flexibility 
analysis (FRFA), and the Small Entity Compliance Guide are available 
from D. Robert Lohn, Administrator, Northwest Region (Regional 
Administrator), NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way, NE., Seattle, WA 98115-0070.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Yvonne deReynier or Becky Renko 
(Northwest Region, NMFS), phone: 206-526-6150; fax: 206-526-6736 and; 
e-mail: [email protected], [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Electronic Access

    The final rule also is accessible via the Internet at the Office of 
the Federal Register's Web site at http://www.access.gov/fr/index.html. 
Background information and documents are available at the NMFS 
Northwest Region Web site at http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/1sustfsh/gdfsh01.htm and at the Council's Web site at http://www.pcouncil.org/groundfish/ gfspex/gfspex04.html.

Background

    A proposed rule to implement the 2004 specifications and management 
measures for Pacific Coast groundfish was published on January 8, 2004 
(69 FR 1380). NMFS requested public comment on the proposed rule 
through February 9, 2004. During the comment period on the proposed 
rule, NMFS received four letters of comment, which are addressed later 
in the preamble to this final rule. See the preamble to the proposed 
rule for additional background information on the fishery and on this 
final rule.
    The Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (FMP) requires 
that fishery specifications for groundfish be biennially or annually 
evaluated and revised, as necessary, that OYs be specified for species 
or species groups in need of particular protection, and that management 
measures designed to achieve the OYs be published in the Federal 
Register and made effective by January 1, the beginning of the fishing 
year. To ensure that new 2004 fishery management measures were 
effective January 1, 2004, NMFS published an emergency rule announcing 
final management measures for January-February 2004 (69 FR 1322, 
January 8, 2004). Annual specifications for 2004 and management 
measures for March-December 2004 were proposed in a separate rule, also 
published on January 8, 2004 (69 FR 1380).
    Specifications and management measures announced in this final rule 
for 2004 are designed to rebuild overfished stocks through constraining 
direct and incidental mortality, to prevent overfishing, and to achieve 
as much of the OYs as practicable for more abundant groundfish stocks 
managed under the FMP.

Comments and Responses

    During the comment period for the 2004 specifications and 
management measures, which ended on February 9, 2004, NMFS received 
four letters of comment. Three of these letters of comment addressed 
different portions of the proposed rule and were received from: a non-
governmental organization representing environmental interests, the 
California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG), and the Council. NMFS 
also received a letter of comment from a non-governmental organization 
representing trawl vessel operators that, in part, addressed the 
proposed rule. Comments received on the proposed rule are addressed 
here:
    Comment 1: In November, we asked the Council's Groundfish 
Management Team (GMT) to calculate whether the trawl trip limits could 
be increased given that 91 limited entry trawl vessels were to be 
removed from the fleet by early December. We asked for a 200 percent 
increase in trawl trip limits, but we have seen only a token increase 
for the first quarter of the year. We demand that the current trawl 
trip limits be overturned so that the trawl fleet can have higher trip 
limits immediately.
    Response: In December 2004, NMFS bought 91 trawl vessels and their 
limited entry permits out of the West Coast groundfish fisheries. The 
funds for this purchase were provided by a Congressional appropriation 
and will, in part, be re-paid by the fishing fleets affected by the 
reduction in number of participants (groundfish trawl, pink shrimp 
trawl, Dungeness crab trap/pot).
    At the November 2003 Council meeting, several groundfish trawlers 
had made comments on the Council floor that they would appreciate a 
NMFS review of 2004 trawl trip limits in light of the expected trawl 
permit/vessel buyback program. These trawl fishery participants 
believed that the vessel/permit buyback program would successfully 
reduce capacity in the fleet enough to warrant an increase in trawl 
trip limits.
    After hearing the trawl industry's comments, Council members 
suggested that NMFS look only at increasing trip limits for the Dover 
sole, shortspine thornyhead, longspine thornyhead, sablefish (DTS) 
complex species. DTS

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complex species tend to aggregate for spawning in the winter and may be 
taken in the winter with lower bycatch of overfished species. Also, DTS 
are deepwater species and fishing for these species usually occurs 
offshore of the ranges of overfished continental shelf species.
    Following the Council meeting, the NMFS Northwest Fisheries Science 
Center (NWFSC) looked at the historic fishing effort of each of the 
vessels removed from the groundfish trawl fishery through the buyback 
program. NMFS then calculated the amount of each DTS species that would 
likely be taken by the remaining fleet operating under the trip limits 
initially recommended by the Council for 2004. Based on that 
calculation, NMFS expected that the now-reduced fleet would take 
notably less of each of the DTS species than if the buyback program had 
not occurred. NMFS then calculated expected harvest by the reduced 
fleet if the agency were to implement DTS trip limits that were 50 
percent higher than those recommended by the Council in September 2003. 
Under that scenario, the reduced fleet operating with increased trip 
limits was still expected to harvest less of each DTS complex species 
(sablefish--63 percent, longspine thornyhead--77 percent, shortspine 
thornyhead--74 percent, Dover sole--72 percent) than the whole fleet 
would have harvested with the initially recommended trip limits. NMFS 
further expected that the reduced fleet operating with increased DTS 
trip limits would still take smaller amounts of overfished species than 
the whole fleet would have taken with the initially recommended trip 
limits.
    Given the expected DTS catch levels under a 50 percent increase in 
trip limits, however, it is clear that a 200 percent increase in trip 
limits would have allowed the current fleet to exceed even the expected 
harvest levels of the pre-buyback fleet. NMFS, the Council, and its 
advisory bodies will have several opportunities during the 2004 fishing 
season to review the effects of the buyback's effort reduction on the 
current fleet's expected harvesting behavior. Thus, NMFS will implement 
for March-April the 50 percent-increased DTS trip limits it had 
proposed and expects that the Council's 2004 inseason management 
process will accommodate any trawl trip limit increases that may be 
possible through the remainder of the year.
    Comment 2: With Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW), 
Oregon trawlers have developed a small footrope trawl net design with a 
cutback headrope. Nets of this design can catch flatfish while avoiding 
encounters with most roundfish. If fishermen are using a conservation 
tool, the cutback headrope trawl, they should be allowed to have higher 
trip limits than those currently set for small footrope trawl vessels.
    Response: Many flatfish species are abundant and support important 
Pacific Coast groundfish fisheries. Flatfish species such as Dover 
sole, petrale sole, English sole, rex sole, and arrowtooth flounder 
have historically been caught by vessels using trawl gear in depths of 
50-150 fathoms (91-274 meters). Many of these areas are within the 
Trawl Rockfish Conservation Area (RCA) where fishing with bottom trawl 
gear is prohibited.
    In 2001 and 2002, ODFW worked on developing a trawl net design with 
a cutback headrope that was intended to be more selective for flatfish 
species while resulting in lower catch rates of overfished rockfish 
species. (A trawl net with a ``cutback headrope'' is one in which the 
curve of the headrope away from the trawl tow lines is deeper than the 
curve of the footrope away from those same lines.) During this 
research, ODFW scientists contracted commercial fishing vessels and did 
comparative testing between the new net and net configurations that are 
typically used in the fishery. Significant reductions in the catch of 
overfished rockfish species relative to flatfish catch were observed in 
hauls where the new net was used. Because this net design meets the 
requirements of small footrope bottom trawl gear as defined by 
regulations at 50 CFR part 660, it has the potential to become an 
effective way for fishers to reduce the bycatch rates of overfished 
rockfish species in the flatfish fisheries.
    To understand how the new net performed under normal commercial 
fishing conditions, further testing was necessary over a broader range 
of the fishery. In 2003, ODFW and CDFG applied for and were issued 
exempted fishing permits (EFPs) to collect data needed to measure the 
selectivity of the new trawl net design when used by commercial 
fishers. Vessels fishing under the EFP were allowed to operate in the 
Trawl RCA. To encourage participation, increased trip limits for 
flatfish were available to the vessels that were willing to modify 
their existing gear or purchase new gear that was consistent with the 
design requirements and who were willing to carry an observer or 
sampler on board their vessel during all EFP fishing. For 2004, ODFW, 
CDFG and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) have applied 
for EFPs to collect additional data that can be used to assess the 
selectivity of the new net over a broader range of areas.
    Because 2003 was the first year in which data was collected through 
the use of EFPs, and because the EFP fishing did not end until October 
2003, a full assessment of the selectivity of the new net under normal 
fishing conditions was not available at the Council's June and 
September meetings, when the 2004 management measures were developed. 
When the data analysis is completed and made available to the Council 
and NMFS, consideration may be given to measures like differential trip 
limits for users of lower bycatch gear that further the management 
objectives defined under the FMP.
    Comment 3: When a vessel carries an observer on board, the vessel 
should be allowed to exceed its trip limits for each species by the 
amount of discard estimated for that species. Species with low trip 
limits or ``no-take'' species should not be discarded, but should be 
landed for scientific purposes and then processed and sold. Fish 
discarded because the vessel operator is highgrading his catch of a 
particular species in order to retain only the highest-priced size fish 
of that species should be retained and donated to charity.
    Response: The West Coast Groundfish Observer Program (WCGOP) is a 
scientific observation program intended to collect data from fishing 
vessels operating in a normal mode of fishing. If vessels were 
essentially permitted to take higher limits than those targeted by 
unobserved vessels in the fleet, then the observed vessels would not be 
operating in a normal fishing mode. Data from those vessels' activities 
would then be less useful as a snapshot of the fishing behavior of the 
fleet as a whole. Additionally, vessel operators would lack incentives 
to develop methods to reduce their discards if they could simply retain 
their overages and profit from them. In order to implement the program 
described in the comment, NMFS would have to place an observer on every 
vessel and the agency does not now have, nor does it anticipate having, 
funds to deploy observers on every vessel. The feasibility of a 
regulations allowing full retention of rockfish species is under 
examination through EFP programs. If the results of these EFP programs 
show that a full retention program can be implemented and effectively 
monitored, full retention regulations that meet the scope of Federal 
groundfish management objectives may be adopted for specific portions 
of the groundfish fleet.
    Observers already retain scientific samples from overfished and 
other

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groundfish species that would have otherwise been discarded. At-sea 
sampling is preferable to at-dock sampling because the fish are not yet 
mixed in the hold and can be identified with a particular tow/haul, 
noting location, depth and other haul-defining data. Data that can be 
identified to a particular haul generally provide better quality 
information than when fish are sampled from a delivery comprised of 
several different hauls, which may be from different fishing locations.
    Landings overages are currently confiscated by the states and such 
fish may be sold to the benefit of the state or donated to charity. 
NMFS' preference, of course, would be to reduce incentives for 
highgrading, rather than encouraging highgrading through allowing 
landings of size-related discards. To that end, NMFS has recently 
announced a new EFP application from ODFW to examine revisions to the 
market categories of key target species such as Dover sole, sablefish, 
thornyheads, and rockfish (February 2, 2004, 69 FR 5837.) NMFS 
currently supports bycatch donation programs in the at-sea whiting 
fisheries, and through EFPs in the shore-based whiting fishery and the 
arrowtooth and other flatfish trawl fisheries.
    Comment 4: The harvest levels NMFS has proposed for nearly all of 
the overfished species fail to comply with the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery 
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) at 304(e)(4)(A) 
because they do not rebuild these species within the shortest period 
possible.
    Response: NMFS believes that the OY levels specified for overfished 
species in this final rule are consistent with the legal requirements 
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and with the national standard guidelines. 
The Magnuson-Stevens Act does not state that rebuilding must be 
completed in the shortest time possible, rather it requires the time 
for rebuilding to be as short as possible, taking into account certain 
factors. The Magnuson-Stevens Act, section 304(e)(4)(A), and the 
national standards guideline at 50 CFR 600.310(e)(4)(A) recognize the 
following factors that enter into the specification of a time period 
for rebuilding: The status and biology of the stock or stock complex; 
interactions between stocks or stock complexes and the marine 
ecosystem; the needs of fishing communities; recommendations of 
international organizations in which the U.S. is a participant; and 
management measures under an international agreement in which the U.S. 
participates.
    According to the national standard guidelines at 50 CFR 
600.310(e)(ii)(B)(2), if the year the stock would be rebuilt in the 
absence of fishing (TMIN) is 10 years or less, then the 
specified time period for rebuilding may be adjusted upward to the 
extent warranted by the needs of fishing communities and 
recommendations of international organizations in which the U.S. is a 
participant. However, the rebuilding period may not exceed 10 years 
unless international agreements that the United States is a party to 
dictate otherwise.
    Of the nine overfished groundfish stocks, lingcod was the only 
species in which TMIN was estimated to be 10 years or less. 
As permitted by the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the national standard 
guidelines, the needs of the fishing community were taken into 
consideration when the rebuilding period for lingcod was established. 
It should be noted that the difference between the TMIN 
rebuilding year of 2007 and the TTARGET rebuilding year of 
2009 intended to be achieved by these harvest specifications is just 2 
years.
    According to the national standard guidelines at 50 CFR 
600.310(e)(4)(ii)(B)(3), if TMIN is 10 years or greater, 
``then the specified time period for rebuilding (TTARGET) 
may be adjusted upward to the extent warranted by the needs of fishing 
communities and recommendations by international organizations in which 
the U.S. participates, except that no such upward adjustment can exceed 
the rebuilding period calculated in the absence of fishing mortality, 
plus one mean generation time or equivalent period based on the 
species' life-history characteristics (TMAX).'' No harvest 
specifications have been set such that they would allow rebuilding 
periods for any of the other overfished species to exceed 
TMAX.
    Comment 5: The harvest levels NMFS has proposed for overfished 
species conflict with NMFS's ``Technical Guidance on the Use of 
Precautionary Approaches to Implementing National Standard 1 of the 
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act'' (Technical 
Guidance). They conflict with the Technical Guidance because that 
document directs the agency to select harvest levels that have at least 
a 90-percent probability of rebuilding before TMAX and that 
result in a rebuilding period no longer than the midpoint between 
TMIN and TMAX.
    Response: The Technical Guidance has been provided by NMFS ``for 
those aspects of scientific fishery management advice that have 
biological underpinnings, such as the response of fish to exploitation. 
The drafting team recognizes that there are many other important 
aspects to managing fisheries, such as socioeconomic factors, which are 
key to defining optimum yield, and which Fishery Management Councils 
must consider.'' As such, the Technical Guidance does not direct NMFS, 
but rather makes suggestions on how to use scientific information to 
implement the policy guidance of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the 
national standard guidelines to achieve the biological goals of 
national standard 1.
    The Technical Guidance at page 38 suggests addressing uncertainty 
with the guideline that ``rebuilding plans be designed to possess a 50-
percent or higher chance of achieving BMSY within 
TTARGET years, and a 90-percent or higher chance of 
achieving BMSY within TMAX years.'' Harvest 
levels finalized by this action have been set such that overfished 
species would have a 50-percent chance of achieving BMSY 
within TTARGET years. However, only harvest levels for 
darkblotched and yelloweye rockfish have been set such that their 
rebuilding plans would have a greater than 90-percent chance of 
achieving BMSY within TMAX years. Each species 
was considered individually in its species-specific rebuilding 
analysis.
    As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule for this action 
(69 FR 1380, January 8, 2004,) the rebuilding measures for the 
remaining overfished West Coast groundfish species except whiting have 
the following probabilities of achieving BMSY within 
TMAX years: Pacific ocean perch (POP), 70 
percent; canary rockfish, 60 percent; lingcod, 60 percent; bocaccio, 
[ge]70 percent; cowcod, 55 percent, and; widow rockfish, 60 percent. 
NMFS will discuss whiting and its probability of achieving 
BMSY in a separate Federal Register document once the 
Council has reviewed and discussed the recently completed whiting stock 
assessment, and has recommended whiting ABC and OY levels for 2004. 
These probabilities of rebuilding and the harvest levels associated 
with them were set to achieve rebuilding, but also to acknowledge that 
these species are usually taken with other, co-occurring and more 
abundant species. OY levels for overfished species are set to allow 
some level of fishing for the more abundant stocks that co-occur with 
overfished species. At the same time, management measures such as 
conservation areas are set to minimize opportunities for the vessels 
targeting more abundant stocks to intercept overfished species. This 
approach to multi-species management is consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Act and

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meets the criteria in the Act at section 304(e)(4) and the national 
standard guidelines at 600.310(e)(4)(ii).
    According to the national standard guidelines at 50 CFR 
600.310(e)(4)(ii)(B)(3), if TMIN is 10 years or greater, 
``then the specified time period for rebuilding [TTARGET] 
may be adjusted upward to the extent warranted by the needs of fishing 
communities and recommendations by international organizations in which 
the United States participates, except that no such upward adjustment 
can exceed the rebuilding period calculated in the absence of fishing 
mortality, plus one mean generation time or equivalent period based on 
the species' life-history characteristics [TMAX].'' While 
the Technical Guidance at page 38 suggests that TTARGET be 
set no higher than the midpoint between TMIN and 
TMAX, adopting that as a binding criterion in all cases 
would not be consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act. It would not be 
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act because it would not allow the 
criteria in the Act at section 304(e)(4) and the national standard 
guidelines at 600.310(e)(4)(ii) to be taken into account. For further 
discussion on this issue, see the preamble to the Amendment 16-1 final 
rule (69 FR 8861, February 26, 2004.)
    Comment 6: NMFS has proposed to implement a new and greatly 
increased harvest level for bocaccio that is based on a new stock 
assessment and a series of assumptions that are not precautionary. NMFS 
has also unreasonably rejected the proposal of the State of California 
that the 2004 OY for bocaccio be 199 mt rather than 250 mt, claiming 
that bocaccio will be managed to a 199 mt catch level.
    Response: The assertion that the proposed harvest of 250 mt is 
``not precautionary'' is not supported by the evidence. Of the three 
rebuilding scenarios (modeled using STARb1, STARb2 and STATc) 
considered in the assessment, a 250 mt harvest is associated with a 70 
percent probability of successful rebuilding within the prescribed 
timeframe in the worst of the three cases (STARb2). Thus the proposed 
harvest level is actually precautionary in two ways. First, the 
probability of rebuilding within TMAX is at least 70 
percent, which is substantially higher than the minimum required 
probability level of 50 percent, and second, because this harvest 
policy is based on the worst case scenario, two out of the three 
rebuilding scenarios place the probability at even greater than 70 
percent.
    The proposed OY is larger than previous OY levels. The new OY, 
however, is based on the most recent (2003) stock assessment results. 
This assessment incorporates the most recent fishery and survey data, 
and revises some aspects of the stock assessment model, including the 
assumed rate of natural mortality. The assessment was peer reviewed 
both by a panel of experts and by the Council's Scientific and 
Statistical Committee (SSC), and constitutes the best currently 
available science. To base the proposed OY on previous assessments that 
do not include the most recent data would violate the Magnuson-Stevens 
Act requirement (section 301(a)(2)) to use the best available 
scientific information.
    The Magnuson-Stevens Act, section 304(e)(4)(A), and the national 
standard guidelines at 50 CFR 600.310(e)(4)(A) recognize a number of 
factors that enter into the specification of a time period for 
rebuilding, including: the status and biology of the stock or stock 
complex; interactions between stocks or stock complexes and the marine 
ecosystem; the needs of fishing communities; recommendations of 
international organizations in which the U.S. is a participant; and 
management measures under an international agreement in which the U.S. 
participates.
    NMFS believes that choosing the Council-preferred alternative is 
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements (including 
section 301(a)(2) requiring a basis of the best scientific information) 
and is a reasonable and precautionary accommodation that meets both 
biological needs of the stock for rebuilding and the needs of the 
fishing communities.
    Comment 7: NMFS has proposed to implement a widow rockfish OY with 
only a 60 percent probability of rebuilding and has ignored any OY 
options with a higher probability of rebuilding success. Moreover, the 
harvest alternatives that NMFS considered for widow rockfish are 
misleading and confusing because they are based on different modeling 
assumptions. These assumptions suggest that a higher level of fishing 
harvest would result in faster rebuilding of the species, which is 
plainly untrue.
    Response: Stock assessments report on the health of a stock and 
include information used to maintain or restore stock size. Stock 
assessments include information about the biology of the species as 
well as information about the fishing activities on the stock. Fishery 
independent data contributes valuable biological information to the 
stock assessment, including age structure of the stock, trends in 
abundance, mortality rates, growth rates, and spawning behavior. 
Reliable fishery dependent data, including sufficient landings and 
effort data can be used to detect changes in the relative abundance of 
the stock, but with less certainty than when fishery independent data 
are available. When a stock assessment is conducted, stock assessment 
scientists must use the best available information to estimate the most 
suitable values for inclusion in the stock assessment model.
    Because widow rockfish are commonly caught with mid-water trawl 
gear, not the bottom trawl gear that is used for the triennial bottom 
trawl survey, fishery data has been used for the stock abundance 
indices. However, reduced trip limits and other fishery restrictions 
have resulted in little and non-comparable fishery data being available 
for the years after 1999. The absence of a fishery independent stock 
size index and the lack of reliable fishery dependent data indices of 
stock size are limiting factors in assessing the status of widow 
rockfish.
    To address data deficiencies and modeling uncertainties, a range of 
model scenarios based on different groupings of the following three 
variables were prepared and presented to the Council and its advisory 
bodies: (1) Whether recruitment should be pre-specified for 2003-2005 
based on a midwater juvenile trawl survey, (2) the methods by which 
future recruitment estimates should be generated, and (3) what range of 
power coefficient should be used to analyze the midwater juvenile trawl 
survey. As described in the proposed rule preamble, the SSC considered 
the different model scenarios and identified a preference for a model 
scenario in which recruitment was pre-specified and a stock recruitment 
relationship was also used. The SSC recommendation narrowed the model 
scenarios to three (identified as models 7, 8, and 9 in the rebuilding 
analysis). The SSC discussed the use of power coefficients to estimate 
juvenile indices, but concluded that the different values were equally 
likely, leaving no statistical basis for choosing among them. The SSC 
did, however, determine that there was a biological basis for 
recommending a power coefficient range between 2.0 and 4.0.
    Growth of the spawning stock biomass depends on the rate at which 
juvenile fish mature and enter the fishery (recruitment) as well as the 
applied exploitation rates. The range of accepted models produce 
different expected levels of future recruitment and will result in 
different levels of expected growth in the spawning stock. This range 
of reasonable values was

[[Page 11068]]

reviewed by the SSC and Stock Assessment Review panels as the best 
available information. A more conclusive determination was not possible 
with the available data.
    The simplicity of the commenter's statement that modeling 
assumptions suggest that a higher level of fishing harvest would result 
in faster rebuilding of the species fails to recognize how recruitment 
levels influence the results. Plausible higher future recruitment 
levels support both faster rebuilding and a higher level of fishing 
harvest during rebuilding. The reverse assumptions would apply for 
lower levels of recruitment.
    The Council considered three OYs based on each of the three model 
scenarios (7, 8, and 9) with the application of a fishing exploitation 
rate for 2004 that corresponded with a 60 percent probability of 
rebuilding the stock to BMSY by 2042 (TMAX). For 
2004, the Council recommended the mid-range OY of 284 mt with a 
corresponding ABC of 3,460, with a target rebuilding date 
(TTARGET) of 2037. Given the complexity in identifying the 
most suitable model, NMFS believes that holding TMAX and 
TTARGET constant to those applied in 2003 was reasonable, 
particularly considering that Amendment 16-3, which will provide a 
rebuilding plan for widow rockfish, will be prepared through the 
Council in early 2004 and considers a full range of rebuilding 
probabilities.
    Comment 8: NMFS has proposed to increase the fishing rates for POP 
and darkblotched rockfish, which would delay rebuilding of these 
species. Maintaining the previous catch rates would have rebuilt these 
species faster. The increase violates the Magnuson-Stevens Act 
requirements to rebuild species as quickly as possible.
    Response: The proposed rule for the 2004 fishery specifications and 
management measures, which was published on January 8, 2004, contained 
revisions to the harvest control rules for POP and darkblotched 
rockfish from what had been published in the Amendment 16-2 proposed 
rule on December 5, 2003 (68 FR 67998). The POP rebuilding parameters 
published in the Amendment 16-2 proposed rule were based on a 2000 
stock assessment that resulted in a target rebuilding year of 2027 and 
a harvest control rule of F=0.0082. The 2004 OY presented in the 
proposed rule to implement the 2004 fishery specifications and 
management measures was based on a new stock assessment prepared in 
2003. Because POP rebuilding parameters such as the unfished biomass 
and BMSY were updated with the new stock assessment, the POP 
harvest control rule was revised to F=0.0257 from F=0.0082. However, 
the target rebuilding year (2027) is the same as was announced for POP 
in the Amendment 16-2 proposed rule. Similarly, the darkblotched 
rockfish rebuilding parameters in the Amendment 16-2 proposed rule were 
based on a 2000 stock assessment that had resulted in a target 
rebuilding year of 2030 and a harvest control rule of F=0.027. The 2004 
OY presented in the proposed rule to implement the 2004 fishery 
specifications and management measures was based on a new stock 
assessment that was prepared in 2003 and results in the same target 
rebuilding year (2030) as was announced in the Amendment 16-2 proposed 
rule for the darkblotched rockfish rebuilding plan. However, because 
other rebuilding parameters such as the unfished biomass and 
BMSY were updated with the new stock assessment, the harvest 
control rule was revised to F=0.032 from F=0.027. Based on the new 
stock assessments, there were modest increases in the harvest rates for 
these species and harvest levels in 2004 are higher than in 2003. 
Nonetheless, the projected times for rebuilding for these species have 
not changed. Although the stock may rebuild faster if the harvest rates 
had been held to the same rates as in 2003, that is not required by the 
Magnuson-Stevens Act, as explained above in the response to Comment 4. 
The Magnuson-Steven Act does not state that rebuilding must be 
completed in the shortest time possible, rather it requires that time 
for rebuilding to be as short as possible, taking into account certain 
factors. NMFS and the Council considered the appropriate factors 
discussed in the response to Comment 4, above, in setting the 2004 
harvest levels.
    Comment 9: NMFS has not given proper consideration to the effect of 
Pacific whiting harvest on other overfished species, presumably because 
NMFS has yet to decide on the 2004 whiting OY. NMFS cannot reasonably 
conclude that its proposed management measures will be sufficient to 
constrain the mortality of overfished species that co-occur with 
whiting if it does not yet know the whiting harvest levels.
    Response: A new whiting stock assessment and rebuilding analysis 
will be available to the Council at its March 2004 meeting in Tacoma, 
Washington. The upcoming whiting stock assessment incorporates 
additional fishery dependent data collected since the last stock 
assessment, and new fishery independent data from the 2003 
hydroacoustical survey and pre-recruit survey work. These added data 
points are expected to provide much needed information both on changes 
to the spawning stock biomass since the 1999 year class began entering 
the fishery, and on potential future whiting recruitment.
    In anticipation of the new stock assessment and given the small 
amount of whiting that is typically landed under trip limits prior to 
the April 1 start of the primary season, the Council delayed adoption 
of a final ABC and OY until the results of the new stock assessment and 
rebuilding analysis are available at its March 2004 meeting. The 
Council will recommend the ABC and OY in March and it will be 
implemented through a final rule that is separate from the final rule 
for the rest of these groundfish specifications and management 
measures.
    In anticipation of the new assessment, the Council considered and 
the EIS analyzed a range of ABCs and OYs that were expected to 
encompass results of the new stock assessment. This range was 
consistent with historical values. The four ABC and OY options 
considered by the Council were: an ABC of 94,000 mt with an OY of 
74,100 mt, which represents 50 percent of the 2003 ABC and OY; an ABC 
of 188,000 mt with an OY of 148,200 mt, which was the 2003 ABC and OY; 
an ABC of 282,000 mt with an OY of 222,300 mt, which is 50 percent 
greater than the 2003 ABC and OY; and an ABC of 325,000 mt with an OY 
of 250,000 mt, which was a value recommended by the Council. The 
Council recommended a preferred OY of 250,000 mt to accommodate 
possible high end estimates that could result from the 2004 stock 
assessment, while recognizing the limitations that incidental catch of 
widow rockfish is likely to have on harvest levels of whiting.
    NMFS believes that proper consideration was given to the effect of 
Pacific whiting harvest on other overfished species. In June 2003, the 
Council asked the GMT to review widow rockfish bycatch in the whiting 
fishery. At the September Council meeting (Exhibit C.6.0 Supplemental 
GMT report 3), the GMT reported that historical data from 1998-2002, 
indicated that the availability of the whiting OY would likely need to 
be constrained to around 120,000 mt to stay within the widow rockfish 
OY of 284 mt. The 2004 alternative scorecards presented in the Draft 
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) (Tables 2.2.2-1, 2.2.3-1, 2.2.4-
1, and 2.2.5-1) display the estimated mortality for each overfished 
species resulting from the alternative whiting OYs. The scorecard

[[Page 11069]]

for Council's preferred alternative estimates the amount of each 
overfished species, except widow rockfish, that would be taken by the 
whiting fishery participants under the medium OY of 148,000 mt. For 
widow rockfish, the maximum availability of this species to the whiting 
fisheries was identified as being 200.5 mt regardless of the whiting OY 
from the new assessment. The impacts of the alternative whiting OYs 
were also discussed in section 4.2.1.2 of the DEIS, with particular 
attention being given to the impacts on widow rockfish.
    The 2004 management measures adopted for overfished species were 
designed to result in total mortality levels that are lower than that 
species' OY, which effectively creates an OY buffer. Providing this OY 
buffer for overfished species will allow for flexibility in 
establishing a whiting OY while reducing the risk of exceeding an OY. 
Because scorecards are updated throughout the year as new information 
becomes available, the estimates of the incidental catch of overfished 
species will be adjusted when the final whiting OY is adopted, and will 
be updated as necessary during the fishing year. Whiting is a unique 
fishery in that it is a mid-water trawl fishery, takes little bycatch, 
and has a high level of catch monitoring (in 2003, nearly 100 percent 
of the hauls were sampled in the at-sea processing fishery and about 30 
percent of the shore-based landings were sampled). NMFS believes that 
the 2004 management measures, including the use of OY buffers and 
inseason adjustments, will be sufficient to keep the mortality of 
overfished species that co-occur with whiting within the established 
OYs. If NMFS finds that the final OY recommendation for whiting is 
significantly different from the range of OYs that was analyzed in the 
DEIS, new information addressing the impacts will be provided. When 
approving the final OY for whiting, NMFS will ensure that the projected 
harvests of overfished species will not exceed their OYs.
    Comment 10: NMFS has failed to give adequate consideration to past 
levels of actual fishing catch in setting the 2004 harvest 
specifications. NMFS has failed to assess and disclose the total levels 
of fishing mortality for overfished species in 2002 and 2003, which 
means that it and the public lack the information necessary to 
determine whether lower harvest levels might be necessary to compensate 
for past overharvests. Without this information, NMFS also does not 
know whether the proposed management measures for 2004 are likely to 
keep fishing mortality at or below the necessary levels.
    Response: NMFS develops and implements the annual specifications 
and management measures through a notice-and-comment rulemaking and 
with a National Environmental Policy Act analysis, such as an EIS. For 
the 2004 fisheries, the Council began much of its work in April 2003 
and finalized its recommendations in early September 2003. NMFS 
published its proposed rule to implement the 2004 specifications and 
management measures on January 8, 2004, and will make this action final 
by March 1, 2004.
    NMFS, the State fisheries agencies, and the Council monitor 
fisheries landings inseason. Commercial fisheries landings are 
monitored by a fish ticket system managed by the three States. State 
fish ticket data is compiled by the Pacific States Marine Fisheries 
Commission (PSMFC). Estimated commercial landings amounts are provided 
to the agencies and the public via the Pacific Fisheries Information 
Network (PacFIN), which has its Web site at http://www.psmfc.org/pacfin. Fish ticket data available through PacFIN are not up-to-the-
minute. For example, if a person were to check the PacFIN Web site on 
March 15th for total coastwide catch of widow rockfish, the estimates 
available would not include all widow rockfish landed up through March 
14th. Depending on State funding and staffing levels, groundfish 
landings may be recorded in PacFIN anywhere from several days to a few 
months after the landings have been made. For this reason, fishery 
managers must estimate current landings levels of a particular species 
by extrapolating what we know has already been landed out to an 
estimate based on several different variables, such as past harvest 
rates in particular months, number of vessels participating in the 
fishery in those months, etc. With the time delays in this landings 
monitoring system, the Council making its recommendations in September 
2003 and even NMFS finalizing its decision in March 2004 would not have 
fully up-to-date landings information from the 2003 commercial 
fisheries. For this reason, the December 2003 FEIS for this action 
based its analyses on the more complete landings estimates from 2002 
and prior years. The partial 2003 data that was available at the time 
that the analysis was conducted would not have accurately depicted 2003 
annual landings.
    In this comment, the commenter refers to fishing ``catch,'' not to 
fishing landings. The State fish ticket system and PacFIN monitor 
commercial fisheries landings. These systems do not include fish taken 
at sea and lost or discarded. While NMFS monitors total catch levels 
through at-sea observer sampling programs, the agency does not have the 
staff, funding, or technology to monitor the thousands of trawl tows 
and trap and longline hauls that result in the fishery's total 
commercial catch. Instead, NMFS monitors a portion of the commercial 
fleet through observers and extrapolates total catch for the fleet 
based on modeling observer data with fish ticket and other data. In the 
preamble to the proposed rule for this action, NMFS described a bycatch 
model that is used both pre-season to develop management measures and 
inseason to modify management measures. This model is a ``total catch'' 
model, i.e. it calculates the total expected catch, not just fish that 
are actually landed. The model is updated annually with new WCGOP data. 
Observer data from the 2001-2002 fisheries was used to develop 2004 
management measures and discard estimates. NMFS just completed its 
analysis of 2002-2003 WCGOP data (http://www.nwfsc.noaa.gov/research/divisions/fram/Observer/), and that analysis will inform the Council's 
inseason management for 2004, and development of the 2005-2006 fishery 
specifications and management measures.
    Recreational fisheries are also monitored inseason, although 
monitoring methods vary by State. As with the commercial fisheries, 
PSMFC maintains a database for recreational fisheries, the Recreational 
Fisheries Information Network (RecFIN). Estimates of recreational 
fisheries catch and landings are available on the Internet at http://www.recfin.org/. All three States deploy port samplers for at-dock 
sampling of recreational groundfish fisheries. Even more so than in 
commercial fisheries, recreational fisheries data may not be available 
to fisheries managers until several months after the subject fishing 
trips have occurred. Because the States of Washington and Oregon have 
smaller coastlines and smaller populations than California, they tend 
to directly sample a much greater proportion of their recreational 
fisheries catch than California does.
    In past years, California has relied on NMFS' Marine Recreational 
Fisheries Statistical Survey (MRFSS) for its estimates of recreational 
fisheries catch. MRFSS uses a telephone survey of the general 
population to determine which persons in the population are anglers, 
and, of the anglers, how much of which species they are catching and 
landing. MRFSS was initially designed as an annual sampling program 
that would

[[Page 11070]]

provide a snapshot of an entire year's harvest of different 
recreational species. Because MRFSS was the only tool for estimating 
recreational catch, the Council has used it for inseason management in 
recent years. In developing the 2004 fishery specifications and 
management measures, NMFS and the state agencies used RecFIN data, 
including MRFSS data for California, from 2002 and prior years. Data 
from the 2003 fisheries is not yet complete and was even less complete 
when the 2004 fisheries regulations were developed. Partial data from 
2003 was not used both because the data delivery times from the three 
States varies and because the database managers do not release the data 
as complete until several months after the fisheries have occurred. 
However, NMFS has used preliminary data from 2003 to adjust 2004 
lingcod management measures in this final rule in order to immediately 
address early evidence of excessive harvest in 2003 of lingcod, an 
overfished species. Reasons for this are explained below in the 
response to Comment 12.
    Recreational fisheries data needs have increased notably since the 
Council first began managing the fisheries to rebuild overfished stocks 
in 2000. All three States, the Council, and NMFS have been concerned 
that data generated from MRFSS was not accurate or timely enough to 
support inseason management of recreational fisheries. Over 2002-2003, 
the agencies met through the PSMFC's RecFIN Data Committee and worked 
together to update their monitoring programs so as to better meet the 
coastwide need for improved recreational fisheries catch data. PSMFC 
reported to the Council on the planned changes to recreational 
fisheries data gathering in the three States at the Council's November 
2003 meeting. All three States have eliminated MRFSS as a sampling 
tool, focusing instead on at-dock sampling and angler interviews. While 
California will continue to use telephone interviews as one of its 
data-gathering methods, its survey population will be licensed 
California anglers, not the entire population of the State of 
California. California will also be increasing its at-dock sampling 
presence and providing some on-board observation of charterboats. 
Oregon and Washington will also be replacing their MRFSS general-
population surveys with surveys specific to licensed anglers, and with 
increased at-dock and at-sea monitoring.
    Finally, in addition to commenting on the timeliness of the data 
used in developing 2004 fishery regulations, the commenter questioned 
whether overall 2004 harvest levels would need to be adjusted based on 
2003 fisheries catch. The purpose of harvest limits is to achieve, ``on 
a continuing basis, the OY from each fishery'' (50 CFR 600.310(a).) It 
is not NMFS' practice to adjust OYs for one year by the overages or 
underages from previous years. NMFS makes adjustments to OYs after 
conducting an assessment of the population of a particular species, an 
assessment that occurs every 2-4 years. (Previously, NMFS had been on a 
3-year stock assessment cycle. With the adoption of Amendment 17, the 
science and management cycle has shifted from annual to biennial 
management. Under the biennial management cycle, stock assessments will 
be conducted every 2-4 years. The decisions on which stock assessments 
to do which year will depend on the status of the stocks, and the 
availability of data and stock assessment personnel. In the years 
between assessments, NMFS and the Council address over- and under-
harvests by adjusting management measures to try to achieve, but not 
exceed, OYs (OYs of several of the more abundant stocks will, of 
necessity, not be achieved in order to protect co-occurring overfished 
species.) Management measures are adjusted inseason using the best 
available scientific information. For example, although the 2002-2003 
WCGOP data was not available until January 2004, it will be 
incorporated into the bycatch model for use in management of the 2004 
fisheries. Additionally, as 2003 fisheries data are finalized, 2003 
management measures will be evaluated for whether they were effective 
at keeping the fisheries within expected harvest levels for each 2-
month management period. Management measures for 2004 will be evaluated 
and, if necessary, adjusted inseason based in part on the effectiveness 
of the 2003 management measures. For example, at the March 2004 Council 
meeting, the GMT will be considering inseason revisions to management 
measures for 2004 and will be informed, in part, by estimates of 
effectiveness of management measures for 2003. In this final rule, the 
preliminary 2003 information has been used to adjust the proposed 
California recreational fisheries management measures for lingcod, as 
discussed in the response to Comment 12. This is being done now rather 
than as an inseason adjustment after consideration by the Council at 
the March or April Council meeting because NMFS believes that the 
preliminary data from the 2003 season indicate that stricter management 
measures will be required to keep harvests within the 2004 OY, and 
because the magnitude of the necessary changes are such that they 
should be made as early in the year as possible. A more complete 
discussion of these changes is found in the response to Comment 12. 
Changes must also be made in California state regulations for the area 
between the shore and 3-miles from shore, and making the changes in the 
Federal rules now provides the opportunity for the California Fish and 
Game (Commission) to consider these changes at its meeting on March 4 
and 5.
    Comment 11: The proposed specifications fail to adopt all 
practicable bycatch reduction measures, particularly failing to adopt 
individual vessel discard caps. On a related matter, NMFS has failed to 
establish adequate bycatch assessment requirements for the fishery 
because there are no bycatch assessment requirements in the proposed 
specifications.
    Response: These fishery specifications and management measures are 
not the only regulations that affect West Coast groundfish fisheries 
and vessel discard caps are not the only potential tool for reducing 
bycatch. In addition, these management measures contain many provisions 
to reduce discard as described here. In the past several years, NMFS 
has implemented a variety of bycatch reduction programs. The agency has 
supported full retention or full utilization EFP programs for the 
Washington arrowtooth flounder trawl, yellowtail rockfish trawl and 
longline dogfish fisheries, and for the California flatfish trawl 
fishery. Shorter-than-year-round fishing seasons have been set for 
various species and sectors of the groundfish fleet in order to protect 
different overfished groundfish species. Amendment 14 to the FMP 
implemented a permit stacking program for the limited entry fixed gear 
fleet. In 2003, NMFS implemented a buyback of limited entry trawl 
vessels and their permits, reducing the limited entry groundfish trawl 
fleet by about one-third. NMFS has implemented gear modification 
requirements that restrict the use of trawl gear in rockier habitat 
where many overfished species are found and constrain the catching 
capacity of recreational fishing gear. Higher groundfish landings 
limits have been made available for trawl vessels using gear or 
operating in areas where overfished species are less likely to be 
taken. Species-to-species landings limit ratios have been thoroughly 
re-examined in a groundfish bycatch model first introduced in 2002 and 
modified and used to develop

[[Page 11071]]

management measures in each intervening year as new observer program 
data became available. The RCAs first implemented in September 2002 and 
implemented with this action for 2004 are large time/area closures that 
affect the entire West Coast and are specifically designed to reduce 
the incidental catch of overfished groundfish species in fisheries 
targeting more abundant stocks.
    ``Discard caps'' generally refers to a management tool whereby an 
entire fishery, or fishing by an individual vessel, is halted when 
discard quotas for designated species are reached. Administration of 
such a system requires real-time information on discards as the fishery 
progresses, either through comprehensive, direct observation by fishery 
observers, or for a fleetwide discard cap, by a combination of observer 
and landings data that can be extrapolated to yield a real-time 
reliable estimate of discards. There is no data collection system in 
place on which to base a system of discard caps. NMFS has examined 
discard caps more fully in a Draft Environmental Impact Statement on 
bycatch management in the West Coast groundfish fisheries, a draft of 
which was made available to the public on February 27, 2004 (69 FR 
9314).
    These 2004 fishery specifications and management measures regulate 
the activities of fishery participants. Bycatch assessment, which is 
comprised of bycatch monitoring and the modeling of the data derived 
from bycatch monitoring programs, is the responsibility of NMFS and 
other government agencies. NMFS has a bycatch monitoring program in 
place, the WCGOP, and groundfish vessels are required to participate in 
that program under 50 CFR 660.360. NMFS NWFSC manages that program and 
models the data derived from the program to estimate bycatch and 
discard in the groundfish fisheries. See the preamble to the proposed 
rule for this action for further explanation of the agency's bycatch 
modeling (January 8, 2004, 69 FR 1380). The regulations implemented by 
this action are not the only regulations governing the fishery. By not 
including bycatch assessment requirements in this particular action, 
NMFS has not failed to assess bycatch. As discussed here, NMFS has 
already implemented the necessary bycatch monitoring program and is 
using data from that program to assess bycatch and discard levels and 
to manage the fishery.
    Comment 12: NMFS admits that there were substantial overharvests in 
the California recreational fisheries in 2003, but has failed to 
propose any changes to the 2004 management measures that would avoid 
similar overharvests in 2004. NMFS has failed to conduct an adequate 
inquiry into whether the 2003 revisions to recreational fisheries 
management have been sufficient to constrain total mortality for 
lingcod and other overfished species to the levels necessary in order 
to avoid further exceeding the fishing harvest levels NMFS has proposed 
for 2004. It is not appropriate to wait until the April 2004 Council 
meeting to make revisions to the California recreational fisheries 
management measures and revisions to the management of those fisheries 
must be made now.
    Response: NMFS agrees that it is necessary to make revisions to the 
California recreational fisheries management measures as soon as 
possible. Therefore, NMFS has consulted with CDFG on potential 
regulatory revisions, and has determined that additional restrictive 
regulatory measures are needed to protect lingcod. Of the 925 mt of 
estimated lingcod landings and dead discard in the 2003 recreational 
fisheries, 681 mt were estimated to have been taken by vessels 
operating in waters between the Oregon/California border 
(42 N. lat.) and Point Conception, CA 
(3427' N. lat.). These estimates are taken from RecFIN's 
MRFSS and estimates for landings in the latter months of 2003 are 
considered preliminary.
    Recreational fisheries tend to be concentrated in waters closer to 
shore where they are easily accessed by vessels on day trips. Thus, in 
order to effectively reduce recreational take of lingcod, both State 
and Federal regulations need to be revised. NMFS discussed with CDFG 
how to revise both State and Federal regulations to reduce recreational 
lingcod landings as quickly as possible. Under California State law, 
State regulations may be changed on an emergency basis to conform to 
Federal regulations. Thus, NMFS is revising Federal regulations with 
this final rule, and CDFG is initiating its emergency regulations 
process to alter recreational fisheries regulations for lingcod inside 
State waters. State regulatory changes would otherwise take 4-5 months, 
under the State's notice-and-comment procedures. Under the expedited 
emergency procedures, these changes could be made by late March 2004.
    Under the proposed regulations for recreational groundfish 
fisheries off California, fishing in both state and Federal waters 
would have been closed between 4010' N. lat. and 
3427' N. lat. for the months of March and April, but 
open north of 4010' N. lat. to the border with Oregon. 
Coastwide, the current lingcod size limit is 24 inches (61 cm) and 
there is a 2-fish bag limit for lingcod. With this final rule, NMFS 
will revise the recreational lingcod size and bag limits such that on 
April 1, 2004, the size limit will be increased to 30 inches (77 cm) 
and the daily bag limit will be decreased to one fish per day. This 
increase in size limit and reduction in bag limit will apply to 
recreational fisheries off the entire coast of California, from the 
Oregon/California border to the California/Mexico border. CDFG has 
estimated that, given current information about recreational effort off 
California in recent years, these changes would result in the fisheries 
taking 291 mt in 2004. This is 55.8 mt less than the 346.8 mt of 
lingcod that was estimated pre-season to be taken in this fishery in 
2004.
    NMFS believes that revising the regulations that particularly 
affect the California recreational fishery is appropriate because these 
regulatory revisions are specifically aimed at the fishery with the 
greatest contribution to overall lingcod landings in 2002 and 2003. 
These changes are needed, in part, to prevent the closure of other 
recreational and commercial fisheries early in the year to prevent 
total lingcod catch from exceeding lingcod harvest levels.
    The Commission will meet on March 4-5, 2004. At that meeting, CDFG 
will propose State regulatory revisions to match these new Federal 
regulations. Once the Commission has approved the changes, CDFG will be 
able to implement the regulatory revisions within 2-3 weeks. NMFS 
expects that this issue will be discussed at the upcoming March 8-12, 
2004 Council meeting, at which time CDFG may have an expected 
implementation date. NMFS expects that California will be able to make 
these changes by the end of March. If for some reason California cannot 
make the anticipated changes in a timely manner, NMFS will immediately 
initiate further changes in the groundfish fishery regulations in order 
to keep the lingcod mortality under the lingcod OY for 2004.
    Preliminary 2003 data indicate that lingcod was the only overfished 
species with its ABC exceeded in 2003. As 2003 fisheries data is 
finalized and the bycatch model is updated, the Council and NMFS will 
look at whether further 2004 inseason adjustments need to be made for 
recreational and commercial fisheries. In addition, CDFG is developing 
further measures to reduce the pace of both groundfish harvest in 
general and lingcod harvest in particular

[[Page 11072]]

in 2004, some of which are dealt with below in Comment 13. The State 
expects to implement a series of management changes in the spring and 
summer to provide greater protection for lingcod and other groundfish 
species, with particular attention to nearshore and shelf rockfish 
species. NMFS anticipates that, as it has done in the past, CDFG will 
bring its recommendations to the Council for discussion and adoption as 
inseason actions during 2004.
    Comment 13: The CDFG requests that NMFS consider implementing a 
recreational and commercial groundfish fisheries closure at Cordell 
Bank for 2004. The bank habitat supports large populations of many 
species of rockfish, including canary rockfish. This action is 
requested to help reduce incidental fisheries landings of canary 
rockfish and other overfished species, and to be consistent with state 
groundfish regulations in effect for 2004. Based on data from a 1988-
1998 CDFG study of recreational charterboat fishing, the relative catch 
of overfished rockfish species from the Cordell Bank area was notably 
higher than for other fishing grounds off central California. Catches 
of widow, bocaccio, canary, and yelloweye rockfish and lingcod 
comprised 27 percent of the landings from Cordell Bank, as compared to 
15 percent of landings from all other areas. Federal regulations for 
the Cordell Bank area currently close waters around the bank deeper 
than 30 fm (55 m). State regulations, however, close recreational 
fishing within a 5-nautical mile radius around Cordell Bank, located at 
3802' N. lat., 12325' W. long. The 
combination of current state and Federal regulations currently allows 
fishing in waters shallower than 30 fm (55 m) in this area of high 
canary rockfish abundance. We are requesting that NMFS implement 
Federal regulations similar to state regulations, such that 
recreational and commercial fishing would be closed at all times for 
rockfish, lingcod, cabezon, greenlings of the species Hexagrammos, 
California scorpionfish, California sheephead, and ocean whitefish.
    Response: NMFS agrees with this recommendation but notes that 
immediate implementation of the full scope of CDFG's recommendations 
may not be practical or possible. The groundfish FMP does not cover 
California sheephead, ocean whitefish or greenlings of the species 
Hexagrammos other than kelp greenling (Hexagrammos decagrammus). 
Fisheries for these species are managed by the State of California, are 
covered by California regulations, and will not be addressed via 
Federal regulation.
    With this final rule, NMFS will implement this closure for the 
recreational fisheries only, which have the greater effect on 
overfished species and which are currently subject to RCA boundaries 
that do not conflict with the suggested closure. If NMFS were to 
implement this recommendation for commercial fisheries at this time, 
the Cordell Bank closure would intersect with several different Trawl 
RCA and Non-trawl RCA boundaries. These intersections would create a 
series of confusing closed and open areas such that groundfish 
fisheries would be entirely closed where the current RCAs and the 
Cordell Bank closure intersect, but closed only for certain species in 
waters covered only by the Cordell Bank closure and not by the RCAs. 
NMFS and CDFG are discussing how to revise the commercial RCA 
boundaries so that the boundaries for Cordell Bank closure may be 
incorporated within the RCAs. NMFS expects that these boundary 
revisions would be discussed at either the March or April Council 
meetings and implemented through Federal inseason action.
    Comment 14: The Council sent a letter of comment to note that, at 
its November meeting, it had recommended that NMFS implement 
regulations for non-trawl limited entry vessels that would prohibit 
those vessels from operating within the non-trawl RCAs except in cases 
when those vessels are transiting the non-trawl RCAs.
    Response: As discussed in the proposed rule for this action, NMFS 
accepted the Council's recommendation from its November meeting and 
included the prohibition in its proposed rule to implement the 2004 
specifications and management measures. Because this revision was 
recommended at the November Council meeting, NMFS did not implement the 
provision via emergency rule for January-February 2004. NMFS agrees 
with the Council's recommendation and has implemented the provision at 
50 CFR 660.306(bb).

Changes From the Proposed Rule

    This final rule is revising the Pacific Coast Groundfish 
Specifications and Management Measures for March-December 2004, which 
were set forth in the proposed rule published in the Federal Register 
on January 8, 2004 (69 FR 1380). This final rule includes changes made 
in a correction document to the Specifications and Management Measures 
implemented via emergency rule for January-February 2003 (69 FR 4084, 
January 28, 2004). Changes to the emergency rule included: A 
clarification that where the phrase ``North and South'' is used in 
Table 5 (North), that refers to north and south of 4010' 
N. lat.; a correction in Table 5 (South) that between 
4010' N. lat. and 3427' N. lat., the 
Trawl RCA is measured from the mainland coast of California, between 
boundary lines approximating the 75 fm (137 m) and 150 fm (274 m) depth 
contours; a correction to a typographic error in one of the coordinates 
for the boundary line approximating the 60-fm (110-m) depth contour 
around the Channel Islands.
    In addition, this final rule makes the changes described above in 
the responses to Comments 12 and 13. In response to comments from CDFG 
and the public, NMFS has made the following revisions from the proposed 
rule to regulations affecting fisheries off California: Closed 
recreational fisheries off California for rockfish, lingcod, cabezon, 
kelp greenling, and California scorpionfish within a 5-nm radius around 
Cordell Bank, located at 3802' N. lat., 
12325' W. long.; clarified that the recreational 
fisheries closure around the Farallon Islands applies only to fisheries 
for rockfish, lingcod, cabezon, kelp greenling, and California 
scorpionfish, rather than to all groundfish; implemented a 1 fish bag 
limit and a 30 inch (77 cm) size limit beginning April 1, 2004, for 
recreational lingcod fisheries off California.
    Finally, this final rule also makes changes to Federal regulations. 
In 50 CFR 660.302, Federal regulations provide definitions for 
different terms used in groundfish regulation and management. For many 
years, NMFS has also provided definitions of terms in the annual 
specifications and management measures implementing final rules at 
section IV.A. In some cases, the definitions provided in the 
specifications and management measures have been more precise than or 
have added to the definitions provided at 50 CFR 660.302. This practice 
is confusing. Thus, NMFS has amended 50 CFR 660.302 to revise the 
definitions for the terms ``Closure,'' ``Fishery management area,'' and 
``Trip limits,'' and has added a definition for ``Legal fish'' to 
conform to those provided herein at IV.A. These revisions and additions 
in no way change the effect of Federal regulations on the groundfish 
fishery, they simply ensure that the same language is used wherever 
those definitions are found. These definitions were included in the 
proposed specifications and management measures and are included

[[Page 11073]]

here in the management measures, and also at 50 CFR part 660.
    The definition for ``Trip limit'' that has been incorporated into 
50 CFR 660.302 is more detailed than the definition for this term 
previously found in 50 CFR 660.302. Among other things, this definition 
details specific types of trip limit periods, such as the 2-month 
``major'' cumulative limit periods. Federal regulations at 
660.335(e)(3)(i) restrict the frequency of permit transfers such that 
they are made effective only on the first date of a major cumulative 
limit period. This final rule also revises that sub-paragraph to 
clarify the start dates for the major cumulative limit periods as they 
are defined under 50 CFR 660.302. Again, this is a minor change and in 
no way alters the effect of Federal groundfish regulations on fishery 
participants.
    At 50 CFR 660.304, coordinates are provided for management areas, 
including conservation areas. The final rule at 68 FR 62374 (November 
4, 2003) inadvertently mis-labeled sub-paragraph Sec.  
660.304(c)(2)(ii) as Sec.  660.304(c)(2)(2). This final rule corrects 
that labeling mistake. Further, that same final rule inadvertently 
neglected to characterize the Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation (YRCA) as 
a Groundfish Conservation Area (GCA) and set the YRCA apart from other 
GCAs in paragraph Sec.  660.304(d). This final rule corrects that 
mistake by re-designating Sec.  660.304(d) as Sec.  660.304(c)(3).

I. Final Specifications

    Final fishery specifications include ABCs, the designation of OYs 
(which may be represented by harvest guidelines (HGs) or quotas for 
species that need individual management), and the allocation of 
commercial OYs between the open access and limited entry segments of 
the fishery. These specifications include fish caught in State ocean 
waters (0-3 nautical miles (nm) offshore) as well as fish caught in the 
EEZ (3-200 nm offshore).
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II. Fisheries Allocations

    Since 1994, the non-tribal commercial groundfish fishery has been 
divided into limited entry and open access sectors, each with its own 
set of allocations and management measures. Species or species group 
allocations between the two sectors are based on the relative amounts 
of a species or species group taken by each component of the fishery 
during the 1984-1988 limited entry permit qualification period (50 CFR 
660.332). The FMP allows suspension of this allocation formula for 
overfished species when changes to the traditional allocation formula 
are needed to better protect overfished species (FMP, section 5.3.2). 
Historically, groundfish species and/or species groups have not been 
allocated between the commercial and recreational fisheries. Fishery 
managers have instead estimated the amount that would be taken in the 
recreational fisheries and have set that amount aside before 
determining the allowable harvest for the non-tribal commercial 
sectors. Species-specific allocations for 2004, including recreational 
fishery set asides and research catch deductions from total catch OYs, 
are provided in the footnotes to Tables 1a and 1b. Following the 
procedures specified in the FMP, the Regional Administrator calculated 
the amounts of allocations that are presented in Tables 1a and 1b of 
this document. Unless otherwise specified, the limited entry and open 
access allocations would be treated as harvest guidelines in 2004. 
There may be slight discrepancies from the Council's recommendations 
due to rounding.

III. 2004 Management Measures

Federal and State Jurisdiction
    The management measures herein, as well as Federal regulations at 
50 CFR part 660, subpart G, govern groundfish fishing vessels of the 
United States in the U.S. EEZ from 3-200 nautical miles offshore off 
the coasts of Washington, Oregon, and California. The States of 
Washington, Oregon, and California retain jurisdiction in State waters 
from 0-3 miles offshore. This is true even though boundaries of some 
fishing areas cross between Federal and State waters. Under their own 
legal authorities, the States generally conform their State regulations 
to the Federal management measures, so the management measures that 
apply to Federal and State waters are the same. This is not true in 
every case, however, and fishers are advised to consult State as well 
as Federal regulations if they intend to fish in both State and Federal 
waters.
    Groundfish stocks are distributed throughout Federal and State 
waters. Therefore, the Federal harvest limits (OYs) include fish taken 
in both Federal and State waters, as do vessel trip limits for 
individual groundfish species. Other Federal management measures 
related to federally-regulated groundfish fishing also apply to 
landings and other shoreside activities in Washington, Oregon, and 
California.
Trip Limit Tables and Management Measures
    Management measures for limited entry and open access commercial 
fisheries and recreational fisheries are found in section IV. Boundary 
line coordinates for RCAs are designated at IV.A.(17). Cumulative trip 
limits are set into tables, with explanations in section IV. Tables for 
each fishing sector are separated into northern and southern area 
tables. The industry is cautioned not to rely on the tables alone. The 
text in section IV. provides cumulative trip limit definitions and 
periods, size limit definitions and conversions, and other information 
that cannot be readily included in a table but must be understood in 
order to correctly use the tables. The sablefish allocations and 
nontrawl sablefish management, Pacific whiting allocations and seasons, 
and ``per trip'' limits for black rockfish off Washington State are 
presented in text in paragraphs IV.B. Trip limits for exempted trawl 
gear in the open access fishery (Table 5 and paragraph IV.C.), 
recreational management measures (paragraph IV.D.), and tribal 
allocations and management measures (paragraph V.) still remain in the 
text.

IV. NMFS Actions

    For the reasons stated above, the Assistant Administrator for 
Fisheries, (AA), NMFS, concurs with the Council's recommendations and 
announces the following management actions for 2004, including measures 
that are unchanged from 2003 and new measures. In addition to the 
measures described herein, the states of Washington, Oregon, and 
California may have additional regulations that apply to vessels 
fishing in State waters or registered to any of those States.
A. General Definitions and Provisions
    The following definitions and provisions apply to the 2004 
management measures, unless otherwise specified in a subsequent Federal 
Register document:
    (1) Trip limits. Trip limits are used in the commercial fishery to 
specify the maximum amount of a fish species or species group that may 
legally be taken and retained, possessed, or landed, per vessel, per 
fishing trip, or cumulatively per unit of time, or the number of 
landings that may be made from a vessel in a given period of time, as 
follows:
    (a) A per trip limit is the total allowable amount of a groundfish 
species or species group, by weight, or by percentage of weight of 
legal fish on board, that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel from a single fishing trip.
    (b) A daily trip limit is the maximum amount of a groundfish 
species or species group that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel in 24 consecutive hours, starting at 0001 hours local 
time (l.t.). Only one landing of groundfish may be made in that 24-hour 
period. Daily trip limits may not be accumulated during multiple day 
trips.
    (c) A weekly trip limit is the maximum amount of a groundfish 
species or species group that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel in 7 consecutive days, starting at 0001 hours l.t. on 
Sunday and ending at 2400 hours l.t. on Saturday. Weekly trip limits 
may not be accumulated during multiple week trips. If a calendar week 
includes days within two different months, a vessel is not entitled to 
two separate weekly limits during that week.
    (d) A cumulative trip limit is the maximum amount of a groundfish 
species or species group that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel in a specified period of time without a limit on the 
number of landings or trips, unless otherwise specified. The cumulative 
trip limit periods for limited entry and open access fisheries, which 
start at 0001 hours l.t. and end at 2400 hours l.t., are as follows, 
unless otherwise specified:
    (i) The 2-month periods are: January 1-February 29, March 1-April 
30, May 1-June 30, July 1-August 31, September 1-October 31, and, 
November 1-December 31.
    (ii) One month means the first day through the last day of the 
calendar month.
    (iii) One week means 7 consecutive days, Sunday through Saturday.
    (e) As stated at 50 CFR 660.302 (in the definition of ``Landing''), 
once the offloading of any species begins, all fish aboard the vessel 
are counted as part of the landing and must be reported as such.
    (f) The cumulative trip limits in section IV.B. and C., including 
Tables 3-5 of this proposed rule, must not be exceeded.
    (2) Fishing ahead. Unless the fishery is closed, a vessel that has 
landed its cumulative or daily limit may continue

[[Page 11085]]

to fish on the limit for the next legal period, so long as no fish 
(including, but not limited to, groundfish with no trip limits, shrimp, 
prawns, or other nongroundfish species or shellfish) are landed 
(offloaded) until the next legal period. As stated at 50 CFR 660.302 
(in the definition of ``landing''), once the offloading of any species 
begins, all fish aboard the vessel are counted as part of the landing. 
Fishing ahead is not allowed during or before a closed period (see 
paragraph IV.A.(7)). See paragraph IV.A.(9) for information on inseason 
changes to limits.
    (3) Weights. All weights are round weights or round-weight 
equivalents unless otherwise specified.
    (4) Percentages. Percentages are based on round weights, and, 
unless otherwise specified, apply only to legal fish on board.
    (5) Legal fish. ``Legal fish'' means fish legally taken and 
retained, possessed, or landed in accordance with the provisions of 50 
CFR part 660, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, any document issued under part 
660, and any other regulation promulgated or permit issued under the 
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
    (6) Size limits, length measurement, and weight limits.
    (a) Size limits and length measurement. Unless otherwise specified, 
size limits in the commercial and recreational groundfish fisheries 
apply to the ``total length,'' which is the longest measurement of the 
fish without mutilation of the fish or the use of force to extend the 
length of the fish. No fish with a size limit may be retained if it is 
in such condition that its length has been extended or cannot be 
determined by these methods. For conversions not listed here, contact 
the state where the fish will be landed.
    (i) Whole fish. For a whole fish, total length is measured from the 
tip of the snout (mouth closed) to the tip of the tail in a natural, 
relaxed position.
    (ii) ``Headed'' fish. For a fish with the head removed 
(``headed''), the length is measured from the origin of the first 
dorsal fin (where the front dorsal fin meets the dorsal surface of the 
body closest to the head) to the tip of the upper lobe of the tail; the 
dorsal fin and tail must be left intact.
    (iii) Filets. A filet is the flesh from one side of a fish 
extending from the head to the tail, which has been removed from the 
body (head, tail, and backbone) in a single continuous piece. Filet 
lengths may be subject to size limits for some groundfish taken in the 
recreational fishery off California (see paragraph IV. D.). A filet is 
measured along the length of the longest part of the filet in a relaxed 
position; stretching or otherwise manipulating the filet to increase 
its length is not permitted.
    (b) Weight limits and conversions. The weight limit conversion 
factor established by the state where the fish is or will be landed 
will be used to convert the processed weight to round weight for 
purposes of applying the trip limit. Weight conversions provided herein 
are those conversions currently in use by the States of Washington, 
Oregon and California and may be subject to change by those states. 
Fishery participants should contact fishery enforcement officials in 
the State where the fish will be landed to determine that State's 
official conversion factor. To determine the round weight, multiply the 
processed weight times the conversion factor.
    (c) Sablefish. The following conversion applies to both the limited 
entry and open access fisheries when trip limits are in effect for 
those fisheries. For headed and gutted (eviscerated) sablefish, the 
weight conversion factor is 1.6 for headed and gutted sablefish.
    (d) Lingcod. The following conversions apply in both limited entry 
and open access fisheries.
    (i) For lingcod with the head removed, the minimum size limit is 
19.5 inches (49.5 cm), which corresponds to 24 inches (61 cm) total 
length for whole fish.
    (ii) The weight conversion factor for headed and gutted lingcod is 
1.5. The conversion factor for lingcod that has only been gutted with 
the head on is 1.1.
    (7) Closure. ``Closure,'' when referring to closure of a fishery, 
means that taking and retaining, possessing, or landing the particular 
species or species group is prohibited. (See 50 CFR 660.302.) Unless 
otherwise announced in the Federal Register, offloading must begin 
before the time the fishery closes. The provisions at paragraph 
IV.A.(2) for fishing ahead do not apply during a closed period. It is 
unlawful to transit through a closed area with any prohibited species 
on board, no matter where that species was caught, except as provided 
for in the CCA at IV.A.(17)(b).
    (8) Fishery management area. As defined at 50 CFR 660.302, the 
fishery management area for these species is the EEZ off the coasts of 
Washington, Oregon, and California between 3 and 200 nm offshore, 
bounded on the north by the Provisional International Boundary between 
the United States and Canada, and bounded on the south by the 
International Boundary between the United States and Mexico. All 
groundfish possessed between 0-200 nm offshore or landed in Washington, 
Oregon, or California are presumed to have been taken and retained from 
the EEZ, unless otherwise demonstrated by the person in possession of 
those fish.
    (9) Routine management measures. Most trip, bag, and size limits, 
and area closures in the groundfish fishery have been designated 
``routine,'' which means they may be changed rapidly after a single 
Council meeting (see 50 CFR 660.323(b)). Council meetings in 2004 will 
be held in the months of March, April, June, September, and November. 
In-season changes to routine management measures are announced in the 
Federal Register pursuant to the requirements of the Administrative 
Procedure Act (APA). Information concerning changes to routine 
management measures is available from the NMFS Northwest Regional 
Office (see ADDRESSES). Changes to trip limits are effective at the 
times stated in the Federal Register. Once a change is effective, it is 
illegal to take and retain, possess, or land more fish than allowed 
under the new trip limit. This means that, unless otherwise announced 
in the Federal Register, offloading must begin before the time a 
fishery closes or a more restrictive trip limit takes effect.
    (10) Limited entry limits. It is unlawful for any person to take 
and retain, possess, or land groundfish in excess of the landing limit 
for the open access fishery without having a valid limited entry permit 
for the vessel affixed with a gear endorsement for the gear used to 
catch the fish (50 CFR 660.306(p)).
    (11) Operating in both limited entry and open access fisheries. The 
open access trip limit applies to any fishing conducted with open 
access gear, even if the vessel has a valid limited entry permit with 
an endorsement for another type of gear. A vessel that operates in both 
the open access and limited entry fisheries is not entitled to two 
separate trip limits for the same species. If a vessel has a limited 
entry permit and uses open access gear, but the open access limit is 
smaller than the limited entry limit, the open access limit may not be 
exceeded and counts toward the limited entry limit. If a vessel has a 
limited entry permit and uses open access gear, but the open access 
limit is larger than the limited entry limit, the smaller limited entry 
limit applies, even if taken entirely with open access gear.
    (12) Operating in north-south management areas with different trip 
limits. NMFS uses different types of management areas for West Coast 
groundfish management. One type of management area is the north-south 
management area, a large ocean area with northern and southern boundary

[[Page 11086]]

lines wherein trip limits, seasons, and conservation areas follow a 
single theme. For example, in the area between the U.S. border with 
Canada and the 4010' N. lat. line, trip limits and 
conservation areas are generally intended to protect darkblotched and 
yelloweye rockfish while providing harvesting opportunities for 
northern flatfish and deepwater species. Within each north-south 
management area, there may be one or more conservation areas, detailed 
at IV.A.(17) and at 50 CFR 660.304. The provisions within this 
paragraph IV.A.(12) apply to vessels operating in different north-south 
management areas. Trip limits for a species or a species group may 
differ in different north-south management areas along the coast. The 
following ``crossover'' provisions apply to vessels operating in 
different geographical areas that have different cumulative or ``per 
trip'' trip limits for the same species or species group. Such 
crossover provisions do not apply to species that are subject only to 
daily trip limits, or to the trip limits for black rockfish off 
Washington (see 50 CFR 660.323(a)(1)). In 2004, the cumulative trip 
limit periods for the limited entry and open access fisheries are 
specified in paragraph IV.A(1)(d), but may be changed during the year 
if announced in the Federal Register pursuant to the requirements of 
the APA.
    (a) Going from a more restrictive to a more liberal area. If a 
vessel takes and retains any groundfish species or species group of 
groundfish in an area where a more restrictive trip limit applies 
before fishing in an area where a more liberal trip limit (or no trip 
limit) applies, then that vessel is subject to the more restrictive 
trip limit for the entire period to which that trip limit applies, no 
matter where the fish are taken and retained, possessed, or landed.
    (b) Going from a more liberal to a more restrictive area. If a 
vessel takes and retains a groundfish species or species group in an 
area where a higher trip limit or no trip limit applies, and takes and 
retains, possesses or lands the same species or species group in an 
area where a more restrictive trip limit applies, that vessel is 
subject to the more restrictive trip limit for the entire period to 
which that trip limit applies, no matter where the fish are taken and 
retained, possessed, or landed.
    (c) Operating in two different areas where a species or species 
group is managed with different types of trip limits. During the 
fishing year, NMFS may implement management measures for a species or 
species group that set different types of trip limits (for example, per 
trip limits versus cumulative trip limits) for different areas. If a 
vessel fishes for a species or species group that is managed with 
different types of trip limits in two different areas within the same 
cumulative limit period, then that vessel is subject to the most 
restrictive overall cumulative limit for that species, regardless of 
where fishing occurs.
    (d) Minor rockfish. Several rockfish species are designated with 
species-specific limits on one side of the 4010 N. lat. 
management line, and are included as part of a minor rockfish complex 
on the other side of the line.
    (i) If a vessel takes and retains minor slope rockfish north of 
38 N. lat., that vessel is also permitted to take and 
retain, possess or land splitnose rockfish up to its cumulative limit 
south of 38 N. lat., even if splitnose rockfish were a 
part of the landings from minor slope rockfish taken and retained north 
of 38 N. lat. (Note: A vessel that takes and retains 
minor slope rockfish on both sides of the management line in a single 
cumulative limit period is subject to the more restrictive cumulative 
limit for minor slope rockfish during that period.)
    (ii) If a vessel takes and retains minor slope rockfish south of 
38 N. lat., that vessel is also permitted to take and 
retain, possess or land POP up to its cumulative limit north of 
38 N. lat., even if POP were a part of the landings from 
minor slope rockfish taken and retained south of 38 N. 
lat. (Note: A vessel that takes and retains minor slope rockfish on 
both sides of the management line in a single cumulative limit period 
is subject to the more restrictive cumulative limit for minor slope 
rockfish during that period.)
    (iii) If a trawl vessel takes and retains minor shelf rockfish 
south of 4010' N. lat., that vessel is also permitted to 
take and retain, possess, or land yellowtail rockfish up to its 
cumulative limits north of 4010' N. lat., even if 
yellowtail rockfish is part of the landings from minor shelf rockfish 
taken and retained south of 4010' N. lat. Yellowtail 
rockfish is included in overall shelf rockfish limits for limited entry 
fixed gear and open access gear groups. Widow rockfish is included in 
overall shelf rockfish limits for all gear groups. (Note: A vessel that 
takes and retains minor shelf rockfish on both sides of the management 
line in a single cumulative limit period is subject to the more 
restrictive cumulative limit for minor shelf rockfish during that 
period.)
    (e) ``DTS complex.'' There are differential trawl trip limits for 
the ``DTS complex'' north and south of the management line at 
4010' N. lat. Vessels operating in the limited entry 
trawl fishery are subject to the crossover provisions in this paragraph 
IV.A.(12) when making landings that include any one of the four species 
in the ``DTS complex.''
    (f) Flatfish complex. There are differential trip limits for the 
flatfish complex (butter, curlfin, English, flathead, petrale, rex, 
rock, and sand soles, Pacific sanddab, and starry flounder) north and 
south of the management line at 4010' N. lat. Vessels 
operating in the limited entry trawl fishery are subject to the 
crossover provisions in this paragraph IV.A.(12) when making landings 
that include any one of the species in the flatfish complex.
    (13) Sorting. It is unlawful for any person to ``fail to sort, 
prior to the first weighing after offloading, those groundfish species 
or species groups for which there is a trip limit, size limit, quota, 
or commercial OY, if the vessel fished or landed in an area during a 
time when such trip limit, size limit, commercial OY, or quota 
applied.'' The States of Washington, Oregon, and California may also 
require that vessels record their landings as sorted on their state 
fish tickets. This provision applies to both the limited entry and open 
access fisheries. (See 50 CFR 660.306(h).) The following species must 
be sorted in 2004:
    (a) For vessels with a limited entry permit:
    (i) Coastwide--widow rockfish, canary rockfish, darkblotched 
rockfish, yelloweye rockfish, shortbelly rockfish, black rockfish, 
minor nearshore rockfish, minor shelf rockfish, minor slope rockfish, 
shortspine and longspine thornyhead, Dover sole, arrowtooth flounder, 
rex sole, petrale sole, arrowtooth flounder, other flatfish, lingcod, 
sablefish, and Pacific whiting

    (Note: Although black rockfish, yelloweye rockfish, and 
darkblotched rockfish are considered minor rockfish managed under the 
minor shelf and minor slope rockfish complexes, respectively, they have 
separate OYs and therefore must be sorted by species.)

    (ii) North of 4010' N. lat.--POP, yellowtail 
rockfish, and, for fixed gear, blue rockfish;
    (iii) South of 4010' N. lat.--minor shallow 
nearshore rockfish, minor deeper nearshore rockfish, California 
scorpionfish, chilipepper rockfish, bocaccio rockfish, splitnose 
rockfish, and Pacific sanddabs.
    (b) For open access vessels (vessels without a limited entry 
permit):
    (i) Coastwide--widow rockfish, canary rockfish, darkblotched 
rockfish,

[[Page 11087]]

yelloweye rockfish, black rockfish, minor nearshore rockfish, minor 
shelf rockfish, minor slope rockfish, Dover sole, arrowtooth flounder, 
petrale sole, rex sole, other flatfish, lingcod, sablefish, Pacific 
whiting, and Pacific sanddabs;
    (ii) North of 4010' N. lat.--blue rockfish, POP, 
yellowtail rockfish;
    (iii) South of 4010' N. lat.--minor shallow 
nearshore rockfish, minor deeper nearshore rockfish, chilipepper 
rockfish, bocaccio rockfish, splitnose rockfish;
    (iv) South of Point Conception, CA--thornyheads.
    (14) Trawl gear restrictions. Limited entry trip limits may vary 
depending on the type of trawl gear that is on board a vessel during a 
fishing trip: large footrope, small footrope, or midwater trawl gear.
    (a) Types of trawl gear--Large footrope, small footrope, and 
midwater or pelagic trawl gears are defined at 50 CFR 660.302 and 
660.322(b). Trawl vessels may include: Those vessels registered to a 
limited entry permit with a trawl endorsement; any vessel using trawl 
gear, including exempted trawl gear used to take pink shrimp, ridgeback 
prawns, California halibut, or sea cucumber; or any tribal vessel using 
trawl gear.
    (b) Cumulative trip limits and prohibitions by limited entry trawl 
gear type--(i) Large footrope trawl. If Table 3 does not provide a 
large footrope trawl cumulative or trip limit for a particular species 
or species group, it is unlawful to take and retain, possess or land 
that species or species group if large footrope gear is on board. It is 
unlawful for any vessel using large footrope gear to exceed large 
footrope gear limits for any species or to use large footrope gear to 
exceed small footrope gear or midwater trawl gear limits for any 
species. It is unlawful for any vessel using large footrope gear or 
that has large footrope trawl gear on board to fish for groundfish 
shoreward of the RCAs defined at paragraph (17) of this section. The 
presence of rollers or bobbins larger than 8 inches (20 cm) in diameter 
on board the vessel, even if not attached to a trawl, will be 
considered to mean a large footrope trawl is on board.
    (ii) Small footrope or midwater trawl gear. Cumulative trip limits 
for canary rockfish, widow rockfish (South of 4010' N. 
lat.,) yellowtail rockfish (North of 4010' N. lat.,) 
minor shelf rockfish (North of 4010' N. lat.,) minor 
nearshore rockfish, and lingcod, as indicated in Table 3 to section 
IV., are allowed only if small footrope gear or midwater trawl gear is 
used, and if that gear meets the specifications in paragraph IV.A.(14) 
and at 50 CFR 660.322. For Dover sole, longspine thornyhead, shortspine 
thornyhead, flatfish complex species including petrale sole, rex sole, 
or arrowtooth flounder there are or may be cumulative trip limits that 
are more restrictive for vessels using small footrope gear than for 
large footrope gear or midwater gear. These more restrictive limits 
recognize that small footrope gear may be used inshore of the RCAs and 
are intended to limit trawl effort in the nearshore area. Where limits 
are more restrictive for small footrope gear, those limits apply to and 
constrain any vessel using small footrope gear at any time during the 
cumulative limit period to which the landings limits apply.
    (iii) Midwater trawl gear. North of 4010' N. lat., 
higher yellowtail and widow rockfish cumulative trip limits are 
available for limited entry vessels using midwater trawl gear in 
November-December. For the first part of the year, yellowtail and widow 
rockfish are only available to trawl vessels using midwater trawl gear 
when those vessels are fishing for Pacific whiting during the primary 
whiting season. Each landing that contains yellowtail or widow rockfish 
is attributed to the gear on board with the most restrictive trip limit 
for those species. Landings attributed to small footrope trawl must not 
exceed the small footrope limit, and landings attributed to midwater 
trawl must not exceed the midwater trawl limit. If a vessel has 
landings attributed to both types of trawls during a cumulative trip 
limit period, all landings are counted toward the most restrictive 
gear-specific cumulative limit.
    (iv) More than one type of trawl gear on board. The cumulative trip 
limits in Table 3 must not be exceeded. A vessel may have more than one 
type of limited entry bottom trawl gear on board, but the most 
restrictive trip limit associated with the gear on board applies for 
that trip and will count toward the cumulative trip limit for that 
gear. (Example: If a vessel has large footrope gear on board, it cannot 
land yellowtail rockfish, even if the yellowtail rockfish is caught 
with a small footrope trawl.) A vessel that is trawling within a GCA 
with trawl gear authorized for use within a GCA may not have any other 
type of trawl gear on board.
    (c) State landing receipts. Washington, Oregon, and California will 
require the type of trawl gear on board to be recorded on the state 
landing receipt(s) for each trip or on an attachment to the state 
landing receipt.
    (d) Gear inspection. All trawl gear and trawl gear components, 
including unattached rollers or bobbins, must be readily accessible and 
made available for inspection at the request of an authorized officer. 
No trawl gear may be removed from the vessel prior to offloading. All 
footropes shall be uncovered and clearly visible except when in use for 
fishing.
    (15) Permit transfers. Limited entry permit transfers are to take 
effect no earlier than the first day of a major cumulative limit period 
following the day NMFS receives the transfer form and original permit 
(50 CFR 660.335(e)(3)). Those days in 2004 are January 1, March 1, May 
1, July 1, September 1, and November 1.
    (16) Exempted fisheries. U.S. vessels operating under an exempted 
fishing permit (EFP) issued under 50 CFR part 600 are also subject to 
these restrictions, unless otherwise provided in the permit. EFPs may 
include the collecting of scientific samples of groundfish species that 
would otherwise be prohibited for retention.
    (17) Groundfish Conservation Areas. Groundfish Conservation Area 
(GCA) means a geographic area defined by coordinates expressed in 
degrees latitude and longitude, created and enforced for the purpose of 
contributing to the rebuilding of overfished West Coast groundfish 
species. The Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area (YRCA), the Cowcod 
Conservation Areas (CCAs), and the depth-based Rockfish Conservation 
Areas (RCAs) are all Groundfish Conservation Areas.
    (a) Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area. The YRCA is a C-shaped 
area off the northern Washington coast intended to protect yelloweye 
rockfish. The specific latitude and longitude coordinates of the YRCA 
are defined at Sec.  660.304(c)(3). Recreational fishing for groundfish 
is prohibited within the YRCA. It is unlawful for recreational fishing 
vessels to take, retain, possess, or land groundfish within the YRCA.
    (b) Cowcod Conservation Areas. The CCAs are two areas off the 
southern California coast intended to protect cowcod. The specific 
latitude and longitude coordinates of the Cowcod Conservation Areas 
(CCAs) are defined at Sec.  660.304(c)(2). During January 1-December 
31, commercial fishing is prohibited within the CCAs, except that 
commercial fishing for rockfish and lingcod is permitted shoreward of 
the 20-fm (37-m) depth contour. In general, during March 1-December 31, 
recreational fishing for all groundfish, except sanddabs, is prohibited 
within the CCAs. However, recreational fishing for the following 
species is permitted shoreward of the 20-fm (37-m) depth contour: the 
RCG complex (including all rockfish (except cowcod, canary

[[Page 11088]]

rockfish, and yelloweye rockfish), cabezon, and kelp greenling), 
lingcod, California scorpionfish, and sanddabs. (Note: California state 
regulations also permit recreational fishing for all greenlings of the 
genus Hexogrammas shoreward of the 20-fm (37-m) depth contour in the 
CCAs.) It is unlawful to take and retain, possess, or land groundfish 
within the CCAs, except for species stated in this section, when those 
waters are open to fishing. Commercial fishing vessels may transit 
through the Western CCA with their gear stowed and groundfish on board 
only in a corridor through the Western CCA bounded on the north by the 
latitude line at 3300'30'' N. lat., and bounded on the 
south by the latitude line at 3259'30'' N. lat.
    (c) Trawl (Limited Entry and Open Access Exempted Trawl Gears) 
Rockfish Conservation Area. (i) Trawl RCAs are intended to protect a 
complex of species, such as overfished shelf rockfish species, and have 
boundaries defined by specific latitude and longitude coordinates 
intended to approximate particular depth contours, such as 75 fm (137 
m), 150 fm (274 m), and 200 fm (366 m). The trawl RCA is closed 
coastwide to limited entry groundfish trawl fishing, except for mid-
water trawl vessels participating in the primary whiting season. The 
trawl RCA is also closed coastwide to open access exempted trawl 
fishing, except for pink shrimp trawling. Fishing with any trawl gear 
is prohibited within the trawl RCA coastwide, unless that vessel is 
participating in the primary whiting season with mid-water trawl gear, 
trawling with midwater gear for yellowtail or widow rockfish when that 
is permitted, or trawling for pink shrimp. Coastwide, it is unlawful to 
take and retain, possess, or land any species of fish taken with trawl 
gear within the trawl RCA, except as permitted for vessels 
participating in the primary whiting season with mid-water trawl gear 
or for vessels participating in the pink shrimp trawl fishery. 
Throughout the year, boundaries for the trawl RCA are provided in Table 
3 of section IV.B. and in Table 5 of section IV.C. and may be modified 
by NMFS inseason pursuant to the requirements of the APA. Trawl RCA 
boundaries are defined by specific latitude and longitude coordinates 
and are provided below at paragraph (e) of this section.
    (ii) Trawl vessels may transit through the trawl RCA, with or 
without groundfish on board, provided all groundfish trawl gear is 
stowed either: (1) Below deck; or (2) if the gear cannot readily be 
moved, in a secured and covered manner, detached from all towing lines, 
so that it is rendered unusable for fishing; or (3) remaining on deck 
uncovered if the trawl doors are hung from their stanchions and the net 
is disconnected from the doors. These restrictions do not apply to 
vessels fishing with mid-water trawl gear for Pacific whiting or taking 
and retaining yellowtail rockfish or widow rockfish in association with 
Pacific whiting caught with mid-water trawl gear or to taking and 
retaining yellowtail or widow rockfish with mid-water trawl gear when 
trip limits are authorized for those species (November-December 2004.)
    (iii) If a vessel fishes in the trawl RCA, it may not participate 
in any fishing on that trip that is prohibited by the restrictions that 
apply within the trawl RCA. For example, if a vessel participates in 
the pink shrimp fishery within the RCA, the vessel cannot on the same 
trip participate in the DTS fishery outside of the RCA. Nothing in 
these Federal regulations supercede any State regulations that may 
prohibit trawling shoreward of the 3-nm state waters boundary line.
    (d) Non-Trawl (Limited Entry Fixed Gear and Open Access Non-trawl 
Gears) Rockfish Conservation Area. (i) Non-trawl RCAs are intended to 
protect a complex of species, such as overfished shelf rockfish 
species, and have boundaries defined by specific latitude and longitude 
coordinates intended to approximate particular depth contours, such as 
27 fm (49 m), 100 fm (183 m), and 150 fm (274 m). The non-trawl RCA is 
closed to non-trawl gear (limited entry or open access longline and pot 
or trap, open access hook-and-line, pot or trap, gillnet, set net, 
trammel net and spear) fishing for groundfish. Fishing for groundfish 
with non-trawl gear is prohibited within the non-trawl RCA. It is 
unlawful to take and retain, possess, or land groundfish taken with 
non-trawl gear within the non-trawl RCA. Limited entry fixed gear and 
open access non-trawl gear vessels may transit through the non-trawl 
RCA, with or without groundfish on board. These restrictions do not 
apply to vessels fishing for species other than groundfish with non-
trawl gear, although non-trawl vessels on a fishing trip for species 
other than groundfish that occurs within the non-trawl RCA may not 
retain any groundfish taken on that trip. If a vessel fishes in the 
non-trawl RCA, it may not participate in any fishing on that trip that 
is prohibited by the restrictions that apply within the non-trawl RCA. 
For example, if a vessel participates in the salmon troll fishery 
within the RCA, the vessel cannot on the same trip participate in the 
sablefish fishery outside of the RCA. Throughout the year, boundaries 
for the non-trawl RCA are provided in Table 4 of section IV.B. and in 
Table 5 of section IV.C. and may be modified by NMFS inseason pursuant 
to the requirements of the APA. Non-trawl RCA boundaries are defined by 
specific latitude and longitude coordinates and are provided below at 
paragraph (e) of this section.
    (e) Recreational Rockfish Conservation Area. (i) Recreational RCAs 
are closed areas intended to protect overfished rockfish species. 
Recreational RCAs may either have (1) boundaries defined by general 
depth contours or (2) boundaries defined by specific latitude and 
longitude coordinates intended to approximate particular depth 
contours. The recreational RCA is closed to recreational fishing for 
groundfish. Fishing for groundfish with recreational gear is prohibited 
within the recreational RCA. It is unlawful to take and retain, 
possess, or land groundfish taken with recreational gear within the 
recreational RCA. These restrictions do not apply to recreational 
vessels fishing for species other than groundfish with recreational 
gear. If a vessel fishes in the recreational RCA, it may not 
participate in any fishing on that trip that is prohibited by the 
restrictions that apply within the recreational RCA. For example, if a 
vessel participates in the recreational salmon fishery within the RCA, 
the vessel cannot on the same trip participate in the recreational 
groundfish fishery shoreward of the RCA. Throughout the year, 
boundaries for the recreational RCAs are provided in the text in 
section IV.D. under each State (Washington, Oregon and California) and 
may be modified by NMFS inseason. Recreational RCA boundaries that are 
defined by specific latitude and longitude coordinates are provided 
below at paragraph (f) of this section.
    (f) RCA Boundary Coordinates. Specific latitude and longitude 
coordinates for RCA boundaries that approximate the depth contours 
selected for both trawl, non-trawl, and recreational RCAs are provided 
here. Also provided here are references to islands and rocks that serve 
as reference points for the RCAs.
    (i) The 27-fm (49-m) depth contour used between 
4616' N. lat. and 4010' N. lat. is 
defined by straight lines connecting all of the following points in the 
order stated:

    (1) 4616.00' N. lat., 12412.39' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4614.85' N. lat., 12412.39' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4603.95' N. lat., 12403.64' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4543.14' N. lat., 12400.17' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4523.33' N. lat., 12401.99' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4509.54' N. lat., 12401.65' W. 
long.;

[[Page 11089]]

    (7) 4439.99' N. lat., 12408.67' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4420.86' N. lat., 12410.31' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4337.11' N. lat., 12414.91' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4327.54' N. lat., 12418.98' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4320.68' N. lat., 12425.53' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4315.08' N. lat., 12427.17' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4306.89' N. lat., 12429.65' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4301.02' N. lat., 12429.70' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4252.67' N. lat., 12436.10' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4245.96' N. lat., 12437.95' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4245.80' N. lat., 12435.41' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4238.46' N. lat., 12427.49' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4235.29' N. lat., 12426.85' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4231.49' N. lat., 12431.40' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4229.06' N. lat., 12432.24' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4214.26' N. lat., 12426.27' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4204.86' N. lat., 12421.94' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4200.10' N. lat., 12420.99' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4200.00' N. lat., 12421.03' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4156.33' N. lat., 12420.34' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4150.93' N. lat., 12423.74' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4141.83' N. lat., 12416.99' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4135.48' N. lat., 12416.35' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4123.51' N. lat., 12410.48' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4104.62' N. lat., 12414.44' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4054.28' N. lat., 12413.90' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4040.37' N. lat., 12426.21' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4034.03' N. lat., 12427.36' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4028.88' N. lat., 12432.41' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4024.82' N. lat., 12429.56' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4022.64' N. lat., 12424.05' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4018.67' N. lat., 12421.90' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4014.23' N. lat., 12423.72' 
W. long.; and
    (40) 4010.00' N. lat., 12417.22' 
W. long.

    (ii) The 30-fm (55-m) depth contour between the U.S. border with 
Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4824.79' N. lat., 12444.07' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4824.80' N. lat., 12444.74' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4823.94' N. lat., 12444.70' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4823.51' N. lat., 12445.01' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4822.59' N. lat., 12444.97' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4821.75' N. lat., 12445.26' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4821.23' N. lat., 12447.78' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4820.32' N. lat., 12449.53' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4816.72' N. lat., 12451.58' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4810.48' N. lat., 12452.58' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4805.63' N. lat., 12452.91' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4753.37' N. lat., 12447.37' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4740.28' N. lat., 12440.07' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4725.67' N. lat., 12434.79' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4712.82' N. lat., 12429.12' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4652.94' N. lat., 12422.58' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4644.18' N. lat., 12418.00' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4636.33' N. lat., 12415.38' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4629.53' N. lat., 12415.89' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4619.27' N. lat., 12414.15' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4616.00' N. lat., 12413.13' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4616.00' N. lat., 12413.05' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4607.00' N. lat., 12407.01' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4555.95' N. lat., 12402.23' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4554.53' N. lat., 12402.57' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4550.65' N. lat., 12401.62' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4548.20' N. lat., 12402.16' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4543.47' N. lat., 12401.28' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4540.48' N. lat., 12401.03' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4539.04' N. lat., 12401.68' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4535.48' N. lat., 12401.89' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4529.81' N. lat., 12402.45' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4527.96' N. lat., 12401.89' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4527.22' N. lat., 12402.67' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4524.20' N. lat., 12402.94' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4520.60' N. lat., 12401.74' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4516.44' N. lat., 12403.22' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4513.63' N. lat., 12402.70' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4511.04' N. lat., 12403.59' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4508.55' N. lat., 12403.47' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4502.82' N. lat., 12404.64' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4458.06' N. lat., 12405.03' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4453.97' N. lat., 12406.92' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4448.89' N. lat., 12407.04' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4446.94' N. lat., 12408.25' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4442.72' N. lat., 12408.98' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4438.16' N. lat., 12411.48' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4433.38' N. lat., 12411.54' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4428.51' N. lat., 12412.03' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4427.65' N. lat., 12412.56' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4419.67' N. lat., 12412.37' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4410.79' N. lat., 12412.22' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4409.22' N. lat., 12412.28' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4400.22' N. lat., 12412.80' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4351.56' N. lat., 12413.17' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4344.26' N. lat., 12414.50' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4333.82' N. lat., 12416.28' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4328.66' N. lat., 12418.72' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4323.12' N. lat., 12424.04' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4320.49' N. lat., 12425.90' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4316.41' N. lat., 12427.52' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4314.23' N. lat., 12429.28' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4314.03' N. lat., 12428.31' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4311.92' N. lat., 12428.26' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4311.02' N. lat., 12429.11' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4310.13' N. lat., 12429.15' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4309.27' N. lat., 12431.03' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4307.73' N. lat., 12430.92' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4305.93' N. lat., 12429.64' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4301.59' N. lat., 12430.64' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4259.73' N. lat., 12431.16' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4253.75' N. lat., 12436.09' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4249.37' N. lat., 12438.81' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4246.42' N. lat., 12437.69' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4246.07' N. lat., 12438.56' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4245.29' N. lat., 12437.95' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4245.61' N. lat., 12436.87' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4244.28' N. lat., 12433.64' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4242.75' N. lat., 12431.84' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4240.04' N. lat., 12429.19' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4238.09' N. lat., 12428.39' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4236.72' N. lat., 12427.54' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4236.56' N. lat., 12428.40' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4235.76' N. lat., 12428.79' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4234.03' N. lat., 12429.98' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4234.19' N. lat., 12430.58' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4231.27' N. lat., 12432.24' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4227.07' N. lat., 12432.53' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4224.21' N. lat., 12431.23' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4220.47' N. lat., 12428.87' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4214.60' N. lat., 12426.80' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4210.90' N. lat., 12424.57' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4207.04' N. lat., 12423.35' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4202.16' N. lat., 12422.59' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4200.00' N. lat., 12421.81' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4159.95' N. lat., 12421.56' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4155.75' N. lat., 12420.72' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4150.93' N. lat., 12423.76' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4142.53' N. lat., 12416.47' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4137.20' N. lat., 12417.05' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4124.58' N. lat., 12410.51' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4120.73' N. lat., 12411.73' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4117.59' N. lat., 12410.66' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4104.54' N. lat., 12414.47' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4054.26' N. lat., 12413.90' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4040.31' N. lat., 12426.24' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4034.00' N. lat., 12427.39' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4028.89' N. lat., 12432.43' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4024.77' N. lat., 12429.51' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4022.47' N. lat., 12424.12' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4019.73' N. lat., 12423.59' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4018.64' N. lat., 12421.89' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4017.67' N. lat., 12423.07' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4015.58' N. lat., 12423.61' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4013.42' N. lat., 12422.94' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4010.00' N. lat., 12416.65' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4009.46' N. lat., 12415.28' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4008.89' N. lat., 12415.24' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4006.40' N. lat., 12410.97' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4006.08' N. lat., 12409.34' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4006.64' N. lat., 12408.00' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4005.08' N. lat., 12407.57' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4004.29' N. lat., 12408.12' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4000.61' N. lat., 12407.35' 
W. long.;
    (125) 3958.60' N. lat., 12405.51' 
W. long.;
    (126) 3954.89' N. lat., 12404.67' 
W. long.;
    (127) 3953.01' N. lat., 12402.33' 
W. long.;
    (128) 3953.20' N. lat., 12358.18' 
W. long.;
    (129) 3948.45' N. lat., 12353.21' 
W. long.;
    (130) 3943.89' N. lat., 12351.75' 
W. long.;
    (131) 3939.60' N. lat., 12349.14' 
W. long.;
    (132) 3934.43' N. lat., 12348.48' 
W. long.;
    (133) 3930.63' N. lat., 12349.71' 
W. long.;
    (134) 3921.25' N. lat., 12350.54' 
W. long.;
    (135) 3908.87' N. lat., 12346.24' 
W. long.;
    (136) 3903.79' N. lat., 12343.91' 
W. long.;
    (137) 3859.65' N. lat., 12345.94' 
W. long.;
    (138) 3856.80' N. lat., 12346.48' 
W. long.;
    (139) 3851.16' N. lat., 12341.48' 
W. long.;
    (140) 3845.77' N. lat., 12335.14' 
W. long.;
    (141) 3842.21' N. lat., 12328.17' 
W. long.;
    (142) 3834.05' N. lat., 12320.96' 
W. long.;
    (143) 3822.47' N. lat., 12307.48' 
W. long.;
    (144) 3816.52' N. lat., 12305.62' 
W. long.;
    (145) 3814.42' N. lat., 12301.91' 
W. long.;
    (146) 3808.24' N. lat., 12259.79' 
W. long.;
    (147) 3802.69' N. lat., 12301.96' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3759.73' N. lat., 12304.75' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3758.41' N. lat., 12302.93' 
W. long.;
    (150) 3758.25' N. lat., 12256.49' 
W. long.;
    (151) 3750.30' N. lat., 12252.23' 
W. long.;
    (152) 3743.36' N. lat., 12304.18' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3740.77' N. lat., 12301.62' 
W. long.;
    (154) 3740.13' N. lat., 12257.30' 
W. long.;
    (155) 3742.59' N. lat., 12253.64' 
W. long.;
    (156) 3729.62' N. lat., 12236.00' 
W. long.;
    (157) 3722.38' N. lat., 12231.66' 
W. long.;
    (158) 3713.86' N. lat., 12228.27' 
W. long.;
    (159) 3708.01' N. lat., 12224.75' 
W. long.;
    (160) 3705.84' N. lat., 12222.47' 
W. long.;
    (161) 3658.77' N. lat., 12213.03' 
W. long.;
    (162) 3653.74' N. lat., 12203.39' 
W. long.;
    (163) 3652.71' N. lat., 12200.14' 
W. long.;
    (164) 3652.51' N. lat., 12156.77' 
W. long.;
    (165) 3649.44' N. lat., 12149.63' 
W. long.;
    (166) 3648.01' N. lat., 12149.92' 
W. long.;
    (167) 3648.25' N. lat., 12147.66' 
W. long.;
    (168) 3646.26' N. lat., 12151.27' 
W. long.;
    (169) 3639.14' N. lat., 12152.05' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3638.00' N. lat., 12153.57' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3639.14' N. lat., 12155.45' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3638.50' N. lat., 12157.09' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3636.75' N. lat., 12159.44' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3634.97' N. lat., 12159.37' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3633.07' N. lat., 12158.32' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3633.27' N. lat., 12157.07' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3632.68' N. lat., 12157.03' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3632.04' N. lat., 12155.98' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3631.61' N. lat., 12155.72' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3631.59' N. lat., 12157.12' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3631.52' N. lat., 12157.57' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3630.88' N. lat., 12157.90' 
W. long.;
    (183) 3630.25' N. lat., 12157.37' 
W. long.;
    (184) 3629.47' N. lat., 12157.55' 
W. long.;
    (185) 3626.72' N. lat., 12156.40' 
W. long.;
    (186) 3624.33' N. lat., 12156.00' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11090]]

    (187) 3623.36' N. lat., 12155.45' 
W. long.;
    (188) 3618.86' N. lat., 12156.15' 
W. long.;
    (189) 3616.21' N. lat., 12154.81' 
W. long.;
    (190) 3615.30' N. lat., 12153.79' 
W. long.;
    (191) 3612.04' N. lat., 12145.38' 
W. long.;
    (192) 3611.87' N. lat., 12144.45' 
W. long.;
    (193) 3612.13' N. lat., 12144.25' 
W. long.;
    (194) 3611.89' N. lat., 12143.65' 
W. long.;
    (195) 3610.56' N. lat., 12142.62' 
W. long.;
    (196) 3609.90' N. lat., 12141.57' 
W. long.;
    (197) 3608.14' N. lat., 12140.44' 
W. long.;
    (198) 3606.69' N. lat., 12138.79' 
W. long.;
    (199) 3605.85' N. lat., 12138.47' 
W. long.;
    (200) 3603.08' N. lat., 12136.25' 
W. long.;
    (201) 3602.92' N. lat., 12135.89' 
W. long.;
    (202) 3601.53' N. lat., 12136.13' 
W. long.;
    (203) 3600.59' N. lat., 12135.40' 
W. long.;
    (204) 3559.93' N. lat., 12133.81' 
W. long.;
    (205) 3559.69' N. lat., 12131.84' 
W. long.;
    (206) 3558.59' N. lat., 12130.30' 
W. long.;
    (207) 3554.02' N. lat., 12129.71' 
W. long.;
    (208) 3551.54' N. lat., 12127.67' 
W. long.;
    (209) 3550.42' N. lat., 12125.79' 
W. long.;
    (210) 3548.37' N. lat., 12124.29' 
W. long.;
    (211) 3547.02' N. lat., 12122.46' 
W. long.;
    (212) 3542.28' N. lat., 12121.20' 
W. long.;
    (213) 3541.57' N. lat., 12121.82' 
W. long.;
    (214) 3539.24' N. lat., 12118.84' 
W. long.;
    (215) 3535.14' N. lat., 12110.45' 
W. long.;
    (216) 3530.11' N. lat., 12105.59' 
W. long.;
    (217) 3525.86' N. lat., 12100.07' 
W. long.;
    (218) 3522.82' N. lat., 12054.68' 
W. long.;
    (219) 3517.96' N. lat., 12055.54' 
W. long.;
    (220) 3514.83' N. lat., 12055.42' 
W. long.;
    (221) 3508.87' N. lat., 12050.22' 
W. long.;
    (222) 3505.55' N. lat., 12044.89' 
W. long.;
    (223) 3502.91' N. lat., 12043.94' 
W. long.;
    (224) 3453.80' N. lat., 12043.94' 
W. long.;
    (225) 3434.89' N. lat., 12041.92' 
W. long.;
    (226) 3432.48' N. lat., 12040.05' 
W. long.;
    (227) 3430.12' N. lat., 12032.81' 
W. long.;
    (228) 3427.00' N. lat., 12030.46' 
W. long.;
    (229) 3427.00' N. lat., 12030.31' 
W. long.;
    (230) 3425.84' N. lat., 12027.40' 
W. long.;
    (231) 3425.16' N. lat., 12020.18' 
W. long.;
    (232) 3425.88' N. lat., 12018.24' 
W. long.;
    (233) 3427.26' N. lat., 12012.47' 
W. long.;
    (234) 3426.27' N. lat., 12002.22' 
W. long.;
    (235) 3423.41' N. lat., 11953.40' 
W. long.;
    (236) 3423.33' N. lat., 11948.74' 
W. long.;
    (237) 3422.31' N. lat., 11941.36' 
W. long.;
    (238) 3421.72' N. lat., 11940.14' 
W. long.;
    (239) 3421.25' N. lat., 11941.18' 
W. long.;
    (240) 3420.25' N. lat., 11939.03' 
W. long.;
    (241) 3419.87' N. lat., 11933.65' 
W. long.;
    (242) 3418.67' N. lat., 11930.16' 
W. long.;
    (243) 3416.95' N. lat., 11927.90' 
W. long.;
    (244) 3413.02' N. lat., 11926.99' 
W. long.;
    (245) 3408.62' N. lat., 11920.89' 
W. long.;
    (246) 3406.95' N. lat., 11917.68' 
W. long.;
    (247) 3405.93' N. lat., 11915.17' 
W. long.;
    (248) 3408.42' N. lat., 11913.11' 
W. long.;
    (249) 3405.23' N. lat., 11913.34' 
W. long.;
    (250) 3404.98' N. lat., 11911.39' 
W. long.;
    (251) 3404.55' N. lat., 11911.09' 
W. long.;
    (252) 3404.15' N. lat., 11909.35' 
W. long.;
    (253) 3404.89' N. lat., 11907.86' 
W. long.;
    (254) 3404.08' N. lat., 11907.33' 
W. long.;
    (255) 3404.10' N. lat., 11906.89' 
W. long.;
    (256) 3405.08' N. lat., 11907.02' 
W. long.;
    (257) 3405.27' N. lat., 11904.95' 
W. long.;
    (258) 3404.51' N. lat., 11904.70' 
W. long.;
    (259) 3402.26' N. lat., 11859.88' 
W. long.;
    (260) 3401.08' N. lat., 11859.77' 
W. long.;
    (261) 3400.94' N. lat., 11851.65' 
W. long.;
    (262) 3359.77' N. lat., 11849.26' 
W. long.;
    (263) 3400.04' N. lat., 11848.92' 
W. long.;
    (264) 3359.65' N. lat., 11848.43' 
W. long.;
    (265) 3359.46' N. lat., 11847.25' 
W. long.;
    (266) 3359.80' N. lat., 11845.89' 
W. long.;
    (267) 3400.21' N. lat., 11837.64' 
W. long.;
    (268) 3359.26' N. lat., 11834.58' 
W. long.;
    (269) 3358.07' N. lat., 11833.36' 
W. long.;
    (270) 3353.76' N. lat., 11830.14' 
W. long.;
    (271) 3351.00' N. lat., 11825.19' 
W. long.;
    (272) 3350.07' N. lat., 11824.70' 
W. long.;
    (273) 3350.16' N. lat., 11823.77' 
W. long.;
    (274) 3348.80' N. lat., 11825.31' 
W. long.;
    (275) 3347.07' N. lat., 11827.07' 
W. long.;
    (276) 3346.12' N. lat., 11826.87' 
W. long.;
    (277) 3344.15' N. lat., 11825.15' 
W. long.;
    (278) 3343.54' N. lat., 11823.02' 
W. long.;
    (279) 3341.35' N. lat., 11818.86' 
W. long.;
    (280) 3339.96' N. lat., 11817.37' 
W. long.;
    (281) 3340.12' N. lat., 11816.33' 
W. long.;
    (282) 3339.28' N. lat., 11816.21' 
W. long.;
    (283) 3338.04' N. lat., 11814.86' 
W. long.;
    (284) 3336.57' N. lat., 11814.67' 
W. long.;
    (285) 3334.93' N. lat., 11810.94' 
W. long.;
    (286) 3335.14' N. lat., 11808.61' 
W. long.;
    (287) 3335.69' N. lat., 11807.68' 
W. long.;
    (288) 3336.21' N. lat., 11807.53' 
W. long.;
    (289) 3336.43' N. lat., 11806.73' 
W. long.;
    (290) 3336.05' N. lat., 11806.15' 
W. long.;
    (291) 3336.32' N. lat., 11803.91' 
W. long.;
    (292) 3335.69' N. lat., 11803.64' 
W. long.;
    (293) 3334.62' N. lat., 11800.04' 
W. long.;
    (294) 3334.80' N. lat., 11757.73' 
W. long.;
    (295) 3335.57' N. lat., 11756.62' 
W. long.;
    (296) 3335.46' N. lat., 11755.99' 
W. long.;
    (297) 3335.98' N. lat., 11755.99' 
W. long.;
    (298) 3335.46' N. lat., 11755.38' 
W. long.;
    (299) 3335.21' N. lat., 11753.46' 
W. long.;
    (300) 3333.61' N. lat., 11750.45' 
W. long.;
    (301) 3331.41' N. lat., 11747.28' 
W. long.;
    (302) 3327.54' N. lat., 11744.36' 
W. long.;
    (303) 3326.63' N. lat., 11743.17' 
W. long.;
    (304) 3325.21' N. lat., 11740.90' 
W. long.;
    (305) 3320.33' N. lat., 11735.99' 
W. long.;
    (306) 3316.35' N. lat., 11731.51' 
W. long.;
    (307) 3311.53' N. lat., 11726.81' 
W. long.;
    (308) 3307.59' N. lat., 11721.13' 
W. long.;
    (309) 3302.21' N. lat., 11719.05' 
W. long.;
    (310) 3256.55' N. lat., 11717.70' 
W. long.;
    (311) 3254.61' N. lat., 11716.60' 
W. long.;
    (312) 3252.32' N. lat., 11715.97' 
W. long.;
    (313) 3251.48' N. lat., 11716.15' 
W. long.;
    (314) 3251.85' N. lat., 11717.26' 
W. long.;
    (315) 3251.55' N. lat., 11719.01' 
W. long.;
    (316) 3249.55' N. lat., 11719.63' 
W. long.;
    (317) 3246.71' N. lat., 11718.32' 
W. long.;
    (318) 3236.35' N. lat., 11715.68' 
W. long.; and
    (319) 3232.85' N. lat., 11715.44' 
W. long.

    (A) The 30-fm (55-m) depth contour around the Farallon Islands off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3746.73' N. lat., 1236.37' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3745.79' N. lat., 12307.91' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3745.28' N. lat., 12307.75' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3744.98' N. lat., 12307.11' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3745.51' N. lat., 12306.26' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3745.14' N. lat., 12305.41' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3745.31' N. lat., 12304.82' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3746.11' N. lat., 12305.23' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3746.44' N. lat., 12305.63' W. 
long.; and
    (10) 3746.73' N. lat., 12306.37' 
W. long.

    (B) The 30-fm (55-m) depth contour around Noon Day Rock off the 
State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of the 
following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3747.83' N. lat., 12310.83' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3747.51' N. lat., 12311.19' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3747.33' N. lat., 12310.68' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3747.02' N. lat., 12310.59' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3747.21' N. lat., 12309.85' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3747.56' N. lat., 12309.72' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3747.87' N. lat., 12310.26' W. 
long.; and
    (8) 3747.83' N. lat., 12310.83' W. 
long.

    (C) The 30-fm (55-m) depth contour around the northern Channel 
Islands off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3401.41' N. lat., 11920.61' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3400.98' N. lat., 11920.46' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3400.53' N. lat., 11920.98' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3400.17' N. lat., 11921.83' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3359.65' N. lat., 11924.45' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3359.68' N. lat., 11925.20' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3359.95' N. lat., 11926.25' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3359.87' N. lat., 11927.27' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3359.55' N. lat., 11928.02' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3358.63' N. lat., 11936.48' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3357.62' N. lat., 11941.13' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3357.00' N. lat., 11942.20' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3356.93' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3357.70' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (14) and (15), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (15) 3358.00' N. lat., 11951.00' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3358.00' N. lat., 11952.00' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3358.54' N. lat., 11952.80' 
W. long.;
    (18) 3359.74' N. lat., 11954.19' 
W. long.;
    (19) 3359.97' N. lat., 11954.66' 
W. long.;
    (20) 3359.83' N. lat., 11956.00' 
W. long.;
    (21) 3359.18' N. lat., 11957.17' 
W. long.;
    (22) 3357.83' N. lat., 11956.74' 
W. long.;
    (23) 3355.71' N. lat., 11956.89' 
W. long.;
    (24) 3353.89' N. lat., 11957.68' 
W. long.;
    (25) 3352.93' N. lat., 11959.80' 
W. long.;
    (26) 3352.79' N. lat., 12001.81' 
W. long.;
    (27) 3352.51' N. lat., 12003.08' 
W. long.;
    (28) 3353.12' N. lat., 12004.88' 
W. long.;
    (29) 3353.12' N. lat., 12005.80' 
W. long.;
    (30) 3352.94' N. lat., 12006.50' 
W. long.;
    (31) 3353.80' N. lat., 12006.50' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (31) and (32), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (32) 3355.00' N. lat., 12010.00' 
W. long.;
    (33) 3354.03' N. lat., 12010.00' 
W. long.;
    (34) 3354.58' N. lat., 12011.82' 
W. long.;
    (35) 3357.08' N. lat., 12014.58' 
W. long.;
    (36) 3359.50' N. lat., 12016.72' 
W. long.;
    (37) 3359.63' N. lat., 12017.88' 
W. long.;
    (38) 3400.30' N. lat., 12019.14' 
W. long.;
    (39) 3400.02' N. lat., 12019.68' 
W. long.;
    (40) 3400.08' N. lat., 12021.73' 
W. long.;
    (41) 3400.94' N. lat., 12024.82' 
W. long.;
    (42) 3400.97' N. lat., 12025.30' 
W. long.;
    (43) 3401.50' N. lat., 12025.30' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (43) and (44), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (44) 3401.80' N. lat., 12026.60' 
W. long.;
    (45) 3401.05' N. lat., 12026.60' 
W. long.;
    (46) 3401.11' N. lat., 12027.43' 
W. long.;
    (47) 3400.96' N. lat., 12028.09' 
W. long.;
    (48) 3401.56' N. lat., 12028.71' 
W. long.;
    (49) 3401.80' N. lat., 12028.31' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11091]]

    (50) 3403.60' N. lat., 12028.87' 
W. long.;
    (51) 3403.60' N. lat., 12028.20' 
W. long.;
    (52) 3405.35' N. lat., 12028.20' 
W. long.;
    (53) 3405.30' N. lat., 12027.33' 
W. long.;
    (54) 3405.65' N. lat., 12026.79' 
W. long.;
    (55) 3405.69' N. lat., 12025.82' 
W. long.;
    (56) 3407.24' N. lat., 12024.98' 
W. long.;
    (57) 3406.00' N. lat., 12023.30' 
W. long.;
    (58) 3403.10' N. lat., 12023.30' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (58) and (59), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (59) 3403.50' N. lat., 12021.30' 
W. long.;
    (60) 3402.90' N. lat., 12020.20' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (60) and (61), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (61) 3401.80' N. lat., 12018.40' 
W. long.;
    (62) 3403.61' N. lat., 12018.40' 
W. long.;
    (63) 3403.25' N. lat., 12016.64' 
W. long.;
    (64) 3404.33' N. lat., 12014.22' 
W. long.;
    (65) 3404.11' N. lat., 12011.17' 
W. long.;
    (66) 3403.72' N. lat., 12009.93' 
W. long.;
    (67) 3403.81' N. lat., 12008.96' 
W. long.;
    (68) 3403.36' N. lat., 12006.52' 
W. long.;
    (69) 3404.80' N. lat., 12004.00' 
W. long.;
    (70) 3404.00' N. lat., 12004.00' 
W. long.;
    (71) 3404.00' N. lat., 12005.20' 
W. long.;
    (72) 3401.30' N. lat., 12005.20' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (72) and (73), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (73) 3400.50' N. lat., 12002.80' 
W. long.;
    (74) 3400.49' N. lat., 12001.01' 
W. long.;
    (75) 3404.00' N. lat., 12001.00' 
W. long.;
    (76) 3403.99' N. lat., 12000.15' 
W. long.;
    (77) 3403.51' N. lat., 11959.42' 
W. long.;
    (78) 3403.79' N. lat., 11958.15' 
W. long.;
    (79) 3404.72' N. lat., 11957.61' 
W. long.;
    (80) 3405.14' N. lat., 11955.17' 
W. long.;
    (81) 3404.85' N. lat., 11953.00' 
W. long.;
    (82) 3404.50' N. lat., 11953.00' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (82) and (83), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (83) 3404.00' N. lat., 11951.00' 
W. long.;
    (84) 3404.49' N. lat., 11951.01' 
W. long.;
    (85) 3403.79' N. lat., 11948.86' 
W. long.;
    (86) 3403.79' N. lat., 11945.46' 
W. long.;
    (87) 3403.27' N. lat., 11944.17' 
W. long.;
    (88) 3403.29' N. lat., 11943.30' 
W. long.;
    (89) 3401.71' N. lat., 11940.83' 
W. long.;
    (90) 3401.74' N. lat., 11937.92' 
W. long.;
    (91) 3402.07' N. lat., 11937.17' 
W. long.;
    (92) 3402.93' N. lat., 11936.52' 
W. long.;
    (93) 3403.48' N. lat., 11935.50' 
W. long.;
    (94) 3402.94' N. lat., 11935.50' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (94) and (95), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (95) 3402.80' N. lat., 11932.80' 
W. long.;
    (96) 3403.56' N. lat., 11932.80' 
W. long.;
    (97) 3402.72' N. lat., 11931.84' 
W. long.;
    (98) 3402.20' N. lat., 11930.53' 
W. long.;
    (99) 3401.49' N. lat., 11930.20' 
W. long.;
    (100) 3400.66' N. lat., 11928.62' 
W. long.;
    (101) 3400.66' N. lat., 11927.57' 
W. long.;
    (102) 3401.40' N. lat., 11926.94' 
W. long.;
    (103) 3401.35' N. lat., 11926.70' 
W. long.;
    (104) 3400.80' N. lat., 11926.70' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (104) and (105), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (105) 3400.40' N. lat., 11924.60' 
W. long.;
    (between coordinates (105) and (106), the boundary follows the 
shoreline)
    (106) 3401.00' N. lat., 11921.40' 
W. long.;
    (107) 3401.49' N. lat., 11921.40' 
W. long.; and
    (108) 3401.41' N. lat., 11920.61' 
W. long.

    (D) The 30-fm (55-m) depth contour around San Clemente Island off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3303.37' N. lat., 11837.76' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3302.72' N. lat., 11838.12' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3302.18' N. lat., 11837.46' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3300.66' N. lat., 11837.36' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3300.08' N. lat., 11836.94' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3300.11' N. lat., 11836.00' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3258.02' N. lat., 11835.41' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3256.00' N. lat., 11833.59' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3254.76' N. lat., 11833.58' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3253.97' N. lat., 11832.45' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3251.18' N. lat., 11830.83' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3250.00' N. lat., 11829.68' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3249.72' N. lat., 11828.33' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3247.88' N. lat., 11826.90' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3247.30' N. lat., 11825.73' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3247.28' N. lat., 11824.83' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3248.12' N. lat., 11824.33' 
W. long.;
    (18) 3248.74' N. lat., 11823.39' 
W. long.;
    (19) 3248.69' N. lat., 11821.75' 
W. long.;
    (20) 3249.06' N. lat., 11820.53' 
W. long.;
    (21) 3250.28' N. lat., 11821.90' 
W. long.;
    (22) 3251.73' N. lat., 11823.86' 
W. long.;
    (23) 3252.79' N. lat., 11825.08' 
W. long.;
    (24) 3254.03' N. lat., 11826.83' 
W. long.;
    (25) 3254.70' N. lat., 11827.55' 
W. long.;
    (26) 3255.49' N. lat., 11829.04' 
W. long.;
    (27) 3259.58' N. lat., 11832.51' 
W. long.;
    (28) 3259.89' N. lat., 11832.52' 
W. long.;
    (29) 3300.29' N. lat., 11832.73' 
W. long.;
    (30) 3300.85' N. lat., 11833.50' 
W. long.;
    (31) 3301.70' N. lat., 11833.64' 
W. long.;
    (32) 3302.90' N. lat., 11835.35' 
W. long.;
    (33) 3302.61' N. lat., 11836.96' 
W. long.; and
    (34) 3303.37' N. lat., 11837.76' 
W. long.

    (E) The 300-fm (55-m) depth contour around Santa Catalina Island 
off the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all 
of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3319.13' N. lat., 11818.04' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3318.32' N. lat., 11818.20' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3317.82' N. lat., 11818.73' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3317.54' N. lat., 11819.52' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3317.99' N. lat., 11821.71' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3318.48' N. lat., 11822.82' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3318.77' N. lat., 11826.95' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3319.69' N. lat., 11828.87' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3320.53' N. lat., 11830.52' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3320.46' N. lat., 11831.47' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3320.98' N. lat., 11831.39' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3320.81' N. lat., 11830.49' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3321.38' N. lat., 11830.07' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3323.12' N. lat., 11829.31' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3324.95' N. lat., 11829.70' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3325.39' N. lat., 11830.50' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3325.21' N. lat., 11830.79' 
W. long.;
    (18) 3325.65' N. lat., 11831.60' 
W. long.;
    (19) 3325.65' N. lat., 11832.04' 
W. long.;
    (20) 3325.94' N. lat., 11832.96' 
W. long.;
    (21) 3325.86' N. lat., 11833.49' 
W. long.;
    (22) 3326.06' N. lat., 11834.12' 
W. long.;
    (23) 3328.28' N. lat., 11836.60' 
W. long.;
    (24) 3328.83' N. lat., 11836.42' 
W. long.;
    (25) 3328.72' N. lat., 11834.93' 
W. long.;
    (26) 3328.71' N. lat., 11833.61' 
W. long.;
    (27) 3328.81' N. lat., 11832.95' 
W. long.;
    (28) 3328.73' N. lat., 11832.07' 
W. long.;
    (29) 3327.55' N. lat., 11830.14' 
W. long.;
    (30) 3327.86' N. lat., 11829.41' 
W. long.;
    (31) 3326.98' N. lat., 11829.06' 
W. long.;
    (32) 3326.96' N. lat., 11828.58' 
W. long.;
    (33) 3326.76' N. lat., 11828.40' 
W. long.;
    (34) 3326.52' N. lat., 11827.66' 
W. long.;
    (35) 3326.31' N. lat., 11827.41' 
W. long.;
    (36) 3325.09' N. lat., 11823.13' 
W. long.;
    (37) 3324.80' N. lat., 11822.86' 
W. long.;
    (38) 3324.60' N. lat., 11822.02' 
W. long.;
    (39) 3322.82' N. lat., 11821.04' 
W. long.;
    (40) 3320.23' N. lat., 11818.45' 
W. long.; and
    (41) 3319.13' N. lat., 11818.04' 
W. long.

    (iii) The 40-fm (73-m) depth contour between 4616' 
N. lat. and 4200' N. lat. is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4616.00' N. lat., 12416.10' N. 
lat.;
    (2) 4615.29' N. lat., 12415.60' N. 
lat.;
    (3) 4611.90' N. lat., 12413.59' N. 
lat.;
    (4) 4606.93' N. lat., 12410.15' N. 
lat.;
    (5) 4605.33' N. lat., 12408.30' N. 
lat.;
    (6) 4558.69' N. lat., 12405.60' N. 
lat.;
    (7) 4557.71' N. lat., 12405.82' N. 
lat.;
    (8) 4553.97' N. lat., 12405.04' N. 
lat.;
    (9) 4549.75' N. lat., 12405.14' N. 
lat.;
    (10) 4547.88' N. lat., 12405.16' 
N. lat.;
    (11) 4547.07' N. lat., 12404.21' 
N. lat.;
    (12) 4544.34' N. lat., 12405.09' 
N. lat.;
    (13) 4540.64' N. lat., 12404.90' 
N. lat.;
    (14) 4533.00' N. lat., 12404.46' 
N. lat.;
    (15) 4532.27' N. lat., 12404.74' 
N. lat.;
    (16) 4529.26' N. lat., 12404.22' 
N. lat.;
    (17) 4519.99' N. lat., 12404.62' 
N. lat.;
    (18) 4517.50' N. lat., 12404.91' 
N. lat.;
    (19) 4511.29' N. lat., 12405.19' 
N. lat.;
    (20) 4505.79' N. lat., 12405.40' 
N. lat.;
    (21) 4505.07' N. lat., 12405.93' 
N. lat.;
    (22) 4501.70' N. lat., 12406.53' 
N. lat.;
    (23) 4458.75' N. lat., 12407.14' 
N. lat.;
    (24) 4451.28' N. lat., 12410.21' 
N. lat.;
    (25) 4449.49' N. lat., 12410.89' 
N. lat.;
    (26) 4444.96' N. lat., 12414.39' 
N. lat.;
    (27) 4443.44' N. lat., 12414.78' 
N. lat.;
    (28) 4442.27' N. lat., 12413.81' 
N. lat.;
    (29) 4441.68' N. lat., 12415.38' 
N. lat.;
    (30) 4434.87' N. lat., 12415.80' 
N. lat.;
    (31) 4433.74' N. lat., 12414.43' 
N. lat.;
    (32) 4427.66' N. lat., 12416.99' 
N. lat.;
    (33) 4419.13' N. lat., 12419.22' 
N. lat.;
    (34) 4415.35' N. lat., 12417.37' 
N. lat.;
    (35) 4414.38' N. lat., 12417.78' 
N. lat.;
    (36) 4412.80' N. lat., 12417.18' 
N. lat.;
    (37) 4409.23' N. lat., 12415.96' 
N. lat.;
    (38) 4408.38' N. lat., 12416.80' 
N. lat.;
    (39) 4401.18' N. lat., 12415.42' 
N. lat.;
    (40) 4351.60' N. lat., 12414.68' 
N. lat.;
    (41) 4342.66' N. lat., 12415.46' 
N. lat.;
    (42) 4340.49' N. lat., 12415.74' 
N. lat.;
    (43) 4338.77' N. lat., 12415.64' 
N. lat.;
    (44) 4334.52' N. lat., 12416.73' 
N. lat.;
    (45) 4328.82' N. lat., 12419.52' 
N. lat.;
    (46) 4323.91' N. lat., 12424.28' 
N. lat.;
    (47) 4317.96' N. lat., 12428.81' 
N. lat.;
    (48) 4316.75' N. lat., 12428.42' 
N. lat.;
    (49) 4313.98' N. lat., 12431.99' 
N. lat.;
    (50) 4313.71' N. lat., 12433.25' 
N. lat.;
    (51) 4312.26' N. lat., 12434.16' 
N. lat.;
    (52) 4310.96' N. lat., 12432.34' 
N. lat.;
    (53) 4305.65' N. lat., 12431.52' 
N. lat.;
    (54) 4259.66' N. lat., 12432.58' 
N. lat.;
    (55) 4254.97' N. lat., 12436.99' 
N. lat.;
    (56) 4253.81' N. lat., 12438.58' 
N. lat.;
    (57) 4249.14' N. lat., 12439.92' 
N. lat.;
    (58) 4246.47' N. lat., 12438.65' 
N. lat.;
    (59) 4245.60' N. lat., 12439.04' 
N. lat.;

[[Page 11092]]

    (60) 4244.79' N. lat., 12437.96' 
N. lat.;
    (61) 4245.00' N. lat., 12436.39' 
N. lat.;
    (62) 4244.14' N. lat., 12435.16' 
N. lat.;
    (63) 4242.15' N. lat., 12432.82' 
N. lat.;
    (64) 4238.82' N. lat., 12431.09' 
N. lat.;
    (65) 4235.91' N. lat., 12431.02' 
N. lat.;
    (66) 4231.34' N. lat., 12434.84' 
N. lat.;
    (67) 4228.13' N. lat., 12434.83' 
N. lat.;
    (68) 4226.73' N. lat., 12435.58' 
N. lat.;
    (69) 4223.85' N. lat., 12434.05' 
N. lat.;
    (70) 4221.68' N. lat., 12430.64' 
N. lat.;
    (71) 4219.62' N. lat., 12429.02' 
N. lat.;
    (72) 4215.01' N. lat., 12427.72' 
N. lat.;
    (73) 4211.38' N. lat., 12425.62' 
N. lat.;
    (74) 4204.66' N. lat., 12424.39' 
N. lat.; and
    (75) 4200.00' N. lat., 12423.55' 
N. lat.

    (iv) The 50-fm (91-m) depth contour between the U.S. border with 
Canada and the Swiftsure Bank is defined by straight lines connecting 
all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4830.15 ' N. lat., 12456.12' 
N. lat.;
    (2) 4828.29' N. lat., 12456.30' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4829.23' N. lat., 12453.63' W. 
long.; and
    (4) 4830.31' N. lat., 12451.73' W. 
long.

    (A) The 50-fm (91-m) depth contour between the U.S. border with 
Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4822.15' N. lat., 12443.15' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4822.15' N. lat., 12449.10' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4820.03' N. lat., 12451.18' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4816.61' N. lat., 12453.72' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4814.68' N. lat., 12454.50' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4812.02' N. lat., 12455.29' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4803.14' N. lat., 12457.02' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4756.05' N. lat., 12455.60' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4752.58' N. lat., 12454.00' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4750.18' N. lat., 12452.36' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4745.34' N. lat., 12451.07' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4740.96' N. lat., 12448.84' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4734.59' N. lat., 12446.24' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4727.86' N. lat., 12442.12' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4722.34' N. lat., 12439.43' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4717.66' N. lat., 12438.75' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4706.25' N. lat., 12439.74' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4700.43' N. lat., 12438.01' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4652.00' N. lat., 12432.44' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4635.41' N. lat., 12425.51' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4625.43' N. lat., 12423.46' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4616.00' N. lat., 12416.90' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4550.88' N. lat., 12409.68' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4512.99' N. lat., 12406.71' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4452.48' N. lat., 12411.22' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4442.41' N. lat., 12419.70' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4438.80' N. lat., 12426.58' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4424.99' N. lat., 12431.22' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4418.11' N. lat., 12443.74' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4415.23' N. lat., 12440.47' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4418.80' N. lat., 12435.48' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4419.62' N. lat., 12427.18' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4356.65' N. lat., 12416.86' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4334.95' N. lat., 12417.47' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4312.60' N. lat., 12435.80' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4308.96' N. lat., 12433.77' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4259.66' N. lat., 12434.79' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4254.29' N. lat., 12439.46' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4246.50' N. lat., 12439.99' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4241.00' N. lat., 12434.92' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4236.29' N. lat., 12434.70' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4228.36' N. lat., 12437.90' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4225.53' N. lat., 12437.68' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4218.64' N. lat., 12429.47' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4212.95' N. lat., 12427.34' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4203.04' N. lat., 12425.81' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4200.00' N. lat., 12426.21' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4157.60' N. lat., 12427.35' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4152.53' N. lat., 12426.51' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4150.17' N. lat., 12425.63' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4146.01' N. lat., 12422.16' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4126.50' N. lat., 12421.78' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4115.66' N. lat., 12416.42' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4105.45' N. lat., 12416.89' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4054.55' N. lat., 12419.53' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4042.22' N. lat., 12428.29' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4039.68' N. lat., 12428.37' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4036.76' N. lat., 12427.39' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4034.44' N. lat., 12428.89' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4032.57' N. lat., 12432.43' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4030.95' N. lat., 12433.87' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4028.90' N. lat., 12434.59' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4024.36' N. lat., 12431.42' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4023.66' N. lat., 12428.35' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4022.54' N. lat., 12424.71' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4021.52' N. lat., 12424.86' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4021.25' N. lat., 12425.59' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4020.63' N. lat., 12426.47' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4019.18' N. lat., 12425.98' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4018.42' N. lat., 12424.77' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4018.64' N. lat., 12422.81' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4015.31' N. lat., 12425.28' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4015.37' N. lat., 12426.82' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4011.91' N. lat., 12422.68' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4010.01' N. lat., 12419.97' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4010.00' N. lat., 12419.97' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4009.20' N. lat., 12415.81' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4007.51' N. lat., 12415.29' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4005.22' N. lat., 12410.06' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4006.51' N. lat., 12408.01' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4000.72' N. lat., 12408.45' 
W. long.;
    (82) 3956.60' N. lat., 12407.12' 
W. long.;
    (83) 3952.58' N. lat., 12403.57' 
W. long.;
    (84) 3950.65' N. lat., 12357.98' 
W. long.;
    (85) 3940.16' N. lat., 12352.41' 
W. long.;
    (86) 3930.12' N. lat., 12352.92' 
W. long.;
    (87) 3924.53' N. lat., 12355.16' 
W. long.;
    (88) 3911.58' N. lat., 12350.93' 
W. long.;
    (89) 3855.13' N. lat., 12351.14' 
W. long.;
    (90) 3828.58' N. lat., 12322.84' 
W. long.;
    (91) 3814.60' N. lat., 12309.92' 
W. long.;
    (92) 3801.84' N. lat., 12309.75' 
W. long.;
    (93) 3759.56' N. lat., 12309.25' 
W. long.;
    (94) 3755.24' N. lat., 12308.30' 
W. long.;
    (95) 3752.06' N. lat., 12309.19' 
W. long.;
    (96) 3750.21' N. lat., 12314.90' 
W. long.;
    (97) 3735.67' N. lat., 12255.43' 
W. long.;
    (98) 3703.06' N. lat., 12224.22' 
W. long.;
    (99) 3650.20' N. lat., 12203.58' 
W. long.;
    (100) 3651.46' N. lat., 12157.54' 
W. long.;
    (101) 3644.14' N. lat., 12158.10' 
W. long.;
    (102) 3636.76' N. lat., 12201.16' 
W. long.;
    (103) 3615.62' N. lat., 12157.13' 
W. long.;
    (104) 3610.41' N. lat., 12142.92' 
W. long.;
    (105) 3602.56' N. lat., 12136.37' 
W. long.;
    (106) 3601.04' N. lat., 12136.47' 
W. long.;
    (107) 3558.26' N. lat., 12132.88' 
W. long.;
    (108) 3540.38' N. lat., 12122.59' 
W. long.;
    (109) 3524.35' N. lat., 12102.53' 
W. long.;
    (110) 3502.66' N. lat., 12051.63' 
W. long.;
    (111) 3439.52' N. lat., 12048.72' 
W. long.;
    (112) 3431.26' N. lat., 12044.12' 
W. long.;
    (113) 3427.00' N. lat., 12033.31' 
W. long.;
    (114) 3423.47' N. lat., 12024.76' 
W. long.;
    (115) 3425.83' N. lat., 12017.26' 
W. long.;
    (116) 3424.65' N. lat., 12004.83' 
W. long.;
    (117) 3423.18' N. lat., 11956.18' 
W. long.;
    (118) 3419.20' N. lat., 11941.64' 
W. long.;
    (119) 3416.82' N. lat., 11935.32' 
W. long.;
    (120) 3413.43' N. lat., 11932.29' 
W. long.;
    (121) 3405.39' N. lat., 11915.13' 
W. long.;
    (122) 3408.22' N. lat., 11913.64' 
W. long.;
    (123) 3407.64' N. lat., 11913.10' 
W. long.;
    (124) 3404.56' N. lat., 11913.73' 
W. long.;
    (125) 3403.90' N. lat., 11912.66' 
W. long.;
    (126) 3403.66' N. lat., 11906.82' 
W. long.;
    (127) 3404.58' N. lat., 11904.91' 
W. long.;
    (128) 3401.35' N. lat., 11900.30' 
W. long.;
    (129) 3400.24' N. lat., 11903.18' 
W. long.;
    (130) 3359.63' N. lat., 11903.20' 
W. long.;
    (131) 3359.54' N. lat., 11900.88' 
W. long.;
    (132) 3400.82' N. lat., 11859.03' 
W. long.;
    (133) 3359.11' N. lat., 11847.52' 
W. long.;
    (134) 3359.07' N. lat., 11836.33' 
W. long.;
    (135) 3355.06' N. lat., 11832.86' 
W. long.;
    (136) 3353.56' N. lat., 11837.75' 
W. long.;
    (137) 3351.22' N. lat., 11836.14' 
W. long.;
    (138) 3350.48' N. lat., 11832.16' 
W. long.;
    (139) 3351.86' N. lat., 11828.71' 
W. long.;
    (140) 3350.09' N. lat., 11827.88' 
W. long.;
    (141) 3349.95' N. lat., 11826.38' 
W. long.;
    (142) 3350.73' N. lat., 11826.17' 
W. long.;
    (143) 3349.86' N. lat., 11824.25' 
W. long.;
    (144) 3348.10' N. lat., 11826.87' 
W. long.;
    (145) 3347.54' N. lat., 11829.66' 
W. long.;
    (146) 3344.10' N. lat., 11825.25' 
W. long.;
    (147) 3341.78' N. lat., 11820.28' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3338.18' N. lat., 11815.69' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3337.50' N. lat., 11816.71' 
W. long.;
    (150) 3335.98' N. lat., 11816.54' 
W. long.;
    (151) 3334.15' N. lat., 11811.22' 
W. long.;
    (152) 3334.29' N. lat., 11808.35' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3335.85' N. lat., 11807.00' 
W. long.;
    (154) 3336.12' N. lat., 11804.15' 
W. long.;
    (155) 3334.97' N. lat., 11802.91' 
W. long.;
    (156) 3334.00' N. lat., 11759.53' 
W. long.;
    (157) 3335.44' N. lat., 11755.67' 
W. long.;
    (158) 3335.15' N. lat., 11753.55' 
W. long.;
    (159) 3331.12' N. lat., 11747.40' 
W. long.;
    (160) 3327.99' N. lat., 11745.19' 
W. long.;
    (161) 3326.88' N. lat., 11743.87' 
W. long.;
    (162) 3325.44' N. lat., 11741.63' 
W. long.;
    (163) 3319.50' N. lat., 11736.08' 
W. long.;
    (164) 3312.74' N. lat., 11728.53' 
W. long.;
    (165) 3310.29' N. lat., 11725.68' 
W. long.;
    (166) 3307.36' N. lat., 11721.23' 
W. long.;
    (167) 3259.39' N. lat., 11718.56' 
W. long.;
    (168) 3256.10' N. lat., 11718.37' 
W. long.;
    (169) 3254.43' N. lat., 11716.93' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3251.89' N. lat., 11716.42' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3252.24' N. lat., 11719.36' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3247.06' N. lat., 11721.92' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3245.09' N. lat., 11720.68' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3243.62' N. lat., 11718.68' 
W. long.; and
    (175) 3233.43' N. lat., 11717.00' 
W. long.

    (B) The 50-fm (91-m) depth contour around the northern Channel 
Islands off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3408.40' N. lat., 12033.78' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3408.40' N. lat., 12028.20' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3408.68' N. lat., 12026.61' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3405.85' N. lat., 12017.13' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3405.57' N. lat., 11951.35' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3407.08' N. lat., 11952.43' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3404.42' N. lat., 11935.35' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3406.20' N. lat., 11935.35' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3406.20' N. lat., 11932.80' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3404.73' N. lat., 11932.77' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11093]]

    (11) 3403.56' N. lat., 11926.70' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3404.00' N. lat., 11926.70' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3404.00' N. lat., 11921.40' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3402.57' N. lat., 11921.40' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3402.02' N. lat., 11919.18' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3401.03' N. lat., 11919.50' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3359.45' N. lat., 11922.38' 
W. long.;
    (18) 3358.68' N. lat., 11932.36' 
W. long.;
    (19) 3356.43' N. lat., 11941.13' 
W. long.;
    (20) 3356.09' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (21) 3355.20' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (22) 3355.20' N. lat., 11953.00' 
W. long.;
    (23) 3358.00' N. lat., 11953.00' 
W. long.;
    (24) 3359.32' N. lat., 11955.59' 
W. long.;
    (25) 3357.52' N. lat., 11955.19' 
W. long.;
    (26) 3356.26' N. lat., 11954.29' 
W. long.;
    (27) 3354.30' N. lat., 11954.83' 
W. long.;
    (28) 3350.97' N. lat., 11957.03' 
W. long.;
    (29) 3350.03' N. lat., 12003.00' 
W. long.;
    (30) 3351.06' N. lat., 12003.23' 
W. long.;
    (31) 3352.35' N. lat., 12006.51' 
W. long.;
    (32) 3351.37' N. lat., 12006.48' 
W. long.;
    (33) 3351.37' N. lat., 12009.99' 
W. long.;
    (34) 3353.50' N. lat., 12010.08' 
W. long.;
    (35) 3354.49' N. lat., 12012.85' 
W. long.;
    (36) 3358.48' N. lat., 12018.50' 
W. long.;
    (37) 3400.06' N. lat., 12025.30' 
W. long.;
    (38) 3358.50' N. lat., 12025.30' 
W. long.;
    (39) 3358.50' N. lat., 12026.60' 
W. long.;
    (40) 3400.34' N. lat., 12026.60' 
W. long.;
    (41) 3400.71' N. lat., 12028.21' 
W. long.;
    (42) 3403.60' N. lat., 12030.60' 
W. long.;
    (43) 3403.60' N. lat., 12034.20' 
W. long.;
    (44) 3406.96' N. lat., 12034.22' 
W. long.;
    (45) 3408.01' N. lat., 12035.24' 
W. long.; and
    (46) 3408.40' N. lat., 12033.78' 
W. long.

    (C) The 50-fm (91-m) depth contour around San Clemente Island off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3303.73' N. lat., 11836.98' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3302.56' N. lat., 11834.12' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3255.54' N. lat., 11828.87' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3255.02' N. lat., 11827.69' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3249.73' N. lat., 11820.99' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3248.55' N. lat., 11820.24' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3247.92' N. lat., 11822.45' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3245.25' N. lat., 11824.59' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3250.23' N. lat., 11830.80' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3255.28' N. lat., 11833.83' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3300.45' N. lat., 11837.88' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3303.27' N. lat., 11838.56' 
W. long.; and
    (13) 3303.73' N. lat., 11836.98' 
W. long.

    (D) The 50-fm (91-m) depth contour around Santa Catalina Island off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3328.01' N. lat., 11837.42' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3329.02' N. lat., 11836.33' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3328.97' N. lat., 11833.16' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3328.71' N. lat., 11831.22' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3326.66' N. lat., 11827.48' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3325.35' N. lat., 11822.83' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3322.61' N. lat., 11819.18' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3320.06' N. lat., 11817.35' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3317.58' N. lat., 11817.42' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3317.05' N. lat., 11818.72' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3317.87' N. lat., 11824.47' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3318.63' N. lat., 11828.16' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3320.17' N. lat., 11831.69' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3320.85' N. lat., 11831.82' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3323.19' N. lat., 11829.78' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3324.85' N. lat., 11831.22' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3325.65' N. lat., 11834.11' 
W. long.; and
    (18) 3328.01' N. lat., 11837.42' 
W. long.

    (v) The 60-fm (110-m) depth contour used between the U.S. border 
with Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight 
lines connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4826.70' N. lat., 12509.43' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4823.76' N. lat., 12506.77' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4823.01' N. lat., 12503.48' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4822.42' N. lat., 12457.84' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4822.62' N. lat., 12448.97' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4818.61' N. lat., 12452.52' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4816.62' N. lat., 12454.03' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4815.39' N. lat., 12454.79' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4813.81' N. lat., 12455.45' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4810.51' N. lat., 12456.56' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4806.90' N. lat., 12457.72' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4802.23' N. lat., 12500.20' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4800.87' N. lat., 12500.37' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4756.30' N. lat., 12459.51' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4746.84' N. lat., 12457.34' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4736.49' N. lat., 12450.93' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4732.01' N. lat., 12448.45' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4727.19' N. lat., 12446.47' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4721.76' N. lat., 12443.29' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4717.82' N. lat., 12442.12' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4708.87' N. lat., 12443.10' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4703.16' N. lat., 12442.61' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4649.70' N. lat., 12436.80' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4642.91' N. lat., 12433.20' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4639.67' N. lat., 12430.59' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4632.47' N. lat., 12426.34' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4623.69' N. lat., 12425.41' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4620.84' N. lat., 12424.24' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4616.00' N. lat., 12419.10' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4615.97' N. lat., 12418.81' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4611.23' N. lat., 12419.96' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4602.51' N. lat., 12419.84' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4559.05' N. lat., 12416.52' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4551.00' N. lat., 12412.83' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4545.85' N. lat., 12411.54' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4538.53' N. lat., 12411.91' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4530.90' N. lat., 12410.94' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4521.20' N. lat., 12409.12' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4512.43' N. lat., 12408.74' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4459.89' N. lat., 12411.95' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4451.96' N. lat., 12415.15' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4444.64' N. lat., 12420.07' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4439.24' N. lat., 12428.09' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4430.61' N. lat., 12431.66' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4426.19' N. lat., 12435.88' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4418.88' N. lat., 12445.16' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4414.69' N. lat., 12445.51' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4410.97' N. lat., 12438.78' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4408.71' N. lat., 12433.54' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4404.92' N. lat., 12424.55' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4357.49' N. lat., 12420.05' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4350.26' N. lat., 12421.84' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4341.69' N. lat., 12421.94' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4335.52' N. lat., 12421.51' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4325.77' N. lat., 12428.47' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4320.25' N. lat., 12431.59' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4312.73' N. lat., 12436.69' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4308.08' N. lat., 12436.10' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4300.33' N. lat., 12437.57' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4253.99' N. lat., 12441.04' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4246.66' N. lat., 12441.13' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4241.74' N. lat., 12437.46' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4237.42' N. lat., 12437.22' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4227.35' N. lat., 12439.90' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4223.94' N. lat., 12438.28' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4217.72' N. lat., 12431.10' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4210.35' N. lat., 12429.11' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4200.00' N. lat., 12428.00' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4200.00' N. lat., 12429.61' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4154.87' N. lat., 12428.50' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4145.80' N. lat., 12423.89' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4134.40' N. lat., 12424.03' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4128.33' N. lat., 12425.46' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4115.80' N. lat., 12418.90' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4109.77' N. lat., 12417.99' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4102.26' N. lat., 12418.71' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4053.54' N. lat., 12421.18' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4049.93' N. lat., 12423.02' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4043.15' N. lat., 12428.74' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4040.19' N. lat., 12429.07' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4036.77' N. lat., 12427.61' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4034.13' N. lat., 12429.39' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4033.15' N. lat., 12433.46' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4029.57' N. lat., 12435.84' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4024.72' N. lat., 12433.06' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4023.91' N. lat., 12431.28' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4023.67' N. lat., 12428.35' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4022.53' N. lat., 12424.72' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4021.51' N. lat., 12424.86' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4021.02' N. lat., 12427.70' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4019.75' N. lat., 12427.06' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4018.23' N. lat., 12425.30' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4018.60' N. lat., 12422.86' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4015.43' N. lat., 12425.37' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4015.55' N. lat., 12428.16' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4011.27' N. lat., 12422.56' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4010.00' N. lat., 12419.97' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4009.20' N. lat., 12415.81' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4007.51' N. lat., 12415.29' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4005.22' N. lat., 12410.06' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4006.51' N. lat., 12408.01' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4000.72' N. lat., 12408.45' 
W. long.;
    (103) 3956.60' N. lat., 12407.12' 
W. long.;
    (104) 3952.58' N. lat., 12403.57' 
W. long.;
    (105) 3950.65' N. lat., 12357.98' 
W. long.;
    (106) 3940.16' N. lat., 12352.41' 
W. long.;
    (107) 3930.12' N. lat., 12352.92' 
W. long.;
    (108) 3924.53' N. lat., 12355.16' 
W. long.;
    (109) 3911.58' N. lat., 12350.93' 
W. long.;
    (110) 3855.13' N. lat., 12351.14' 
W. long.;
    (111) 3828.58' N. lat., 12322.84' 
W. long.;
    (112) 3808.57' N. lat., 12314.74' 
W. long.;
    (113) 3800.00' N. lat., 12315.61' 
W. long.;
    (114) 3756.98' N. lat., 12321.82' 
W. long.;
    (115) 3748.01' N. lat., 12315.90' 
W. long.;
    (116) 3736.73' N. lat., 12258.48' 
W. long.;
    (117) 3707.58' N. lat., 12237.64' 
W. long.;
    (118) 3702.08' N. lat., 12225.49' 
W. long.;
    (119) 3648.20' N. lat., 12203.32' 
W. long.;
    (120) 3651.46' N. lat., 12157.54' 
W. long.;
    (121) 3644.14' N. lat., 12158.10' 
W. long.;
    (122) 3636.76' N. lat., 12201.16' 
W. long.;
    (123) 3615.62' N. lat., 12157.13' 
W. long.;
    (124) 3610.42' N. lat., 12142.90' 
W. long.;
    (125) 3602.55' N. lat., 12136.35' 
W. long.;
    (126) 3601.04' N. lat., 12136.47' 
W. long.;
    (127) 3558.25' N. lat., 12132.88' 
W. long.;
    (128) 3540.38' N. lat., 12122.59' 
W. long.;
    (129) 3524.35' N. lat., 12102.53' 
W. long.;
    (130) 3502.66' N. lat., 12051.63' 
W. long.;
    (131) 3439.52' N. lat., 12048.72' 
W. long.;
    (132) 3431.26' N. lat., 12044.12' 
W. long.;
    (133) 3427.00' N. lat., 12036.00' 
W. long.;
    (134) 3423.00' N. lat., 12025.32' 
W. long.;
    (135) 3425.68' N. lat., 12017.46' 
W. long.;
    (136) 3423.18' N. lat., 11956.17' 
W. long.;
    (137) 3418.73' N. lat., 11941.89' 
W. long.;
    (138) 3411.18' N. lat., 11931.21' 
W. long.;
    (139) 3410.01' N. lat., 11925.84' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11094]]

    (140) 3403.88' N. lat., 11912.46' 
W. long.;
    (141) 3403.58' N. lat., 11906.71' 
W. long.;
    (142) 3404.52' N. lat., 11904.89' 
W. long.;
    (143) 3401.28' N. lat., 11900.27' 
W. long.;
    (144) 3400.20' N. lat., 11903.18' 
W. long.;
    (145) 3359.60' N. lat., 11903.14' 
W. long.;
    (146) 3359.45' N. lat., 11900.87' 
W. long.;
    (147) 3400.71' N. lat., 11859.07' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3359.05' N. lat., 11847.34' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3359.06' N. lat., 11836.30' 
W. long.;
    (150) 3355.05' N. lat., 11832.85' 
W. long.;
    (151) 3353.56' N. lat., 11837.73' 
W. long.;
    (152) 3351.22' N. lat., 11836.13' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3350.19' N. lat., 11832.19' 
W. long.;
    (154) 3351.28' N. lat., 11829.12' 
W. long.;
    (155) 3349.89' N. lat., 11828.04' 
W. long.;
    (156) 3349.95' N. lat., 11826.38' 
W. long.;
    (157) 3350.73' N. lat., 11826.16' 
W. long.;
    (158) 3349.87' N. lat., 11824.37' 
W. long.;
    (159) 3347.54' N. lat., 11829.65' 
W. long.;
    (160) 3344.10' N. lat., 11825.25' 
W. long.;
    (161) 3341.77' N. lat., 11820.32' 
W. long.;
    (162) 3338.17' N. lat., 11815.69' 
W. long.;
    (163) 3337.48' N. lat., 11816.72' 
W. long.;
    (164) 3335.98' N. lat., 11816.54' 
W. long.;
    (165) 3334.15' N. lat., 11811.22' 
W. long.;
    (166) 3334.09' N. lat., 11808.15' 
W. long.;
    (167) 3335.73' N. lat., 11805.01' 
W. long.;
    (168) 3333.75' N. lat., 11759.82' 
W. long.;
    (169) 3335.44' N. lat., 11755.65' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3335.15' N. lat., 11753.54' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3331.12' N. lat., 11747.39' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3327.49' N. lat., 11744.85' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3316.42' N. lat., 11732.92' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3306.66' N. lat., 11721.59' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3300.08' N. lat., 11719.02' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3256.11' N. lat., 11718.41' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3254.43' N. lat., 11716.93' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3251.89' N. lat., 11716.42' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3252.61' N. lat., 11719.50' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3246.96' N. lat., 11722.69' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3244.98' N. lat., 11721.87' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3243.52' N. lat., 11719.32' 
W. long.; and
    (183) 3233.56' N. lat., 11717.72' 
W. long.

    (A) The 60-fm (110-m) depth contour around the northern Channel 
Islands off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3408.80' N. lat., 12034.58' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3409.16' N. lat., 12026.31' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3406.69' N. lat., 12016.43' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3406.38' N. lat., 12004.00' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3407.36' N. lat., 11952.06' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3404.84' N. lat., 11936.94' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3404.84' N. lat., 11935.50' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3406.20' N. lat., 11935.50' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3406.20' N. lat., 11932.80' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3405.04' N. lat., 11932.80' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3404.00' N. lat., 11926.70' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3404.00' N. lat., 11921.40' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3428.00' N. lat., 11921.40' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3402.36' N. lat., 11918.97' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3400.65' N. lat., 11919.42' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3359.45' N. lat., 11922.38' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3358.68' N. lat., 11932.36' 
W. long.;
    (18) 3356.14' N. lat., 11941.09' 
W. long.;
    (19) 3355.84' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (20) 3355.20' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (21) 3355.20' N. lat., 11953.00' 
W. long.;
    (22) 3358.00' N. lat., 11953.00' 
W. long.;
    (23) 3359.32' N. lat., 11955.59' 
W. long.;
    (24) 3357.52' N. lat., 11955.19' 
W. long.;
    (25) 3356.10' N. lat., 11954.25' 
W. long.;
    (26) 3350.28' N. lat., 11956.02' 
W. long.;
    (27) 3348.51' N. lat., 11959.67' 
W. long.;
    (28) 3349.14' N. lat., 12003.58' 
W. long.;
    (29) 3351.93' N. lat., 12006.50' 
W. long.;
    (30) 3351.40' N. lat., 12006.50' 
W. long.;
    (31) 3351.40' N. lat., 12010.00' 
W. long.;
    (32) 3353.16' N. lat., 12010.00' 
W. long.;
    (33) 3354.36' N. lat., 12013.06' 
W. long.;
    (34) 3358.53' N. lat., 12020.46' 
W. long.;
    (35) 3359.52' N. lat., 12025.30' 
W. long.;
    (36) 3358.50' N. lat., 12025.30' 
W. long.;
    (37) 3358.50' N. lat., 12026.60' 
W. long.;
    (38) 3359.84' N. lat., 12026.60' 
W. long.;
    (39) 3400.12' N. lat., 12028.12' 
W. long.;
    (40) 3403.60' N. lat., 12031.46' 
W. long.;
    (41) 3403.60' N. lat., 12034.20' 
W. long.;
    (42) 3406.41' N. lat., 12034.20' 
W. long.;
    (43) 3408.09' N. lat., 12035.85' 
W. long.; and
    (44) 3408.80' N. lat., 12034.58' 
W. long.

    (B) The 60-fm (110-m) depth contour around San Clemente Island off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3304.06' N. lat., 11837.32' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3302.56' N. lat., 11834.12' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3255.54' N. lat., 11828.87' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3255.02' N. lat., 11827.69' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3249.78' N. lat., 11820.88' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3248.32' N. lat., 11819.89' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3247.60' N. lat., 11822.00' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3244.59' N. lat., 11824.52' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3249.97' N. lat., 11831.52' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3253.62' N. lat., 11832.94' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3255.63' N. lat., 11834.82' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3300.71' N. lat., 11838.42' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3303.31' N. lat., 11838.74' 
W. long.; and
    (14) 3304.06' N. lat., 11837.32' 
W. long.

    (C) The 60-fm (110-m) depth contour around Santa Catalina Island 
off the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all 
of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3328.15' N. lat., 11837.85' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3329.23' N. lat., 11836.27' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3328.85' N. lat., 11830.85' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3326.69' N. lat., 11827.37' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3325.35' N. lat., 11822.83' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3322.60' N. lat., 11818.82' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3319.49' N. lat., 11816.91' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3317.13' N. lat., 11816.58' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3316.72' N. lat., 11818.07' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3318.35' N. lat., 11827.86' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3320.03' N. lat., 11832.04' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3321.86' N. lat., 11831.72' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3323.15' N. lat., 11829.89' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3325.13' N. lat., 11832.16' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3325.73' N. lat., 11834.88' 
W. long.; and
    (16) 3328.15' N. lat., 11837.85' 
W. long.

    (vi) The 75-fm (137-m) depth contour used between the U.S. border 
with Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight 
lines connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4816.80' N. lat., 12534.90' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4814.50' N. lat., 12529.50' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4812.08' N. lat., 12528.00' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4809.00' N. lat., 12528.00' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4807.80' N. lat., 12531.70' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4804.28' N. lat., 12529.00' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4802.50' N. lat., 12525.70' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4810.00' N. lat., 12520.19' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4821.70' N. lat., 12517.56' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4823.12' N. lat., 12510.25' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4821.99' N. lat., 12502.59' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4823.05' N. lat., 12448.80' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4817.10' N. lat., 12454.82' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4805.10' N. lat., 12459.40' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4804.50' N. lat., 12502.00' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4804.70' N. lat., 12504.08' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4805.20' N. lat., 12504.90' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4806.80' N. lat., 12506.15' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4805.91' N. lat., 12508.30' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4807.00' N. lat., 12509.80' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4806.93' N. lat., 12511.48' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4804.98' N. lat., 12510.02' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4754.00' N. lat., 12504.98' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4744.52' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4742.00' N. lat., 12458.98' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4735.52' N. lat., 12455.50' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4722.02' N. lat., 12444.40' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4716.98' N. lat., 12445.48' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4710.98' N. lat., 12448.48' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4704.98' N. lat., 12449.02' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4657.98' N. lat., 12446.50' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4654.00' N. lat., 12445.00' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4648.48' N. lat., 12444.52' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4640.02' N. lat., 12436.00' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4634.09' N. lat., 12427.03' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4624.64' N. lat., 12430.33' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4619.98' N. lat., 12436.00' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4618.14' N. lat., 12434.26' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4618.72' N. lat., 12422.68' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4616.00' N. lat., 12419.49' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4614.64' N. lat., 12422.54' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4611.08' N. lat., 12430.74' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4604.28' N. lat., 12431.49' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4555.97' N. lat., 12419.95' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4544.97' N. lat., 12415.96' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4543.14' N. lat., 12421.86' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4534.44' N. lat., 12414.44' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4515.49' N. lat., 12411.49' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4457.31' N. lat., 12415.03' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4443.90' N. lat., 12428.88' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4428.64' N. lat., 12435.67' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4425.31' N. lat., 12443.08' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4417.15' N. lat., 12447.98' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4413.67' N. lat., 12454.41' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4356.85' N. lat., 12455.32' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4357.50' N. lat., 12441.23' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4401.79' N. lat., 12438.00' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4402.16' N. lat., 12432.62' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4358.15' N. lat., 12430.39' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4353.25' N. lat., 12431.39' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4335.56' N. lat., 12428.17' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4321.84' N. lat., 12436.07' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4319.73' N. lat., 12434.86' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4309.38' N. lat., 12439.30' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4307.11' N. lat., 12437.66' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4256.27' N. lat., 12443.29' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4245.00' N. lat., 12441.50' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4239.72' N. lat., 12439.11' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4232.88' N. lat., 12440.13' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4232.30' N. lat., 12439.04' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4226.96' N. lat., 12444.31' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4224.11' N. lat., 12442.16' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4221.10' N. lat., 12435.46' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4214.72' N. lat., 12432.30' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4209.24' N. lat., 12432.04' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4201.89' N. lat., 12432.70' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4200.03' N. lat., 12432.02' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4200.00' N. lat., 12432.02' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4146.18' N. lat., 12426.60' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4129.22' N. lat., 12428.04' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11095]]

    (81) 4109.62' N. lat., 12419.75' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4050.71' N. lat., 12423.80' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4043.35' N. lat., 12429.30' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4040.24' N. lat., 12429.86' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4037.50' N. lat., 12428.68' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4034.42' N. lat., 12429.65' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4034.74' N. lat., 12434.61' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4031.70' N. lat., 12437.13' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4025.03' N. lat., 12434.77' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4023.58' N. lat., 12431.49' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4023.64' N. lat., 12428.35' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4022.53' N. lat., 12424.76' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4021.46' N. lat., 12424.86' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4021.74' N. lat., 12427.63' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4019.76' N. lat., 12428.15' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4018.00' N. lat., 12425.38' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4018.54' N. lat., 12422.94' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4015.55' N. lat., 12425.75' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4016.06' N. lat., 12430.48' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4015.75' N. lat., 12431.69' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4010.00' N. lat., 12421.28' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4008.37' N. lat., 12417.99' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4009.00' N. lat., 12415.77' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4006.93' N. lat., 12416.49' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4003.60' N. lat., 12411.60' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4006.20' N. lat., 12408.23' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4000.94' N. lat., 12408.57' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4000.01' N. lat., 12409.84' 
W. long.;
    (109) 3957.75' N. lat., 12409.53' 
W. long.;
    (110) 3955.56' N. lat., 12407.67' 
W. long.;
    (111) 3952.21' N. lat., 12405.54' 
W. long.;
    (112) 3948.07' N. lat., 12357.48' 
W. long.;
    (113) 3941.60' N. lat., 12355.12' 
W. long.;
    (114) 3930.39' N. lat., 12355.03' 
W. long.;
    (115) 3929.48' N. lat., 12356.12' 
W. long.;
    (116) 3913.76' N. lat., 12354.65' 
W. long.;
    (117) 3905.21' N. lat., 12355.38' 
W. long.;
    (118) 3855.90' N. lat., 12354.35' 
W. long.;
    (119) 3848.59' N. lat., 12349.61' 
W. long.;
    (120) 3828.82' N. lat., 12327.44' 
W. long.;
    (121) 3809.70' N. lat., 12318.66' 
W. long.;
    (122) 3801.81' N. lat., 12319.22' 
W. long.;
    (123) 3804.67' N. lat., 12325.85' 
W. long.;
    (124) 3804.33' N. lat., 12329.68' 
W. long.;
    (125) 3802.38' N. lat., 12330.13' 
W. long.;
    (126) 3800.00' N. lat., 12327.84' 
W. long.;
    (127) 3756.73' N. lat., 12325.22' 
W. long.;
    (128) 3755.59' N. lat., 12325.62' 
W. long.;
    (129) 3752.79' N. lat., 12323.85' 
W. long.;
    (130) 3749.13' N. lat., 12318.83' 
W. long.;
    (131) 3746.01' N. lat., 12312.28' 
W. long.;
    (132) 3736.12' N. lat., 12300.33' 
W. long.;
    (133) 3703.52' N. lat., 12237.57' 
W. long.;
    (134) 3659.69' N. lat., 12227.32' 
W. long.;
    (135) 3701.41' N. lat., 12224.41' 
W. long.;
    (136) 3658.75' N. lat., 12223.81' 
W. long.;
    (137) 3659.17' N. lat., 12221.44' 
W. long.;
    (138) 3657.51' N. lat., 12220.69' 
W. long.;
    (139) 3651.46' N. lat., 12210.01' 
W. long.;
    (140) 3648.43' N. lat., 12206.47' 
W. long.;
    (141) 3648.66' N. lat., 12204.99' 
W. long.;
    (142) 3647.75' N. lat., 12203.33' 
W. long.;
    (143) 3651.23' N. lat., 12157.79' 
W. long.;
    (144) 3649.72' N. lat., 12157.87' 
W. long.;
    (145) 3648.84' N. lat., 12158.68' 
W. long.;
    (146) 3647.89' N. lat., 12158.53' 
W. long.;
    (147) 3648.66' N. lat., 12150.49' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3645.56' N. lat., 12154.11' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3645.30' N. lat., 12157.62' 
W. long.;
    (150) 3638.54' N. lat., 12201.13' 
W. long.;
    (151) 3635.76' N. lat., 12200.87' 
W. long.;
    (152) 3632.58' N. lat., 12159.12' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3632.95' N. lat., 12157.62' 
W. long.;
    (154) 3631.96' N. lat., 12156.27' 
W. long.;
    (155) 3631.74' N. lat., 12158.24' 
W. long.;
    (156) 3630.57' N. lat., 12159.66' 
W. long.;
    (157) 3627.80' N. lat., 12159.30' 
W. long.;
    (158) 3626.52' N. lat., 12158.09' 
W. long.;
    (159) 3623.65' N. lat., 12158.94' 
W. long.;
    (160) 3620.93' N. lat., 12200.28' 
W. long.;
    (161) 3618.23' N. lat., 12203.10' 
W. long.;
    (162) 3614.21' N. lat., 12157.73' 
W. long.;
    (163) 3614.68' N. lat., 12155.43' 
W. long.;
    (164) 3610.42' N. lat., 12142.90' 
W. long.;
    (165) 3602.55' N. lat., 12136.35' 
W. long.;
    (166) 3601.04' N. lat., 12136.47' 
W. long.;
    (167) 3558.25' N. lat., 12132.88' 
W. long.;
    (168) 3539.35' N. lat., 12122.63' 
W. long.;
    (169) 3524.44' N. lat., 12102.23' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3510.84' N. lat., 12055.90' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3504.35' N. lat., 12051.62' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3455.25' N. lat., 12049.36' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3447.95' N. lat., 12050.76' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3439.27' N. lat., 12049.16' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3431.05' N. lat., 12044.71' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3427.00' N. lat., 12036.54' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3422.60' N. lat., 12025.41' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3425.45' N. lat., 12017.41' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3422.94' N. lat., 11956.40' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3418.37' N. lat., 11942.01' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3411.22' N. lat., 11932.47' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3409.58' N. lat., 11925.94' 
W. long.;
    (183) 3403.89' N. lat., 11912.47' 
W. long.;
    (184) 3403.57' N. lat., 11906.72' 
W. long.;
    (185) 3404.53' N. lat., 11904.90' 
W. long.;
    (186) 3402.84' N. lat., 11902.37' 
W. long.;
    (187) 3401.30' N. lat., 11900.26' 
W. long.;
    (188) 3400.22' N. lat., 11903.20' 
W. long.;
    (189) 3359.60' N. lat., 11903.16' 
W. long.;
    (190) 3359.46' N. lat., 11900.88' 
W. long.;
    (191) 3400.49' N. lat., 11859.08' 
W. long.;
    (192) 3359.07' N. lat., 11847.34' 
W. long.;
    (193) 3358.73' N. lat., 11836.45' 
W. long.;
    (194) 3355.24' N. lat., 11833.42' 
W. long.;
    (195) 3353.71' N. lat., 11838.01' 
W. long.;
    (196) 3351.22' N. lat., 11836.17' 
W. long.;
    (197) 3349.85' N. lat., 11832.31' 
W. long.;
    (198) 3349.61' N. lat., 11828.07' 
W. long.;
    (199) 3349.95' N. lat., 11826.38' 
W. long.;
    (200) 3350.36' N. lat., 11825.84' 
W. long.;
    (201) 3349.84' N. lat., 11824.78' 
W. long.;
    (202) 3347.53' N. lat., 11830.12' 
W. long.;
    (203) 3344.11' N. lat., 11825.25' 
W. long.;
    (204) 3341.77' N. lat., 11820.32' 
W. long.;
    (205) 3338.17' N. lat., 11815.70' 
W. long.;
    (206) 3337.48' N. lat., 11816.73' 
W. long.;
    (207) 3336.01' N. lat., 11816.55' 
W. long.;
    (208) 3333.76' N. lat., 11811.37' 
W. long.;
    (209) 3333.76' N. lat., 11807.94' 
W. long.;
    (210) 3335.59' N. lat., 11805.05' 
W. long.;
    (211) 3333.75' N. lat., 11759.82' 
W. long.;
    (212) 3335.10' N. lat., 11755.68' 
W. long.;
    (213) 3334.91' N. lat., 11753.76' 
W. long.;
    (214) 3330.77' N. lat., 11747.56' 
W. long.;
    (215) 3327.50' N. lat., 11744.87' 
W. long.;
    (216) 3316.89' N. lat., 11734.37' 
W. long.;
    (217) 3306.66' N. lat., 11721.59' 
W. long.;
    (218) 3303.35' N. lat., 11720.92' 
W. long.;
    (219) 3300.07' N. lat., 11719.02' 
W. long.;
    (220) 3255.99' N. lat., 11718.60' 
W. long.;
    (221) 3254.43' N. lat., 11716.93' 
W. long.;
    (222) 3252.13' N. lat., 11716.55' 
W. long.;
    (223) 3252.61' N. lat., 11719.50' 
W. long.;
    (224) 3246.95' N. lat., 11722.81' 
W. long.;
    (225) 3245.01' N. lat., 11722.07' 
W. long.;
    (226) 3243.40' N. lat., 11719.80' 
W. long.; and
    (227) 3233.74' N. lat., 11718.67' 
W. long.

    (A) The 75-fm (137-m) depth contour around the northern Channel 
Islands off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3409.12' N. lat., 12035.03' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3409.99' N. lat., 12027.85' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3407.19' N. lat., 12016.28' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3406.56' N. lat., 12004.00' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3407.27' N. lat., 11957.76' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3407.48' N. lat., 11952.08' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3405.18' N. lat., 11937.94' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3405.22' N. lat., 11935.52' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3406.18' N. lat., 11935.50' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3406.16' N. lat., 11932.76' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3405.12' N. lat., 11932.74' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3404.32' N. lat., 11927.32' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3404.06' N. lat., 11926.60' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3404.00' N. lat., 11921.34' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3403.00' N. lat., 11921.36' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3402.32' N. lat., 11918.46' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3400.65' N. lat., 11919.42' 
W. long.;
    (18) 3359.45' N. lat., 11922.38' 
W. long.;
    (19) 3358.68' N. lat., 11932.36' 
W. long.;
    (20) 3356.12' N. lat., 11941.10' 
W. long.;
    (21) 3355.74' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (22) 3355.21' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (23) 3355.21' N. lat., 11953.00' 
W. long.;
    (24) 3357.78' N. lat., 11953.04' 
W. long.;
    (25) 3359.06' N. lat., 11955.38' 
W. long.;
    (26) 3357.57' N. lat., 11954.93' 
W. long.;
    (27) 3356.35' N. lat., 11953.91' 
W. long.;
    (28) 3354.43' N. lat., 11954.07' 
W. long.;
    (29) 3352.67' N. lat., 11954.78' 
W. long.;
    (30) 3348.33' N. lat., 11955.09' 
W. long.;
    (31) 3347.28' N. lat., 11957.30' 
W. long.;
    (32) 3347.36' N. lat., 12000.39' 
W. long.;
    (33) 3349.16' N. lat., 12005.06' 
W. long.;
    (34) 3351.41' N. lat., 12006.49' 
W. long.;
    (35) 3351.41' N. lat., 12010.00' 
W. long.;
    (36) 3352.99' N. lat., 12010.01' 
W. long.;
    (37) 3356.64' N. lat., 12018.88' 
W. long.;
    (38) 3358.02' N. lat., 12021.41' 
W. long.;
    (39) 3358.73' N. lat., 12025.22' 
W. long.;
    (40) 3358.49' N. lat., 12025.22' 
W. long.;
    (41) 3358.48' N. lat., 12026.55' 
W. long.;
    (42) 3359.08' N. lat., 12026.58' 
W. long.;
    (43) 3359.95' N. lat., 12028.21' 
W. long.;
    (44) 3403.54' N. lat., 12032.23' 
W. long.;
    (45) 3403.54' N. lat., 12034.19' 
W. long.;
    (46) 3405.57' N. lat., 12034.23' 
W. long.;
    (47) 3408.13' N. lat., 12036.05' 
W. long.; and
    (48) 3409.12' N. lat., 12035.03' 
W. long.

    (B) The 75-fm (137-m) depth contour around San Clemente Island off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3304.54' N. lat., 11837.54' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3302.56' N. lat., 11834.12' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3255.54' N. lat., 11828.87' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3255.02' N. lat., 11827.69' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3249.78' N. lat., 11820.88' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3248.32' N. lat., 11819.89' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3247.41' N. lat., 11821.98' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3244.39' N. lat., 11824.49' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3247.93' N. lat., 11829.90' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3249.69' N. lat., 11831.52' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3253.57' N. lat., 11833.09' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3255.42' N. lat., 11835.17' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3300.49' N. lat., 11838.56' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3303.23' N. lat., 11839.16' 
W. long.; and
    (15) 3304.54' N. lat., 11837.54' 
W. long.

    (C) The 75-fm (137-m) depth contour around Santa Catalina Island 
off the

[[Page 11096]]

State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of the 
following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3328.17' N. lat., 11838.16' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3329.35' N. lat., 11836.23' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3328.85' N. lat., 11830.85' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3326.69' N. lat., 11827.37' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3326.31' N. lat., 11825.14' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3325.35' N. lat., 11822.83' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3322.47' N. lat., 11818.53' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3319.51' N. lat., 11816.82' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3317.07' N. lat., 11816.38' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3316.58' N. lat., 11817.61' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3318.35' N. lat., 11827.86' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3320.07' N. lat., 11832.12' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3321.77' N. lat., 11831.85' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3323.15' N. lat., 11829.99' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3324.96' N. lat., 11832.21' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3325.67' N. lat., 11834.88' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3327.80' N. lat., 11837.90' 
W. long.; and
    (18) 3328.17' N. lat., 11838.16' 
W. long.

    (vii) The 100-fm (183-m) depth contour used between the U.S. border 
with Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight 
lines connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4815.00' N. lat., 12541.00' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4814.00' N. lat., 12536.00' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4809.50' N. lat., 12540.50' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4808.00' N. lat., 12538.00' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4805.00' N. lat., 12537.25' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4802.60' N. lat., 12534.70' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4759.00' N. lat., 12534.00' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4757.26' N. lat., 12529.82' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4759.87' N. lat., 12525.81' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4801.80' N. lat., 12524.53' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4802.08' N. lat., 12522.98' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4802.97' N. lat., 12522.89' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4804.47' N. lat., 12521.75' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4806.11' N. lat., 12519.33' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4807.95' N. lat., 12518.55' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4809.00' N. lat., 12518.00' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4811.31' N. lat., 12517.55' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4814.60' N. lat., 12513.46' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4816.67' N. lat., 12514.34' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4818.73' N. lat., 12514.41' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4819.67' N. lat., 12513.70' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4819.70' N. lat., 12511.13' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4822.95' N. lat., 12510.79' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4821.61' N. lat., 12502.54' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4823.00' N. lat., 12449.34' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4817.00' N. lat., 12456.50' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4806.00' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4804.62' N. lat., 12501.73' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4804.84' N. lat., 12504.03' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4806.41' N. lat., 12506.51' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4806.00' N. lat., 12508.00' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4807.08' N. lat., 12509.34' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4807.28' N. lat., 12511.14' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4803.45' N. lat., 12516.66' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4759.50' N. lat., 12518.88' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4758.68' N. lat., 12516.19' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4756.62' N. lat., 12513.50' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4753.71' N. lat., 12511.96' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4751.70' N. lat., 12509.38' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4749.95' N. lat., 12506.07' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4749.00' N. lat., 12503.00' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4746.95' N. lat., 12504.00' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4746.58' N. lat., 12503.15' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4744.07' N. lat., 12504.28' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4743.32' N. lat., 12504.41' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4740.95' N. lat., 12504.14' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4739.58' N. lat., 12504.97' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4736.23' N. lat., 12502.77' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4734.28' N. lat., 12458.66' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4732.17' N. lat., 12457.77' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4730.27' N. lat., 12456.16' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4730.60' N. lat., 12454.80' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4729.26' N. lat., 12452.21' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4728.21' N. lat., 12450.65' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4727.38' N. lat., 12449.34' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4725.61' N. lat., 12448.26' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4723.54' N. lat., 12446.42' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4720.64' N. lat., 12445.91' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4717.99' N. lat., 12445.59' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4718.20' N. lat., 12449.12' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4715.01' N. lat., 12451.09' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4712.61' N. lat., 12454.89' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4708.22' N. lat., 12456.53' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4708.50' N. lat., 12457.74' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4701.92' N. lat., 12454.95' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4701.14' N. lat., 12459.35' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4658.48' N. lat., 12457.81' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4656.79' N. lat., 12456.03' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4658.01' N. lat., 12455.09' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4655.07' N. lat., 12454.14' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4659.60' N. lat., 12449.79' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4658.72' N. lat., 12448.78' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4654.45' N. lat., 12448.36' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4653.99' N. lat., 12449.95' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4654.38' N. lat., 12452.73' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4652.38' N. lat., 12452.02' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4648.93' N. lat., 12449.17' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4641.50' N. lat., 12443.00' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4634.50' N. lat., 12428.50' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4629.00' N. lat., 12430.00' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4620.00' N. lat., 12436.50' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4618.00' N. lat., 12438.00' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4617.52' N. lat., 12435.35' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4617.00' N. lat., 12422.50' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4616.00' N. lat., 12420.62' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4613.52' N. lat., 12425.49' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4612.17' N. lat., 12430.75' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4610.63' N. lat., 12437.95' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4609.29' N. lat., 12439.01' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4602.40' N. lat., 12440.37' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4556.45' N. lat., 12438.00' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4551.92' N. lat., 12438.49' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4547.19' N. lat., 12435.58' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4546.41' N. lat., 12432.36' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4541.75' N. lat., 12428.12' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4536.96' N. lat., 12424.48' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4531.84' N. lat., 12422.04' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4527.10' N. lat., 12421.74' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4518.14' N. lat., 12417.59' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4511.08' N. lat., 12416.97' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4504.38' N. lat., 12418.36' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4458.05' N. lat., 12421.58' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4447.67' N. lat., 12431.41' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4444.55' N. lat., 12433.58' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4439.88' N. lat., 12435.01' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4432.90' N. lat., 12436.81' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4430.33' N. lat., 12438.56' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4430.04' N. lat., 12442.31' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4426.84' N. lat., 12444.91' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4417.99' N. lat., 12451.03' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4413.68' N. lat., 12456.38' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4356.67' N. lat., 12455.45' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4356.47' N. lat., 12434.61' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4342.73' N. lat., 12432.41' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4330.93' N. lat., 12434.43' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4317.45' N. lat., 12441.16' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4307.04' N. lat., 12441.25' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4303.45' N. lat., 12444.36' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4303.90' N. lat., 12450.81' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4255.70' N. lat., 12452.79' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4254.12' N. lat., 12447.36' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4244.00' N. lat., 12442.38' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4238.23' N. lat., 12441.25' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4233.03' N. lat., 12442.38' 
W. long.;
    (125) 4231.89' N. lat., 12442.04' 
W. long.;
    (126) 4230.09' N. lat., 12442.67' 
W. long.;
    (127) 4228.28' N. lat., 12447.08' 
W. long.;
    (128) 4225.22' N. lat., 12443.51' 
W. long.;
    (129) 4219.23' N. lat., 12437.92' 
W. long.;
    (130) 4216.29' N. lat., 12436.11' 
W. long.;
    (131) 4205.66' N. lat., 12434.92' 
W. long.;
    (132) 4200.00' N. lat., 12435.27' 
W. long.;
    (133) 4200.00' N. lat., 12435.26' 
W. long.;
    (134) 4147.04' N. lat., 12427.64' 
W. long.;
    (135) 4132.92' N. lat., 12428.79' 
W. long.;
    (136) 4124.17' N. lat., 12428.46' 
W. long.;
    (137) 4110.12' N. lat., 12420.50' 
W. long.;
    (138) 4051.41' N. lat., 12424.38' 
W. long.;
    (139) 4043.71' N. lat., 12429.89' 
W. long.;
    (140) 4040.14' N. lat., 12430.90' 
W. long.;
    (141) 4037.35' N. lat., 12429.05' 
W. long.;
    (142) 4034.76' N. lat., 12429.82' 
W. long.;
    (143) 4036.78' N. lat., 12437.06' 
W. long.;
    (144) 4032.44' N. lat., 12439.58' 
W. long.;
    (145) 4024.82' N. lat., 12435.12' 
W. long.;
    (146) 4023.30' N. lat., 12431.60' 
W. long.;
    (147) 4023.52' N. lat., 12428.78' 
W. long.;
    (148) 4022.43' N. lat., 12425.00' 
W. long.;
    (149) 4021.72' N. lat., 12424.94' 
W. long.;
    (150) 4021.87' N. lat., 12427.96' 
W. long.;
    (151) 4021.40' N. lat., 12428.74' 
W. long.;
    (152) 4019.68' N. lat., 12428.49' 
W. long.;
    (153) 4017.73' N. lat., 12425.43' 
W. long.;
    (154) 4018.37' N. lat., 12423.35' 
W. long.;
    (155) 4015.75' N. lat., 12426.05' 
W. long.;
    (156) 4016.75' N. lat., 12433.71' 
W. long.;
    (157) 4016.29' N. lat., 12434.36' 
W. long.;
    (158) 4010.00' N. lat., 12421.12' 
W. long.;
    (159) 4010.00' N. lat., 12421.50' 
W. long.;
    (160) 4007.70' N. lat., 12418.44' 
W. long.;
    (161) 4008.84' N. lat., 12415.86' 
W. long.;
    (162) 4006.53' N. lat., 12417.39' 
W. long.;
    (163) 4003.15' N. lat., 12414.43' 
W. long.;
    (164) 4002.19' N. lat., 12412.85' 
W. long.;
    (165) 4002.89' N. lat., 12411.78' 
W. long.;
    (166) 4002.78' N. lat., 12410.70' 
W. long.;
    (167) 4004.57' N. lat., 12410.08' 
W. long.;
    (168) 4006.06' N. lat., 12408.30' 
W. long.;
    (169) 4004.05' N. lat., 12408.93' 
W. long.;
    (170) 4001.17' N. lat., 12408.80' 
W. long.;
    (171) 4001.03' N. lat., 12410.06' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3958.07' N. lat., 12411.89' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3956.39' N. lat., 12408.71' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3954.64' N. lat., 12407.30' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3953.86' N. lat., 12407.95' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3951.95' N. lat., 12407.63' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3948.78' N. lat., 12403.29' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3947.36' N. lat., 12403.31' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3940.08' N. lat., 12358.37' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3936.16' N. lat., 12356.90' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3930.75' N. lat., 12355.86' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3931.62' N. lat., 12357.33' 
W. long.;
    (183) 3930.91' N. lat., 12357.88' 
W. long.;
    (184) 3901.79' N. lat., 12356.59' 
W. long.;
    (185) 3859.42' N. lat., 12355.67' 
W. long.;
    (186) 3858.89' N. lat., 12356.28' 
W. long.;
    (187) 3854.72' N. lat., 12355.68' 
W. long.;
    (188) 3848.95' N. lat., 12351.85' 
W. long.;
    (189) 3836.67' N. lat., 12340.20' 
W. long.;
    (190) 3833.82' N. lat., 12339.23' 
W. long.;
    (191) 3829.02' N. lat., 12333.52' 
W. long.;
    (192) 3818.88' N. lat., 12325.93' 
W. long.;
    (193) 3814.12' N. lat., 12323.26' 
W. long.;
    (194) 3811.07' N. lat., 12322.07' 
W. long.;
    (195) 3803.19' N. lat., 12320.70' 
W. long.;
    (196) 3806.30' N. lat., 12324.96' 
W. long.;
    (197) 3806.34' N. lat., 12329.25' 
W. long.;
    (198) 3804.57' N. lat., 12331.23' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11097]]

    (199) 3802.32' N. lat., 12331.00' 
W. long.;
    (200) 3800.00' N. lat., 12328.41' 
W. long.;
    (201) 3758.08' N. lat., 12326.68' 
W. long.;
    (202) 3755.07' N. lat., 12326.81' 
W. long.;
    (203) 3750.66' N. lat., 12323.06' 
W. long.;
    (204) 3745.18' N. lat., 12311.88' 
W. long.;
    (205) 3736.21' N. lat., 12301.20' 
W. long.;
    (206) 3715.58' N. lat., 12248.36' 
W. long.;
    (207) 3703.18' N. lat., 12238.15' 
W. long.;
    (208) 3700.48' N. lat., 12233.93' 
W. long.;
    (209) 3658.70' N. lat., 12227.22' 
W. long.;
    (210) 3700.85' N. lat., 12224.70' 
W. long.;
    (211) 3658.00' N. lat., 12224.14' 
W. long.;
    (212) 3658.74' N. lat., 12221.51' 
W. long.;
    (213) 3656.97' N. lat., 12221.32' 
W. long.;
    (214) 3651.52' N. lat., 12210.68' 
W. long.;
    (215) 3648.39' N. lat., 12207.60' 
W. long.;
    (216) 3647.43' N. lat., 12203.22' 
W. long.;
    (217) 3650.95' N. lat., 12158.03' 
W. long.;
    (218) 3649.92' N. lat., 12158.01' 
W. long.;
    (219) 3648.88' N. lat., 12158.90' 
W. long.;
    (220) 3647.70' N. lat., 12158.75' 
W. long.;
    (221) 3648.37' N. lat., 12151.14' 
W. long.;
    (222) 3645.74' N. lat., 12154.17' 
W. long.;
    (223) 3645.51' N. lat., 12157.72' 
W. long.;
    (224) 3638.84' N. lat., 12201.32' 
W. long.;
    (225) 3635.62' N. lat., 12200.98' 
W. long.;
    (226) 3632.46' N. lat., 12159.15' 
W. long.;
    (227) 3632.79' N. lat., 12157.67' 
W. long.;
    (228) 3631.98' N. lat., 12156.55' 
W. long.;
    (229) 3631.79' N. lat., 12158.40' 
W. long.;
    (230) 3630.73' N. lat., 12159.70' 
W. long.;
    (231) 3630.31' N. lat., 12200.22' 
W. long.;
    (232) 3629.35' N. lat., 12200.36' 
W. long.;
    (233) 3627.66' N. lat., 12159.80' 
W. long.;
    (234) 3626.22' N. lat., 12158.35' 
W. long.;
    (235) 3621.20' N. lat., 12200.72' 
W. long.;
    (236) 3620.47' N. lat., 12202.92' 
W. long.;
    (237) 3618.46' N. lat., 12204.51' 
W. long.;
    (238) 3615.92' N. lat., 12201.33' 
W. long.;
    (239) 3613.76' N. lat., 12157.27' 
W. long.;
    (240) 3614.43' N. lat., 12155.43' 
W. long.;
    (241) 3610.24' N. lat., 12143.08' 
W. long.;
    (242) 3607.66' N. lat., 12140.91' 
W. long.;
    (243) 3602.49' N. lat., 12136.51' 
W. long.;
    (244) 3601.07' N. lat., 12136.82' 
W. long.;
    (245) 3557.84' N. lat., 12133.10' 
W. long.;
    (246) 3550.36' N. lat., 12129.32' 
W. long.;
    (247) 3539.03' N. lat., 12122.86' 
W. long.;
    (248) 3524.30' N. lat., 12102.56' 
W. long.;
    (249) 3516.53' N. lat., 12100.39' 
W. long.;
    (250) 3504.82' N. lat., 12053.96' 
W. long.;
    (251) 3452.51' N. lat., 12051.62' 
W. long.;
    (252) 3443.36' N. lat., 12052.12' 
W. long.;
    (253) 3437.64' N. lat., 12049.99' 
W. long.;
    (254) 3430.80' N. lat., 12045.02' 
W. long.;
    (255) 3427.00' N. lat., 12039.00' 
W. long.;
    (256) 3421.90' N. lat., 12025.25' 
W. long.;
    (257) 3424.86' N. lat., 12016.81' 
W. long.;
    (258) 3422.80' N. lat., 11957.06' 
W. long.;
    (259) 3418.59' N. lat., 11944.84' 
W. long.;
    (260) 3415.04' N. lat., 11940.34' 
W. long.;
    (261) 3414.40' N. lat., 11945.39' 
W. long.;
    (262) 3412.32' N. lat., 11942.41' 
W. long.;
    (263) 3409.71' N. lat., 11928.85' 
W. long.;
    (264) 3404.70' N. lat., 11915.38' 
W. long.;
    (265) 3403.33' N. lat., 11912.93' 
W. long.;
    (266) 3402.72' N. lat., 11907.01' 
W. long.;
    (267) 3403.90' N. lat., 11904.64' 
W. long.;
    (268) 3401.80' N. lat., 11903.23' 
W. long.;
    (269) 3359.32' N. lat., 11903.50' 
W. long.;
    (270) 3359.00' N. lat., 11859.55' 
W. long.;
    (271) 3359.51' N. lat., 11857.25' 
W. long.;
    (272) 3358.82' N. lat., 11852.47' 
W. long.;
    (273) 3358.54' N. lat., 11841.86' 
W. long.;
    (274) 3355.07' N. lat., 11834.25' 
W. long.;
    (275) 3354.28' N. lat., 11838.68' 
W. long.;
    (276) 3351.00' N. lat., 11836.66' 
W. long.;
    (277) 3339.77' N. lat., 11818.41' 
W. long.;
    (278) 3335.50' N. lat., 11816.85' 
W. long.;
    (279) 3332.68' N. lat., 11809.82' 
W. long.;
    (280) 3334.09' N. lat., 11754.06' 
W. long.;
    (281) 3331.60' N. lat., 11749.28' 
W. long.;
    (282) 3316.07' N. lat., 11734.74' 
W. long.;
    (283) 3307.06' N. lat., 11722.71' 
W. long.;
    (284) 3259.28' N. lat., 11719.69' 
W. long.;
    (285) 3255.36' N. lat., 11719.54' 
W. long.;
    (286) 3253.35' N. lat., 11717.05' 
W. long.;
    (287) 3253.34' N. lat., 11719.13' 
W. long.;
    (288) 3246.39' N. lat., 11723.45' 
W. long.;
    (289) 3242.79' N. lat., 11721.16' 
W. long.; and
    (290) 3234.22' N. lat., 11721.20' 
W. long.

    (A) The 100-fm (183-m) depth contour around San Clemente Island off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3304.73' N. lat., 11837.98' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3302.67' N. lat., 11834.06' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3255.80' N. lat., 11828.92' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3249.78' N. lat., 11820.88' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3248.01' N. lat., 11819.49' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3247.53' N. lat., 11821.76' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3244.03' N. lat., 11824.70' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3249.75' N. lat., 11832.10' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3253.36' N. lat., 11833.23' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3255.17' N. lat., 11834.64' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3255.13' N. lat., 11835.31' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3300.22' N. lat., 11838.68' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3303.13' N. lat., 11839.59' 
W. long.; and
    (14) 3304.73' N. lat., 11837.98' 
W. long.

    (B) The 100-fm (183-m) depth contour around Santa Catalina Island 
off the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all 
of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3328.23' N. lat., 11839.38' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3329.60' N. lat., 11836.11' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3329.14' N. lat., 11830.81' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3326.97' N. lat., 11827.57' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3325.68' N. lat., 11823.00' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3322.67' N. lat., 11818.41' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3319.72' N. lat., 11816.25' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3317.14' N. lat., 11814.96' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3316.09' N. lat., 11815.46' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3318.10' N. lat., 11827.95' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3319.84' N. lat., 11832.16' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3320.83' N. lat., 11832.83' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3321.91' N. lat., 11831.98' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3323.05' N. lat., 11830.11' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3324.87' N. lat., 11832.45' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3325.30' N. lat., 11834.32' 
W. long.; and
    (17) 3328.23' N. lat., 11839.38' 
W. long.

    (viii) The 125-fm (229-m) depth contour used between the U.S. 
border with Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by 
straight lines connecting all of the following points in the order 
stated:

    (1) 4815.00' N. lat., 12541.13' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4813.05' N. lat., 12537.43' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4808.62' N. lat., 12541.68' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4807.42' N. lat., 12542.38' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4804.20' N. lat., 12536.57' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4802.79' N. lat., 12535.55' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4800.48' N. lat., 12537.84' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4754.90' N. lat., 12534.79' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4758.37' N. lat., 12526.58' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4759.84' N. lat., 12525.20' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4801.85' N. lat., 12524.12' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4802.13' N. lat., 12522.80' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4803.31' N. lat., 12522.46' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4806.83' N. lat., 12517.73' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4810.08' N. lat., 12515.56' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4811.24' N. lat., 12513.72' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4812.41' N. lat., 12514.48' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4813.01' N. lat., 12513.77' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4813.59' N. lat., 12512.83' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4812.22' N. lat., 12512.28' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4811.15' N. lat., 12512.26' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4810.18' N. lat., 12510.44' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4810.18' N. lat., 12506.32' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4815.39' N. lat., 12502.83' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4818.32' N. lat., 12501.00' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4821.67' N. lat., 12501.86' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4825.70' N. lat., 12500.10' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4826.43' N. lat., 12456.65' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4824.28' N. lat., 12456.48' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4823.27' N. lat., 12459.12' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4821.79' N. lat., 12459.30' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4820.71' N. lat., 12458.74' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4819.84' N. lat., 12457.09' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4822.06' N. lat., 12454.78' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4822.45' N. lat., 12453.35' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4822.74' N. lat., 12450.96' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4821.04' N. lat., 12452.60' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4818.07' N. lat., 12455.85' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4815.03' N. lat., 12458.16' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4811.31' N. lat., 12458.53' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4806.25' N. lat., 12500.06' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4804.70' N. lat., 12501.80' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4804.93' N. lat., 12503.92' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4806.44' N. lat., 12506.50' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4807.34' N. lat., 12509.35' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4807.62' N. lat., 12511.37' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4803.71' N. lat., 12517.63' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4801.35' N. lat., 12518.66' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4800.05' N. lat., 12519.66' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4759.51' N. lat., 12518.90' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4758.29' N. lat., 12516.64' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4754.67' N. lat., 12513.20' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4753.15' N. lat., 12512.53' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4748.46' N. lat., 12504.72' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4746.10' N. lat., 12504.00' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4744.60' N. lat., 12504.49' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4742.90' N. lat., 12504.72' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4740.71' N. lat., 12504.68' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4739.02' N. lat., 12505.63' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4734.86' N. lat., 12502.11' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4731.64' N. lat., 12458.11' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4729.69' N. lat., 12455.71' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4729.35' N. lat., 12453.23' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4728.56' N. lat., 12451.34' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4725.31' N. lat., 12448.20' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4723.92' N. lat., 12447.15' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4718.09' N. lat., 12445.74' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4718.65' N. lat., 12451.51' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4718.12' N. lat., 12452.58' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4717.64' N. lat., 12450.45' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4716.31' N. lat., 12450.92' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4715.60' N. lat., 12452.62' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4714.25' N. lat., 12452.49' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4711.32' N. lat., 12457.19' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4709.14' N. lat., 12457.46' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4708.83' N. lat., 12458.47' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4705.88' N. lat., 12458.26' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4703.60' N. lat., 12455.84' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4702.91' N. lat., 12456.15' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4701.08' N. lat., 12459.46' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4658.13' N. lat., 12458.83' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4657.44' N. lat., 12457.78' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11098]]

    (83) 4655.98[min] N. lat., 
12454.60[min] W. long.;
    (84) 4654.90[min] N. lat., 
12454.14[min] W. long.;
    (85) 4658.47[min] N. lat., 
12449.65[min] W. long.;
    (86) 4654.44[min] N. lat., 
12448.79[min] W. long.;
    (87) 4654.41[min] N. lat., 
12452.87[min] W. long.;
    (88) 4649.36[min] N. lat., 
12452.77[min] W. long.;
    (89) 4640.06[min] N. lat., 
12445.34[min] W. long.;
    (90) 4639.64[min] N. lat., 
12442.21[min] W. long.;
    (91) 4634.27[min] N. lat., 
12434.63[min] W. long.;
    (92) 4633.58[min] N. lat., 
12429.10[min] W. long.;
    (93) 4625.64[min] N. lat., 
12432.57[min] W. long.;
    (94) 4621.33[min] N. lat., 
12436.36[min] W. long.;
    (95) 4620.59[min] N. lat., 
12436.15[min] W. long.;
    (96) 4619.38[min] N. lat., 
12438.21[min] W. long.;
    (97) 4617.94[min] N. lat., 
12438.10[min] W. long.;
    (98) 4616.00[min] N. lat., 
12435.35[min] W. long.;
    (99) 4616.00[min] N. lat., 
12422.17[min] W. long.;
    (100) 4613.37[min] N. lat., 
12430.70[min] W. long.;
    (101) 4612.20[min] N. lat., 
12436.04[min] W. long.;
    (102) 4611.01[min] N. lat., 
12438.68[min] W. long.;
    (103) 4609.73[min] N. lat., 
12439.91[min] W. long.;
    (104) 4603.23[min] N. lat., 
12442.03[min] W. long.;
    (105) 4601.17[min] N. lat., 
12442.06[min] W. long.;
    (106) 4600.35[min] N. lat., 
12442.26[min] W. long.;
    (107) 4552.81[min] N. lat., 
12441.62[min] W. long.;
    (108) 4549.70[min] N. lat., 
12441.14[min] W. long.;
    (109) 4545.18[min] N. lat., 
12438.39[min] W. long.;
    (110) 4543.24[min] N. lat., 
12437.77[min] W. long.;
    (111) 4534.75[min] N. lat., 
12428.59[min] W. long.;
    (112) 4519.90[min] N. lat., 
12421.34[min] W. long.;
    (113) 4512.44[min] N. lat., 
12419.35[min] W. long.;
    (114) 4507.48[min] N. lat., 
12419.73[min] W. long.;
    (115) 4459.96[min] N. lat., 
12422.91[min] W. long.;
    (116) 4454.72[min] N. lat., 
12426.84[min] W. long.;
    (117) 4451.15[min] N. lat., 
12431.41[min] W. long.;
    (118) 4449.97[min] N. lat., 
12432.37[min] W. long.;
    (119) 4447.06[min] N. lat., 
12434.43[min] W. long.;
    (120) 4441.37[min] N. lat., 
12436.51[min] W. long.;
    (121) 4432.78[min] N. lat., 
12437.86[min] W. long.;
    (122) 4429.44[min] N. lat., 
12444.25[min] W. long.;
    (123) 4427.95[min] N. lat., 
12445.13[min] W. long.;
    (124) 4424.73[min] N. lat., 
12447.42[min] W. long.;
    (125) 4419.67[min] N. lat., 
12451.17[min] W. long.;
    (126) 4417.96[min] N. lat., 
12452.53[min] W. long.;
    (127) 4413.70[min] N. lat., 
12456.45[min] W. long.;
    (128) 4412.26[min] N. lat., 
12457.53[min] W. long.;
    (129) 4407.57[min] N. lat., 
12457.19[min] W. long.;
    (130) 4404.78[min] N. lat., 
12456.31[min] W. long.;
    (131) 4401.14[min] N. lat., 
12456.07[min] W. long.;
    (132) 4357.39[min] N. lat., 
12457.01[min] W. long.;
    (133) 4354.58[min] N. lat., 
12452.18[min] W. long.;
    (134) 4353.18[min] N. lat., 
12447.41[min] W. long.;
    (135) 4353.60[min] N. lat., 
12437.45[min] W. long.;
    (136) 4353.04[min] N. lat., 
12436.00[min] W. long.;
    (137) 4347.93[min] N. lat., 
12435.18[min] W. long.;
    (138) 4339.32[min] N. lat., 
12435.14[min] W. long.;
    (139) 4332.38[min] N. lat., 
12435.26[min] W. long.;
    (140) 4330.32[min] N. lat., 
12436.79[min] W. long.;
    (141) 4327.81[min] N. lat., 
12436.42[min] W. long.;
    (142) 4323.73[min] N. lat., 
12439.66[min] W. long.;
    (143) 4317.78[min] N. lat., 
12442.84[min] W. long.;
    (144) 4310.48[min] N. lat., 
12443.54[min] W. long.;
    (145) 4304.77[min] N. lat., 
12445.51[min] W. long.;
    (146) 4305.94[min] N. lat., 
12449.77[min] W. long.;
    (147) 4303.38[min] N. lat., 
12451.86[min] W. long.;
    (148) 4259.32[min] N. lat., 
12451.93[min] W. long.;
    (149) 4256.80[min] N. lat., 
12453.38[min] W. long.;
    (150) 4254.54[min] N. lat., 
12452.72[min] W. long.;
    (151) 4252.89[min] N. lat., 
12447.45[min] W. long.;
    (152) 4248.10[min] N. lat., 
12446.75[min] W. long.;
    (153) 4246.34[min] N. lat., 
12443.53[min] W. long.;
    (154) 4241.66[min] N. lat., 
12442.70[min] W. long.;
    (155) 4232.53[min] N. lat., 
12442.77[min] W. long.;
    (156) 4229.74[min] N. lat., 
12443.81[min] W. long.;
    (157) 4228.07[min] N. lat., 
12447.65[min] W. long.;
    (158) 4221.58[min] N. lat., 
12441.41[min] W. long.;
    (159) 4215.17[min] N. lat., 
12436.25[min] W. long.;
    (160) 4208.28[min] N. lat., 
12436.08[min] W. long.;
    (161) 4200.00[min] N. lat., 
12435.46[min] W. long.;
    (162) 4200.00[min] N. lat., 
12435.45[min] W. long.;
    (163) 4147.67[min] N. lat., 
12428.67[min] W. long.;
    (164) 4132.91[min] N. lat., 
12429.01[min] W. long.;
    (165) 4122.57[min] N. lat., 
12428.66[min] W. long.;
    (166) 4113.38[min] N. lat., 
12422.88[min] W. long.;
    (167) 4106.42[min] N. lat., 
12422.02[min] W. long.;
    (168) 4050.19[min] N. lat., 
12425.58[min] W. long.;
    (169) 4044.08[min] N. lat., 
12430.43[min] W. long.;
    (170) 4040.54[min] N. lat., 
12431.75[min] W. long.;
    (171) 4037.36[min] N. lat., 
12429.17[min] W. long.;
    (172) 4035.30[min] N. lat., 
12430.03[min] W. long.;
    (173) 4037.02[min] N. lat., 
12437.10[min] W. long.;
    (174) 4035.82[min] N. lat., 
12439.58[min] W. long.;
    (175) 4031.70[min] N. lat., 
12439.97[min] W. long.;
    (176) 4029.71[min] N. lat., 
12438.08[min] W. long.;
    (177) 4024.77[min] N. lat., 
12435.39[min] W. long.;
    (178) 4023.22[min] N. lat., 
12431.87[min] W. long.;
    (179) 4023.40[min] N. lat., 
12428.65[min] W. long.;
    (180) 4022.30[min] N. lat., 
12425.27[min] W. long.;
    (181) 4021.91[min] N. lat., 
12425.18[min] W. long.;
    (182) 4021.91[min] N. lat., 
12427.97[min] W. long.;
    (183) 4021.37[min] N. lat., 
12429.03[min] W. long.;
    (184) 4019.74[min] N. lat., 
12428.71[min] W. long.;
    (185) 4018.52[min] N. lat., 
12427.26[min] W. long.;
    (186) 4017.57[min] N. lat., 
12425.49[min] W. long.;
    (187) 4018.20[min] N. lat., 
12423.63[min] W. long.;
    (188) 4015.89[min] N. lat., 
12426.00[min] W. long.;
    (189) 4017.00[min] N. lat., 
12435.01[min] W. long.;
    (190) 4015.97[min] N. lat., 
12435.91[min] W. long.;
    (191) 4010.01[min] N. lat., 
12422.00[min] W. long.;
    (192) 4007.35[min] N. lat., 
12418.64[min] W. long.;
    (193) 4008.46[min] N. lat., 
12416.24[min] W. long.;
    (194) 4006.26[min] N. lat., 
12417.54[min] W. long.;
    (195) 4003.26[min] N. lat., 
12415.30[min] W. long.;
    (196) 4002.00[min] N. lat., 
12412.97[min] W. long.;
    (197) 4002.60[min] N. lat., 
12410.61[min] W. long.;
    (198) 4003.63[min] N. lat., 
12409.12[min] W. long.;
    (199) 4002.18[min] N. lat., 
12409.07[min] W. long.;
    (200) 4001.26[min] N. lat., 
12409.86[min] W. long.;
    (201) 3958.05[min] N. lat., 
12411.87[min] W. long.;
    (202) 3956.39[min] N. lat., 
12408.70[min] W. long.;
    (203) 3954.64[min] N. lat., 
12407.31[min] W. long.;
    (204) 3953.87[min] N. lat., 
12407.95[min] W. long.;
    (205) 3952.42[min] N. lat., 
12408.18[min] W. long.;
    (206) 3942.50[min] N. lat., 
12400.60[min] W. long.;
    (207) 3934.23[min] N. lat., 
12356.82[min] W. long.;
    (208) 3933.00[min] N. lat., 
12356.44[min] W. long.;
    (209) 3930.96[min] N. lat., 
12356.00[min] W. long.;
    (210) 3932.03[min] N. lat., 
12357.44[min] W. long.;
    (211) 3931.43[min] N. lat., 
12358.16[min] W. long.;
    (212) 3905.56[min] N. lat., 
12357.24[min] W. long.;
    (213) 3901.75[min] N. lat., 
12356.83[min] W. long.;
    (214) 3859.52[min] N. lat., 
12355.95[min] W. long.;
    (215) 3858.98[min] N. lat., 
12356.57[min] W. long.;
    (216) 3853.91[min] N. lat., 
12356.00[min] W. long.;
    (217) 3842.57[min] N. lat., 
12346.60[min] W. long.;
    (218) 3828.72[min] N. lat., 
12335.61[min] W. long.;
    (219) 3828.01[min] N. lat., 
12336.47[min] W. long.;
    (220) 3820.94[min] N. lat., 
12331.26[min] W. long.;
    (221) 3815.94[min] N. lat., 
12325.33[min] W. long.;
    (222) 3810.95[min] N. lat., 
12323.19[min] W. long.;
    (223) 3805.52[min] N. lat., 
12322.90[min] W. long.;
    (224) 3808.46[min] N. lat., 
12326.23[min] W. long.;
    (225) 3806.95[min] N. lat., 
12328.03[min] W. long.;
    (226) 3806.34[min] N. lat., 
12329.80[min] W. long.;
    (227) 3804.57[min] N. lat., 
12331.24[min] W. long.;
    (228) 3802.33[min] N. lat., 
12331.02[min] W. long.;
    (229) 3800.00[min] N. lat., 
12328.23[min] W. long.;
    (230) 3758.10[min] N. lat., 
12326.69[min] W. long.;
    (231) 3755.46[min] N. lat., 
12327.05[min] W. long.;
    (232) 3751.51[min] N. lat., 
12324.86[min] W. long.;
    (233) 3745.01[min] N. lat., 
12312.09[min] W. long.;
    (234) 3736.47[min] N. lat., 
12301.56[min] W. long.;
    (235) 3726.62[min] N. lat., 
12256.21[min] W. long.;
    (236) 3714.41[min] N. lat., 
12249.07[min] W. long.;
    (237) 3703.19[min] N. lat., 
12238.31[min] W. long.;
    (238) 3700.99[min] N. lat., 
12235.51[min] W. long.;
    (239) 3658.23[min] N. lat., 
12227.36[min] W. long.;
    (240) 3700.54[min] N. lat., 
12224.74[min] W. long.;
    (241) 3657.81[min] N. lat., 
12224.65[min] W. long.;
    (242) 3658.54[min] N. lat., 
12221.67[min] W. long.;
    (243) 3656.52[min] N. lat., 
12221.70[min] W. long.;
    (244) 3655.37[min] N. lat., 
12218.45[min] W. long.;
    (245) 3652.16[min] N. lat., 
12212.17[min] W. long.;
    (246) 3651.53[min] N. lat., 
12210.67[min] W. long.;
    (247) 3648.05[min] N. lat., 
12207.59[min] W. long.;
    (248) 3647.35[min] N. lat., 
12203.27[min] W. long.;
    (249) 3650.71[min] N. lat., 
12158.17[min] W. long.;
    (250) 3648.89[min] N. lat., 
12158.90[min] W. long.;
    (251) 3647.70[min] N. lat., 
12158.76[min] W. long.;
    (252) 3648.37[min] N. lat., 
12151.15[min] W. long.;
    (253) 3645.74[min] N. lat., 
12154.18[min] W. long.;
    (254) 3645.50[min] N. lat., 
12157.73[min] W. long.;
    (255) 3644.02[min] N. lat., 
12158.55[min] W. long.;
    (256) 3638.84[min] N. lat., 
12201.32[min] W. long.;
    (257) 3635.63[min] N. lat., 
12200.98[min] W. long.;
    (258) 3632.47[min] N. lat., 
12159.17[min] W. long.;
    (259) 3632.52[min] N. lat., 
12157.62[min] W. long.;
    (260) 3630.16[min] N. lat., 
12200.55[min] W. long.;
    (261) 3624.56[min] N. lat., 
12159.19[min] W. long.;
    (262) 3622.19[min] N. lat., 
12200.30[min] W. long.;
    (263) 3620.62[min] N. lat., 
12202.93[min] W. long.;
    (264) 3618.89[min] N. lat., 
12205.18[min] W. long.;
    (265) 3614.45[min] N. lat., 
12159.44[min] W. long.;
    (266) 3613.73[min] N. lat., 
12157.38[min] W. long.;
    (267) 3614.41[min] N. lat., 
12155.45[min] W. long.;
    (268) 3610.25[min] N. lat., 
12143.08[min] W. long.;
    (269) 3607.67[min] N. lat., 
12140.92[min] W. long.;
    (270) 3602.51[min] N. lat., 
12136.76[min] W. long.;
    (271) 3601.08[min] N. lat., 
12136.82[min] W. long.;
    (272) 3557.84[min] N. lat., 
12133.10[min] W. long.;
    (273) 3545.57[min] N. lat., 
12127.26[min] W. long.;
    (274) 3539.02[min] N. lat., 
12122.86[min] W. long.;
    (275) 3525.92' N. lat., 12105.52' 
W. long.;
    (276) 3516.26' N. lat., 12101.50' 
W. long.;
    (277) 3507.60' N. lat., 12056.49' 
W. long.;
    (278) 3457.77' N. lat., 12053.87' 
W. long.;
    (279) 3442.30' N. lat., 12053.42' 
W. long.;
    (280) 3437.69' N. lat., 12050.04' 
W. long.;
    (281) 3430.13' N. lat., 12044.45' 
W. long.;
    (282) 3427.00' N. lat., 12039.24' 
W. long.;
    (283) 3424.71' N. lat., 12035.37' 
W. long.;
    (284) 3421.63' N. lat., 12024.86' 
W. long.;
    (285) 3424.39' N. lat., 12016.65' 
W. long.;
    (286) 3422.48' N. lat., 11956.42' 
W. long.;
    (287) 3418.54' N. lat., 11946.26' 
W. long.;
    (288) 3416.37' N. lat., 11945.12' 
W. long.;
    (289) 3415.91' N. lat., 11947.29' 
W. long.;
    (290) 3413.80' N. lat., 11945.40' 
W. long.;
    (291) 3411.69' N. lat., 11941.80' 
W. long.;
    (292) 3409.98' N. lat., 11931.87' 
W. long.;
    (293) 3408.12' N. lat., 11927.71' 
W. long.;
    (294) 3406.35' N. lat., 11932.65' 
W. long.;
    (295) 3406.80' N. lat., 11940.08' 
W. long.;
    (296) 3407.48' N. lat., 11947.54' 
W. long.;
    (297) 3408.21' N. lat., 11954.90' 
W. long.;
    (298) 3406.85' N. lat., 12005.60' 
W. long.;
    (299) 3406.99' N. lat., 12010.37' 
W. long.;
    (300) 3408.53' N. lat., 12017.89' 
W. long.;
    (301) 3410.00' N. lat., 12023.05' 
W. long.;
    (302) 3412.53' N. lat., 12029.82' 
W. long.;
    (303) 3409.02' N. lat., 12037.47' 
W. long.;
    (304) 3401.01' N. lat., 12031.17' 
W. long.;
    (305) 3358.07' N. lat., 12028.33' 
W. long.;
    (306) 3353.37' N. lat., 12014.43' 
W. long.;
    (307) 3350.53' N. lat., 12007.20' 
W. long.;
    (308) 3345.88' N. lat., 12004.26' 
W. long.;
    (309) 3338.19' N. lat., 11957.85' 
W. long.;
    (310) 3338.19' N. lat., 11950.42' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11099]]

    (311) 3342.36' N. lat., 11949.60' 
W. long.;
    (312) 3353.95' N. lat., 11953.81' 
W. long.;
    (313) 3355.85' N. lat., 11943.34' 
W. long.;
    (314) 3358.48' N. lat., 11927.90' 
W. long.;
    (315) 3400.34' N. lat., 11919.22' 
W. long.;
    (316) 3404.48' N. lat., 11915.32' 
W. long.;
    (317) 3402.80' N. lat., 11912.95' 
W. long.;
    (318) 3402.39' N. lat., 11907.17' 
W. long.;
    (319) 3403.75' N. lat., 11904.72' 
W. long.;
    (320) 3401.82' N. lat., 11903.24' 
W. long.;
    (321) 3359.33' N. lat., 11903.49' 
W. long.;
    (322) 3359.01' N. lat., 11859.56' 
W. long.;
    (323) 3359.51' N. lat., 11857.25' 
W. long.;
    (324) 3358.83' N. lat., 11852.50' 
W. long.;
    (325) 3358.55' N. lat., 11841.86' 
W. long.;
    (326) 3355.10' N. lat., 11834.25' 
W. long.;
    (327) 3354.30' N. lat., 11838.71' 
W. long.;
    (328) 3350.88' N. lat., 11837.02' 
W. long.;
    (329) 3339.78' N. lat., 11818.40' 
W. long.;
    (330) 3335.50' N. lat., 11816.85' 
W. long.;
    (331) 3332.46' N. lat., 11810.90' 
W. long.;
    (332) 3334.11' N. lat., 11754.07' 
W. long.;
    (333) 3331.61' N. lat., 11749.30' 
W. long.;
    (334) 3316.36' N. lat., 11735.48' 
W. long.;
    (335) 3306.81' N. lat., 11722.93' 
W. long.;
    (336) 3259.28' N. lat., 11719.69' 
W. long.;
    (337) 3255.37' N. lat., 11719.55' 
W. long.;
    (338) 3253.35' N. lat., 11717.05' 
W. long.;
    (339) 3253.36' N. lat., 11719.12' 
W. long.;
    (340) 3246.42' N. lat., 11723.45' 
W. long.;
    (341) 3242.71' N. lat., 11721.45' 
W. long.; and
    (342) 3234.54' N. lat., 11723.04' 
W. long.

    (A) The 125-fm (229-m) depth contour around San Clemente Island off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3304.73' N. lat., 11837.99' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3302.67' N. lat., 11834.07' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3255.97' N. lat., 11828.95' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3249.79' N. lat., 11820.89' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3248.02' N. lat., 11819.49' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3247.37' N. lat., 11821.72' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3243.58' N. lat., 11824.54' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3249.74' N. lat., 11832.11' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3253.36' N. lat., 11833.44' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3255.03' N. lat., 11834.64' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3254.89' N. lat., 11835.37' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3300.20' N. lat., 11838.72' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3303.15' N. lat., 11839.80' 
W. long.; and
    (14) 3304.73' N. lat., 11837.99' 
W. long.

    (B) The 125-fm (229-m) depth contour around Santa Catalina Island 
off the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all 
of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3328.42' N. lat., 11839.85' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3329.99' N. lat., 11836.14' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3329.47' N. lat., 11833.66' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3329.31' N. lat., 11830.53' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3327.24' N. lat., 11827.71' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3325.77' N. lat., 11822.57' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3323.76' N. lat., 11819.27' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3317.61' N. lat., 11813.61' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3316.16' N. lat., 11813.98' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3315.86' N. lat., 11815.27' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3318.11' N. lat., 11827.96' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3319.83' N. lat., 11832.16' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3320.81' N. lat., 11832.94' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3321.99' N. lat., 11832.04' 
W. long.;
    (15) 3323.09' N. lat., 11830.37' 
W. long.;
    (16) 3324.78' N. lat., 11832.46' 
W. long.;
    (17) 3325.43' N. lat., 11834.93' 
W. long.; and
    (18) 3328.42' N. lat., 11839.85' 
W. long.

    (C) The 125-fm (229-m) depth contour around Lasuen Knoll off the 
State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of the 
following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3324.57' N. lat., 11800.15' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3323.42' N. lat., 11759.43' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3323.69' N. lat., 11758.72' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3324.72' N. lat., 11759.51' W. 
long.; and
    (5) 3324.57' N. lat., 11800.15' W. 
long.

    (ix) The 150-fm (274-m) depth contour used between the U.S. border 
with Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight 
lines connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4814.96' N. lat., 12541.24' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4812.89' N. lat., 12537.83' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4811.49' N. lat., 12539.27' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4808.72' N. lat., 12541.84' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4807.00' N. lat., 12545.00' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4806.13' N. lat., 12541.57' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4805.00' N. lat., 12539.00' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4804.15' N. lat., 12536.71' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4803.00' N. lat., 12536.00' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4801.65' N. lat., 12536.96' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4801.00' N. lat., 12538.50' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4757.50' N. lat., 12536.50' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4754.50' N. lat., 12535.00' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4756.53' N. lat., 12530.33' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4757.28' N. lat., 12527.89' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4759.00' N. lat., 12525.50' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4801.77' N. lat., 12524.05' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4802.13' N. lat., 12522.80' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4803.00' N. lat., 12522.50' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4803.46' N. lat., 12522.10' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4804.29' N. lat., 12520.37' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4802.00' N. lat., 12518.50' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4800.01' N. lat., 12519.90' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4758.75' N. lat., 12517.54' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4753.50' N. lat., 12513.50' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4748.88' N. lat., 12505.91' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4747.18' N. lat., 12506.60' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4748.50' N. lat., 12505.00' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4745.98' N. lat., 12504.26' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4745.00' N. lat., 12505.50' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4742.11' N. lat., 12504.74' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4739.00' N. lat., 12506.00' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4735.53' N. lat., 12504.55' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4730.90' N. lat., 12457.31' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4729.54' N. lat., 12456.50' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4729.50' N. lat., 12454.50' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4728.57' N. lat., 12451.50' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4725.00' N. lat., 12448.00' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4723.95' N. lat., 12447.24' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4723.00' N. lat., 12447.00' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4721.00' N. lat., 12446.50' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4718.20' N. lat., 12445.84' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4718.50' N. lat., 12449.00' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4719.17' N. lat., 12450.86' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4718.07' N. lat., 12453.29' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4717.78' N. lat., 12451.39' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4716.81' N. lat., 12450.85' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4715.96' N. lat., 12453.15' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4714.31' N. lat., 12452.62' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4711.87' N. lat., 12456.90' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4712.39' N. lat., 12458.09' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4709.50' N. lat., 12457.50' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4709.00' N. lat., 12459.00' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4706.06' N. lat., 12458.80' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4703.62' N. lat., 12455.96' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4702.89' N. lat., 12456.89' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4701.04' N. lat., 12459.54' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4658.47' N. lat., 12459.08' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4658.29' N. lat., 12500.28' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4656.30' N. lat., 12500.75' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4657.09' N. lat., 12458.86' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4655.95' N. lat., 12454.88' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4654.79' N. lat., 12454.14' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4658.00' N. lat., 12450.00' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4654.50' N. lat., 12449.00' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4654.53' N. lat., 12452.94' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4649.52' N. lat., 12453.41' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4639.50' N. lat., 12447.00' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4639.50' N. lat., 12442.50' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4637.50' N. lat., 12441.00' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4636.50' N. lat., 12438.00' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4633.85' N. lat., 12436.99' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4633.50' N. lat., 12429.50' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4632.00' N. lat., 12431.00' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4630.53' N. lat., 12430.55' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4625.50' N. lat., 12433.00' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4623.00' N. lat., 12435.00' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4621.50' N. lat., 12437.00' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4620.64' N. lat., 12436.21' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4620.36' N. lat., 12437.85' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4619.48' N. lat., 12438.35' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4618.09' N. lat., 12438.30' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4616.00' N. lat., 12436.00' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4614.87' N. lat., 12426.15' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4613.38' N. lat., 12431.36' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4612.09' N. lat., 12438.39' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4609.46' N. lat., 12440.64' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4607.30' N. lat., 12440.68' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4602.76' N. lat., 12444.01' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4602.64' N. lat., 12447.96' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4601.22' N. lat., 12443.47' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4551.82' N. lat., 12442.89' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4545.95' N. lat., 12440.72' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4544.11' N. lat., 12443.09' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4534.50' N. lat., 12430.27' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4521.10' N. lat., 12423.11' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4509.69' N. lat., 12420.45' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4456.25' N. lat., 12427.03' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4444.47' N. lat., 12437.85' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4431.81' N. lat., 12439.60' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4431.48' N. lat., 12443.30' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4412.04' N. lat., 12458.16' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4407.38' N. lat., 12457.87' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4357.06' N. lat., 12457.20' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4352.52' N. lat., 12449.00' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4351.55' N. lat., 12437.49' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4347.83' N. lat., 12436.43' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4331.79' N. lat., 12436.80' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4329.34' N. lat., 12436.77' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4326.46' N. lat., 12440.02' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4316.15' N. lat., 12444.37' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4309.33' N. lat., 12445.35' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4308.85' N. lat., 12448.92' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4303.23' N. lat., 12452.41' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4300.25' N. lat., 12451.93' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4256.62' N. lat., 12453.93' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4254.84' N. lat., 12454.01' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4252.31' N. lat., 12450.76' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4247.78' N. lat., 12447.27' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4246.32' N. lat., 12443.59' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4241.63' N. lat., 12444.07' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4238.83' N. lat., 12442.77' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4235.37' N. lat., 12443.22' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4232.78' N. lat., 12444.68' 
W. long.;
    (125) 4232.19' N. lat., 12442.40' 
W. long.;
    (126) 4230.28' N. lat., 12444.30' 
W. long.;
    (127) 4228.16' N. lat., 12448.38' 
W. long.;
    (128) 4218.34' N. lat., 12438.77' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11100]]

    (129) 4213.65' N. lat., 12436.82' 
W. long.;
    (130) 4200.15' N. lat., 12435.81' 
W. long.;
    (131) 4200.00' N. lat., 12435.99' 
W. long.;
    (132) 4147.80' N. lat., 12429.41' 
W. long.;
    (133) 4123.51' N. lat., 12429.50' 
W. long.;
    (134) 4113.29' N. lat., 12423.31' 
W. long.;
    (135) 4106.23' N. lat., 12422.62' 
W. long.;
    (136) 4055.60' N. lat., 12426.04' 
W. long.;
    (137) 4049.62' N. lat., 12426.57' 
W. long.;
    (138) 4045.72' N. lat., 12430.00' 
W. long.;
    (139) 4040.56' N. lat., 12432.11' 
W. long.;
    (140) 4037.33' N. lat., 12429.27' 
W. long.;
    (141) 4035.60' N. lat., 12430.49' 
W. long.;
    (142) 4037.38' N. lat., 12437.14' 
W. long.;
    (143) 4036.03' N. lat., 12439.97' 
W. long.;
    (144) 4031.59' N. lat., 12440.74' 
W. long.;
    (145) 4029.76' N. lat., 12438.13' 
W. long.;
    (146) 4028.22' N. lat., 12437.23' 
W. long.;
    (147) 4024.86' N. lat., 12435.71' 
W. long.;
    (148) 4023.01' N. lat., 12431.94' 
W. long.;
    (149) 4023.39' N. lat., 12428.64' 
W. long.;
    (150) 4022.29' N. lat., 12425.25' 
W. long.;
    (151) 4021.90' N. lat., 12425.18' 
W. long.;
    (152) 4022.02' N. lat., 12428.00' 
W. long.;
    (153) 4021.34' N. lat., 12429.53' 
W. long.;
    (154) 4019.74' N. lat., 12428.95' 
W. long.;
    (155) 4018.13' N. lat., 12427.08' 
W. long.;
    (156) 4017.45' N. lat., 12425.53' 
W. long.;
    (157) 4017.97' N. lat., 12424.12' 
W. long.;
    (158) 4015.96' N. lat., 12426.05' 
W. long.;
    (159) 4017.00' N. lat., 12435.01' 
W. long.;
    (160) 4015.97' N. lat., 12435.90' 
W. long.;
    (161) 4010.00' N. lat., 12422.96' 
W. long.;
    (162) 4007.00' N. lat., 12419.00' 
W. long.;
    (163) 4008.10' N. lat., 12416.70' 
W. long.;
    (164) 4005.90' N. lat., 12417.77' 
W. long.;
    (165) 4002.99' N. lat., 12415.55' 
W. long.;
    (166) 4002.00' N. lat., 12412.97' 
W. long.;
    (167) 4002.60' N. lat., 12410.61' 
W. long.;
    (168) 4003.63' N. lat., 12409.12' 
W. long.;
    (169) 4002.18' N. lat., 12409.07' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3958.25' N. lat., 12412.56' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3957.03' N. lat., 12411.34' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3956.30' N. lat., 12408.96' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3954.82' N. lat., 12407.66' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3952.57' N. lat., 12408.55' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3945.34' N. lat., 12403.30' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3934.75' N. lat., 12358.50' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3934.22' N. lat., 12356.82' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3932.98' N. lat., 12356.43' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3931.47' N. lat., 12358.73' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3905.68' N. lat., 12357.81' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3900.24' N. lat., 12356.74' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3854.31' N. lat., 12356.73' 
W. long.;
    (183) 3841.42' N. lat., 12346.75' 
W. long.;
    (184) 3839.61' N. lat., 12346.48' 
W. long.;
    (185) 3837.52' N. lat., 12343.78' 
W. long.;
    (186) 3835.25' N. lat., 12342.00' 
W. long.;
    (187) 3828.79' N. lat., 12337.07' 
W. long.;
    (188) 3819.88' N. lat., 12332.54' 
W. long.;
    (189) 3814.43' N. lat., 12325.56' 
W. long.;
    (190) 3808.75' N. lat., 12324.48' 
W. long.;
    (191) 3810.10' N. lat., 12327.20' 
W. long.;
    (192) 3807.16' N. lat., 12328.18' 
W. long.;
    (193) 3806.42' N. lat., 12330.18' 
W. long.;
    (194) 3804.28' N. lat., 12331.70' 
W. long.;
    (195) 3801.88' N. lat., 12330.98' 
W. long.;
    (196) 3800.75' N. lat., 12329.72' 
W. long.;
    (197) 3800.00' N. lat., 12328.60' 
W. long.;
    (198) 3758.23' N. lat., 12326.90' 
W. long.;
    (199) 3755.32' N. lat., 12327.19' 
W. long.;
    (200) 3751.47' N. lat., 12324.92' 
W. long.;
    (201) 3744.47' N. lat., 12311.57' 
W. long.;
    (202) 3736.33' N. lat., 12301.76' 
W. long.;
    (203) 3715.16' N. lat., 12251.64' 
W. long.;
    (204) 3701.68' N. lat., 12237.28' 
W. long.;
    (205) 3659.70' N. lat., 12233.71' 
W. long.;
    (206) 3658.00' N. lat., 12227.80' 
W. long.;
    (207) 3700.25' N. lat., 12224.85' 
W. long.;
    (208) 3657.50' N. lat., 12224.98' 
W. long.;
    (209) 3658.38' N. lat., 12221.85' 
W. long.;
    (210) 3655.85' N. lat., 12221.95' 
W. long.;
    (211) 3652.02' N. lat., 12212.10' 
W. long.;
    (212) 3647.63' N. lat., 12207.37' 
W. long.;
    (213) 3647.26' N. lat., 12203.22' 
W. long.;
    (214) 3650.34' N. lat., 12158.40' 
W. long.;
    (215) 3648.83' N. lat., 12159.14' 
W. long.;
    (216) 3644.81' N. lat., 12158.28' 
W. long.;
    (217) 3639.00' N. lat., 12201.71' 
W. long.;
    (218) 3629.60' N. lat., 12200.49' 
W. long.;
    (219) 3623.43' N. lat., 12159.76' 
W. long.;
    (220) 3618.90' N. lat., 12205.32' 
W. long.;
    (221) 3615.38' N. lat., 12201.40' 
W. long.;
    (222) 3613.79' N. lat., 12158.12' 
W. long.;
    (223) 3610.12' N. lat., 12143.33' 
W. long.;
    (224) 3602.57' N. lat., 12137.02' 
W. long.;
    (225) 3601.01' N. lat., 12136.95' 
W. long.;
    (226) 3557.74' N. lat., 12133.45' 
W. long.;
    (227) 3551.32' N. lat., 12130.08' 
W. long.;
    (228) 3545.84' N. lat., 12128.84' 
W. long.;
    (229) 3538.94' N. lat., 12123.16' 
W. long.;
    (230) 3526.00' N. lat., 12108.00' 
W. long.;
    (231) 3507.42' N. lat., 12057.08' 
W. long.;
    (232) 3442.76' N. lat., 12055.09' 
W. long.;
    (233) 3437.75' N. lat., 12051.96' 
W. long.;
    (234) 3429.29' N. lat., 12044.19' 
W. long.;
    (235) 3427.00' N. lat., 12040.42' 
W. long.;
    (236) 3421.89' N. lat., 12031.36' 
W. long.;
    (237) 3420.79' N. lat., 12021.58' 
W. long.;
    (238) 3423.97' N. lat., 12015.25' 
W. long.;
    (239) 3422.11' N. lat., 11956.63' 
W. long.;
    (240) 3419.00' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (241) 3415.00' N. lat., 11948.00' 
W. long.;
    (242) 3408.00' N. lat., 11937.00' 
W. long.;
    (243) 3408.39' N. lat., 11954.78' 
W. long.;
    (244) 3407.10' N. lat., 12010.37' 
W. long.;
    (245) 3410.08' N. lat., 12022.98' 
W. long.;
    (246) 3413.16' N. lat., 12029.40' 
W. long.;
    (247) 3409.41' N. lat., 12037.75' 
W. long.;
    (248) 3403.15' N. lat., 12034.71' 
W. long.;
    (249) 3357.09' N. lat., 12027.76' 
W. long.;
    (250) 3351.00' N. lat., 12009.00' 
W. long.;
    (251) 3338.16' N. lat., 11959.23' 
W. long.;
    (252) 3337.04' N. lat., 11950.17' 
W. long.;
    (253) 3342.28' N. lat., 11948.85' 
W. long.;
    (254) 3353.96' N. lat., 11953.77' 
W. long.;
    (255) 3359.94' N. lat., 11919.57' 
W. long.;
    (256) 3403.12' N. lat., 11915.51' 
W. long.;
    (257) 3401.97' N. lat., 11907.28' 
W. long.;
    (258) 3403.60' N. lat., 11904.71' 
W. long.;
    (259) 3359.30' N. lat., 11903.73' 
W. long.;
    (260) 3358.87' N. lat., 11859.37' 
W. long.;
    (261) 3358.08' N. lat., 11841.14' 
W. long.;
    (262) 3350.93' N. lat., 11837.65' 
W. long.;
    (263) 3339.54' N. lat., 11818.70' 
W. long.;
    (264) 3335.42' N. lat., 11817.14' 
W. long.;
    (265) 3332.15' N. lat., 11810.84' 
W. long.;
    (266) 3333.71' N. lat., 11753.72' 
W. long.;
    (267) 3331.17' N. lat., 11749.11' 
W. long.;
    (268) 3316.53' N. lat., 11736.13' 
W. long.;
    (269) 3306.77' N. lat., 11722.92' 
W. long.;
    (270) 3258.94' N. lat., 11720.05' 
W. long.;
    (271) 3255.83' N. lat., 11720.15' 
W. long.;
    (272) 3246.29' N. lat., 11723.89' 
W. long.;
    (273) 3242.00' N. lat., 11722.16' 
W. long.;
    (274) 3239.47' N. lat., 11727.78' 
W. long.; and
    (275) 3234.83' N. lat., 11724.69' 
W. long.

    (A) The 150-fm (274-m) depth contour used around San Clemente 
Island off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3247.95' N. lat., 11819.31' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3249.79' N. lat., 11820.82' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3255.99' N. lat., 11828.80' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3303.00' N. lat., 11834.00' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3305.00' N. lat., 11838.00' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3303.21' N. lat., 11839.85' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3301.93' N. lat., 11839.85' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3254.69' N. lat., 11835.45' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3253.28' N. lat., 11833.58' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3248.26' N. lat., 11831.62' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3243.03' N. lat., 11824.21' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3247.15' N. lat., 11821.53' 
W. long.; and
    (13) 3247.95' N. lat., 11819.31' 
W. long.

    (B) The 150-fm (274-m) depth contour used around Santa Catalina 
Island off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3317.24' N. lat., 11812.94' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3323.60' N. lat., 11818.79' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3326.00' N. lat., 11822.00' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3327.57' N. lat., 11827.69' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3329.78' N. lat., 11831.01' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3330.46' N. lat., 11836.52' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3328.65' N. lat., 11841.07' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3323.23' N. lat., 11830.69' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3320.97' N. lat., 11833.29' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3319.81' N. lat., 11832.24' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3318.00' N. lat., 11828.00' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3315.62' N. lat., 11814.74' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3316.00' N. lat., 11813.00' 
W. long.; and
    (14) 3317.24' N. lat., 11812.94' 
W. long.

    (C) The 150-fm (274-m) depth contour used around Lasuen Knoll off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3324.99' N. lat., 11759.32' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3323.66' N. lat., 11758.28' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3323.21' N. lat., 11759.55' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3324.74' N. lat., 11800.61' W. 
long.; and
    (5) 3324.99' N. lat., 11759.32' W. 
long.

    (x) The 180-fm (329-m) depth contour used between the U.S. border 
with Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight 
lines connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4814.82' N. lat., 12541.61' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4812.86' N. lat., 12537.95' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4811.28' N. lat., 12539.67' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4810.13' N. lat., 12542.62' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4808.86' N. lat., 12541.92' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4808.15' N. lat., 12544.95' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4807.18' N. lat., 12545.67' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4805.79' N. lat., 12544.64' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4806.04' N. lat., 12541.84' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4804.26' N. lat., 12540.09' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4804.18' N. lat., 12536.94' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4803.02' N. lat., 12536.24' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4801.75' N. lat., 12537.42' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4801.39' N. lat., 12539.42' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4757.08' N. lat., 12536.51' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4755.20' N. lat., 12536.62' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4754.33' N. lat., 12534.98' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4754.73' N. lat., 12531.95' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11101]]

    (19) 4756.39' N. lat., 12530.22' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4755.86' N. lat., 12528.54' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4758.07' N. lat., 12525.72' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4800.81' N. lat., 12524.39' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4801.81' N. lat., 12523.76' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4802.16' N. lat., 12522.71' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4803.46' N. lat., 12522.01' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4804.21' N. lat., 12520.40' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4803.15' N. lat., 12519.50' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4801.92' N. lat., 12518.69' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4800.85' N. lat., 12520.02' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4800.12' N. lat., 12520.04' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4758.18' N. lat., 12518.78' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4758.24' N. lat., 12517.26' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4752.47' N. lat., 12515.30' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4752.13' N. lat., 12512.95' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4750.60' N. lat., 12510.65' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4749.39' N. lat., 12510.59' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4748.74' N. lat., 12506.07' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4747.03' N. lat., 12506.95' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4747.46' N. lat., 12505.20' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4745.88' N. lat., 12504.50' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4744.51' N. lat., 12506.64' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4742.22' N. lat., 12504.86' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4738.49' N. lat., 12506.32' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4734.93' N. lat., 12504.34' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4730.85' N. lat., 12457.42' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4728.80' N. lat., 12456.51' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4729.25' N. lat., 12453.92' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4728.29' N. lat., 12451.32' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4724.04' N. lat., 12447.38' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4718.24' N. lat., 12445.97' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4719.36' N. lat., 12450.96' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4718.07' N. lat., 12453.38' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4717.73' N. lat., 12452.83' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4717.77' N. lat., 12451.56' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4716.84' N. lat., 12450.94' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4716.01' N. lat., 12453.36' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4714.32' N. lat., 12452.73' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4711.97' N. lat., 12456.81' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4712.93' N. lat., 12458.47' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4709.43' N. lat., 12457.99' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4709.36' N. lat., 12459.29' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4705.88' N. lat., 12459.06' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4703.64' N. lat., 12456.07' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4701.00' N. lat., 12459.69' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4658.72' N. lat., 12459.17' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4658.30' N. lat., 12500.60' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4655.61' N. lat., 12501.19' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4656.96' N. lat., 12458.85' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4655.91' N. lat., 12454.98' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4654.55' N. lat., 12454.21' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4656.80' N. lat., 12450.55' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4654.87' N. lat., 12449.59' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4654.63' N. lat., 12453.48' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4652.33' N. lat., 12454.75' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4645.12' N. lat., 12451.82' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4639.20' N. lat., 12447.02' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4633.45' N. lat., 12436.61' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4633.37' N. lat., 12430.21' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4631.67' N. lat., 12431.41' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4627.87' N. lat., 12432.04' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4621.01' N. lat., 12437.63' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4618.58' N. lat., 12438.92' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4616.00' N. lat., 12436.17' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4615.97' N. lat., 12423.57' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4612.85' N. lat., 12435.52' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4612.27' N. lat., 12438.69' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4608.71' N. lat., 12441.27' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4605.79' N. lat., 12442.12' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4602.84' N. lat., 12448.05' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4602.41' N. lat., 12448.15' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4558.96' N. lat., 12443.98' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4547.05' N. lat., 12443.25' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4544.00' N. lat., 12445.37' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4534.97' N. lat., 12431.95' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4513.01' N. lat., 12421.71' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4509.59' N. lat., 12422.78' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4500.22' N. lat., 12428.31' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4453.53' N. lat., 12432.98' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4440.25' N. lat., 12446.34' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4428.83' N. lat., 12447.09' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4422.97' N. lat., 12449.38' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4413.07' N. lat., 12458.34' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4357.99' N. lat., 12457.84' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4351.43' N. lat., 12452.02' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4350.72' N. lat., 12439.23' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4339.04' N. lat., 12437.82' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4327.76' N. lat., 12439.76' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4320.22' N. lat., 12442.92' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4313.07' N. lat., 12446.03' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4310.43' N. lat., 12450.27' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4303.47' N. lat., 12452.80' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4256.93' N. lat., 12453.95' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4254.74' N. lat., 12454.19' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4249.43' N. lat., 12452.03' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4247.68' N. lat., 12447.72' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4246.17' N. lat., 12444.05' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4241.67' N. lat., 12444.36' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4238.79' N. lat., 12442.87' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4232.39' N. lat., 12445.38' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4232.07' N. lat., 12443.44' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4230.98' N. lat., 12443.84' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4228.37' N. lat., 12448.91' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4220.07' N. lat., 12441.59' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4215.05' N. lat., 12438.07' 
W. long.;
    (125) 4207.37' N. lat., 12437.25' 
W. long.;
    (126) 4204.93' N. lat., 12436.79' 
W. long.;
    (127) 4200.00' N. lat., 12436.26' 
W. long.;
    (128) 4200.00' N. lat., 12436.33' 
W. long.;
    (129) 4147.60' N. lat., 12429.75' 
W. long.;
    (130) 4122.07' N. lat., 12429.55' 
W. long.;
    (131) 4113.58' N. lat., 12424.17' 
W. long.;
    (132) 4106.51' N. lat., 12423.07' 
W. long.;
    (133) 4055.20' N. lat., 12427.46' 
W. long.;
    (134) 4049.76' N. lat., 12427.17' 
W. long.;
    (135) 4045.79' N. lat., 12430.37' 
W. long.;
    (136) 4040.31' N. lat., 12432.47' 
W. long.;
    (137) 4037.42' N. lat., 12437.20' 
W. long.;
    (138) 4036.03' N. lat., 12439.97' 
W. long.;
    (139) 4031.48' N. lat., 12440.95' 
W. long.;
    (140) 4029.76' N. lat., 12438.13' 
W. long.;
    (141) 4024.81' N. lat., 12435.82' 
W. long.;
    (142) 4022.00' N. lat., 12430.01' 
W. long.;
    (143) 4016.84' N. lat., 12429.87' 
W. long.;
    (144) 4017.06' N. lat., 12435.51' 
W. long.;
    (145) 4016.41' N. lat., 12439.10' 
W. long.;
    (146) 4010.00' N. lat., 12423.56' 
W. long.;
    (147) 4006.67' N. lat., 12419.08' 
W. long.;
    (148) 4008.10' N. lat., 12416.71' 
W. long.;
    (149) 4005.90' N. lat., 12417.77' 
W. long.;
    (150) 4002.80' N. lat., 12416.28' 
W. long.;
    (151) 4001.98' N. lat., 12412.99' 
W. long.;
    (152) 4001.53' N. lat., 12409.82' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3958.28' N. lat., 12412.93' 
W. long.;
    (154) 3957.06' N. lat., 12412.03' 
W. long.;
    (155) 3956.31' N. lat., 12408.98' 
W. long.;
    (156) 3955.20' N. lat., 12407.98' 
W. long.;
    (157) 3952.57' N. lat., 12409.04' 
W. long.;
    (158) 3942.78' N. lat., 12402.11' 
W. long.;
    (159) 3934.76' N. lat., 12358.51' 
W. long.;
    (160) 3934.22' N. lat., 12356.82' 
W. long.;
    (161) 3932.98' N. lat., 12356.43' 
W. long.;
    (162) 3932.14' N. lat., 12358.83' 
W. long.;
    (163) 3907.79' N. lat., 12358.72' 
W. long.;
    (164) 3900.99' N. lat., 12357.56' 
W. long.;
    (165) 3900.05' N. lat., 12356.83' 
W. long.;
    (166) 3856.28' N. lat., 12357.53' 
W. long.;
    (167) 3856.01' N. lat., 12358.72' 
W. long.;
    (168) 3852.41' N. lat., 12356.38' 
W. long.;
    (169) 3846.81' N. lat., 12351.46' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3845.56' N. lat., 12351.32' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3843.24' N. lat., 12349.91' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3841.42' N. lat., 12347.22' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3840.97' N. lat., 12347.80' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3838.58' N. lat., 12346.07' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3837.38' N. lat., 12343.80' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3833.86' N. lat., 12341.51' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3829.45' N. lat., 12338.42' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3828.20' N. lat., 12338.17' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3824.09' N. lat., 12335.26' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3816.72' N. lat., 12331.42' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3815.32' N. lat., 12329.33' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3814.45' N. lat., 12326.15' 
W. long.;
    (183) 3810.26' N. lat., 12325.43' 
W. long.;
    (184) 3812.61' N. lat., 12328.08' 
W. long.;
    (185) 3811.98' N. lat., 12329.35' 
W. long.;
    (186) 3808.23' N. lat., 12328.04' 
W. long.;
    (187) 3806.39' N. lat., 12330.59' 
W. long.;
    (188) 3804.25' N. lat., 12331.81' 
W. long.;
    (189) 3802.08' N. lat., 12331.27' 
W. long.;
    (190) 3800.17' N. lat., 12329.43' 
W. long.;
    (191) 3800.00' N. lat., 12328.55' 
W. long.;
    (192) 3758.24' N. lat., 12326.91' 
W. long.;
    (193) 3755.32' N. lat., 12327.19' 
W. long.;
    (194) 3751.52' N. lat., 12325.01' 
W. long.;
    (195) 3744.21' N. lat., 12311.38' 
W. long.;
    (196) 3736.27' N. lat., 12301.86' 
W. long.;
    (197) 3714.29' N. lat., 12252.99' 
W. long.;
    (198) 3700.86' N. lat., 12237.55' 
W. long.;
    (199) 3659.71' N. lat., 12233.73' 
W. long.;
    (200) 3657.98' N. lat., 12227.80' 
W. long.;
    (201) 3659.83' N. lat., 12225.17' 
W. long.;
    (202) 3657.21' N. lat., 12225.17' 
W. long.;
    (203) 3657.79' N. lat., 12222.28' 
W. long.;
    (204) 3655.86' N. lat., 12221.99' 
W. long.;
    (205) 3652.06' N. lat., 12212.12' 
W. long.;
    (206) 3647.63' N. lat., 12207.40' 
W. long.;
    (207) 3647.26' N. lat., 12203.23' 
W. long.;
    (208) 3649.53' N. lat., 12159.35' 
W. long.;
    (209) 3644.81' N. lat., 12158.29' 
W. long.;
    (210) 3638.95' N. lat., 12202.02' 
W. long.;
    (211) 3623.43' N. lat., 12159.76' 
W. long.;
    (212) 3619.66' N. lat., 12206.25' 
W. long.;
    (213) 3614.78' N. lat., 12201.52' 
W. long.;
    (214) 3613.64' N. lat., 12157.83' 
W. long.;
    (215) 3609.99' N. lat., 12143.48' 
W. long.;
    (216) 3557.09' N. lat., 12134.16' 
W. long.;
    (217) 3552.71' N. lat., 12132.32' 
W. long.;
    (218) 3551.23' N. lat., 12130.54' 
W. long.;
    (219) 3546.07' N. lat., 12129.75' 
W. long.;
    (220) 3534.08' N. lat., 12119.83' 
W. long.;
    (221) 3531.41' N. lat., 12114.80' 
W. long.;
    (222) 3515.42' N. lat., 12103.47' 
W. long.;
    (223) 3507.70' N. lat., 12059.31' 
W. long.;
    (224) 3457.27' N. lat., 12056.93' 
W. long.;
    (225) 3444.27' N. lat., 12057.65' 
W. long.;
    (226) 3432.75' N. lat., 12050.08' 
W. long.;
    (227) 3427.00' N. lat., 12041.50' 
W. long.;
    (228) 3420.00' N. lat., 12030.99' 
W. long.;
    (229) 3419.15' N. lat., 12019.78' 
W. long.;
    (230) 3423.24' N. lat., 12014.17' 
W. long.;
    (231) 3421.35' N. lat., 11954.89' 
W. long.;
    (232) 3409.79' N. lat., 11944.51' 
W. long.;
    (233) 3407.34' N. lat., 12006.71' 
W. long.;
    (234) 3409.74' N. lat., 12019.78' 
W. long.;
    (235) 3413.95' N. lat., 12029.78' 
W. long.;
    (236) 3409.41' N. lat., 12037.75' 
W. long.;
    (237) 3403.39' N. lat., 12035.26' 
W. long.;
    (238) 3356.82' N. lat., 12028.30' 
W. long.;
    (239) 3350.71' N. lat., 12009.24' 
W. long.;
    (240) 3338.21' N. lat., 11959.90' 
W. long.;
    (241) 3335.35' N. lat., 11951.95' 
W. long.;
    (242) 3335.99' N. lat., 11949.13' 
W. long.;
    (243) 3342.74' N. lat., 11947.80' 
W. long.;
    (244) 3353.65' N. lat., 11953.29' 
W. long.;
    (245) 3357.85' N. lat., 11931.05' 
W. long.;
    (246) 3356.78' N. lat., 11927.44' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11102]]

    (247) 3358.03' N. lat., 11927.82' 
W. long.;
    (248) 3359.31' N. lat., 11920.02' 
W. long.;
    (249) 3402.91' N. lat., 11915.38' 
W. long.;
    (250) 3359.04' N. lat., 11903.02' 
W. long.;
    (251) 3357.88' N. lat., 11841.69' 
W. long.;
    (252) 3350.89' N. lat., 11837.78' 
W. long.;
    (253) 3339.54' N. lat., 11818.70' 
W. long.;
    (254) 3335.42' N. lat., 11817.15' 
W. long.;
    (255) 3331.26' N. lat., 11810.84' 
W. long.;
    (256) 3332.71' N. lat., 11752.05' 
W. long.;
    (257) 3258.94' N. lat., 11720.05' 
W. long.;
    (258) 3246.45' N. lat., 11724.37' 
W. long.;
    (259) 3242.25' N. lat., 11722.87' 
W. long.;
    (260) 3239.50' N. lat., 11727.80' 
W. long.; and
    (261) 3234.83' N. lat., 11724.67' 
W. long.

    (A) The 180-fm (329-m) depth contour used around San Clemente 
Island off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3301.90' N. lat., 11840.17' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3303.23' N. lat., 11840.05' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3305.07' N. lat., 11839.01' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3305.00' N. lat., 11838.01' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3303.00' N. lat., 11834.00' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3255.92' N. lat., 11828.39' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3249.78' N. lat., 11820.82' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3247.32' N. lat., 11818.30' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3247.46' N. lat., 11820.29' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3246.21' N. lat., 11821.96' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3242.25' N. lat., 11824.07' 
W. long.;
    (12) 3247.73' N. lat., 11831.74' 
W. long.;
    (13) 3253.16' N. lat., 11833.85' 
W. long.;
    (14) 3254.51' N. lat., 11835.56' 
W. long.; and
    (15) 3301.90' N. lat., 11840.17' 
W. long.

    (B) The 180-fm (329-m) depth contour used around Santa Catalina 
Island off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3330.00' N. lat., 11844.18' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3330.65' N. lat., 11835.07' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3329.88' N. lat., 11830.89' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3327.54' N. lat., 11826.91' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3326.11' N. lat., 11821.97' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3324.20' N. lat., 11819.05' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3314.58' N. lat., 11810.35' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3317.91' N. lat., 11828.20' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3319.14' N. lat., 11831.34' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3320.79' N. lat., 11833.75' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3323.14' N. lat., 11830.80' 
W. long.; and
    (12) 3330.00' N. lat., 11844.18' 
W. long.

    (C) The 180-fm (329-m) depth contour used around Lasuen Knoll off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3325.12' N. lat., 11801.09' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3325.41' N. lat., 11759.36' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3323.49' N. lat., 11757.47' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3323.02' N. lat., 11759.58' W. 
long.; and
    (5) 3325.12' N. lat., 11801.09' W. 
long.

    (D) The 180-fm (329-m) depth contour used around San Diego Rise off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3249.98' N. lat., 11750.19' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3244.10' N. lat., 11745.34' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3242.01' N. lat., 11746.01' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3244.42' N. lat., 11748.69' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3249.86' N. lat., 11750.50' W. 
long.; and
    (6) 3249.98' N. lat., 11750.19' W. 
long.

    (xi) The 200-fm (366-m) depth contour between the U.S. border with 
Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4814.75' N. lat., 12541.73' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4812.85' N. lat., 12538.06' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4811.52' N. lat., 12539.45' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4810.14' N. lat., 12542.81' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4808.96' N. lat., 12542.08' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4808.33' N. lat., 12544.91' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4807.19' N. lat., 12545.87' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4805.66' N. lat., 12544.79' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4805.91' N. lat., 12542.16' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4804.11' N. lat., 12540.17' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4804.07' N. lat., 12536.96' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4803.05' N. lat., 12536.38' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4801.98' N. lat., 12537.41' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4801.46' N. lat., 12539.61' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4757.28' N. lat., 12536.87' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4755.11' N. lat., 12536.92' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4754.09' N. lat., 12534.98' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4754.50' N. lat., 12532.01' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4756.07' N. lat., 12530.17' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4755.65' N. lat., 12528.46' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4757.88' N. lat., 12525.61' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4801.63' N. lat., 12523.75' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4802.21' N. lat., 12522.43' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4803.60' N. lat., 12521.84' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4803.98' N. lat., 12520.65' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4803.26' N. lat., 12519.76' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4801.49' N. lat., 12518.80' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4801.03' N. lat., 12520.12' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4800.04' N. lat., 12520.26' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4758.10' N. lat., 12518.91' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4758.17' N. lat., 12517.50' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4752.28' N. lat., 12516.06' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4751.92' N. lat., 12513.89' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4749.20' N. lat., 12510.67' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4748.69' N. lat., 12506.50' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4746.54' N. lat., 12507.68' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4747.24' N. lat., 12505.38' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4745.95' N. lat., 12504.61' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4744.58' N. lat., 12507.12' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4742.24' N. lat., 12505.15' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4738.54' N. lat., 12506.76' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4734.86' N. lat., 12504.67' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4730.75' N. lat., 12457.52' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4728.51' N. lat., 12456.69' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4729.15' N. lat., 12454.10' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4728.43' N. lat., 12451.58' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4724.13' N. lat., 12447.51' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4718.31' N. lat., 12446.17' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4719.57' N. lat., 12451.01' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4718.12' N. lat., 12453.66' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4717.59' N. lat., 12452.94' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4717.71' N. lat., 12451.63' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4716.90' N. lat., 12451.23' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4716.10' N. lat., 12453.67' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4714.24' N. lat., 12453.02' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4712.16' N. lat., 12456.77' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4713.35' N. lat., 12458.70' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4709.53' N. lat., 12458.32' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4709.54' N. lat., 12459.50' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4705.87' N. lat., 12459.29' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4703.65' N. lat., 12456.26' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4700.91' N. lat., 12459.73' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4658.74' N. lat., 12459.40' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4658.55' N. lat., 12500.70' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4655.57' N. lat., 12501.61' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4655.77' N. lat., 12455.04' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4653.16' N. lat., 12453.69' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4652.39' N. lat., 12455.24' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4644.88' N. lat., 12451.97' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4633.28' N. lat., 12436.96' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4633.20' N. lat., 12430.64' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4627.85' N. lat., 12431.95' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4618.16' N. lat., 12439.39' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4616.48' N. lat., 12427.41' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4616.73' N. lat., 12423.20' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4616.00' N. lat., 12424.88' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4614.22' N. lat., 12426.28' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4611.53' N. lat., 12439.58' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4608.77' N. lat., 12441.71' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4605.86' N. lat., 12442.27' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4603.85' N. lat., 12448.20' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4602.34' N. lat., 12448.51' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4558.99' N. lat., 12444.42' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4546.90' N. lat., 12443.50' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4544.98' N. lat., 12444.93' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4543.47' N. lat., 12444.93' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4534.88' N. lat., 12432.58' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4513.04' N. lat., 12421.92' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4500.17' N. lat., 12429.28' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4455.41' N. lat., 12431.84' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4448.25' N. lat., 12440.62' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4441.34' N. lat., 12449.20' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4423.30' N. lat., 12450.17' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4413.19' N. lat., 12458.66' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4357.89' N. lat., 12458.13' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4350.59' N. lat., 12452.80' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4350.10' N. lat., 12440.27' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4339.06' N. lat., 12438.55' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4328.85' N. lat., 12439.99' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4320.22' N. lat., 12443.05' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4313.29' N. lat., 12447.00' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4313.14' N. lat., 12452.61' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4304.26' N. lat., 12453.05' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4253.93' N. lat., 12454.60' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4249.52' N. lat., 12453.16' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4247.46' N. lat., 12450.24' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4247.57' N. lat., 12448.12' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4246.19' N. lat., 12444.52' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4241.75' N. lat., 12444.69' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4238.81' N. lat., 12443.09' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4231.83' N. lat., 12446.23' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4232.08' N. lat., 12443.58' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4230.96' N. lat., 12443.84' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4228.41' N. lat., 12449.17' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4224.80' N. lat., 12445.93' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4219.71' N. lat., 12441.60' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4215.12' N. lat., 12438.34' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4212.35' N. lat., 12438.09' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4204.38' N. lat., 12436.83' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4200.00' N. lat., 12436.80' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4159.98' N. lat., 12436.70' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4147.85' N. lat., 12430.41' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4143.34' N. lat., 12429.89' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4123.47' N. lat., 12430.29' 
W. long.;
    (125) 4121.30' N. lat., 12429.36' 
W. long.;
    (126) 4113.53' N. lat., 12424.41' 
W. long.;
    (127) 4106.72' N. lat., 12423.30' 
W. long.;
    (128) 4054.67' N. lat., 12428.13' 
W. long.;
    (129) 4049.02' N. lat., 12428.52' 
W. long.;
    (130) 4040.45' N. lat., 12432.74' 
W. long.;
    (131) 4037.11' N. lat., 12438.03' 
W. long.;
    (132) 4034.22' N. lat., 12441.13' 
W. long.;
    (133) 4032.90' N. lat., 12441.83' 
W. long.;
    (134) 4031.30' N. lat., 12440.97' 
W. long.;
    (135) 4029.63' N. lat., 12438.04' 
W. long.;
    (136) 4024.99' N. lat., 12436.37' 
W. long.;
    (137) 4022.23' N. lat., 12431.78' 
W. long.;
    (138) 4016.95' N. lat., 12431.93' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11103]]

    (139) 4017.59' N. lat., 12445.23' 
W. long.;
    (140) 4013.25' N. lat., 12432.36' 
W. long.;
    (141) 4010.16' N. lat., 12424.57' 
W. long.;
    (142) 4006.43' N. lat., 12419.19' 
W. long.;
    (143) 4007.07' N. lat., 12417.75' 
W. long.;
    (144) 4005.53' N. lat., 12418.02' 
W. long.;
    (145) 4004.71' N. lat., 12418.10' 
W. long.;
    (146) 4002.35' N. lat., 12416.57' 
W. long.;
    (147) 4001.53' N. lat., 12409.82' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3958.28' N. lat., 12413.51' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3956.60' N. lat., 12412.02' 
W. long.;
    (150) 3955.20' N. lat., 12407.96' 
W. long.;
    (151) 3952.55' N. lat., 12409.40' 
W. long.;
    (152) 3942.68' N. lat., 12402.52' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3935.96' N. lat., 12359.49' 
W. long.;
    (154) 3934.62' N. lat., 12359.59' 
W. long.;
    (155) 3933.78' N. lat., 12356.82' 
W. long.;
    (156) 3933.02' N. lat., 12357.07' 
W. long.;
    (157) 3932.21' N. lat., 12359.13' 
W. long.;
    (158) 3907.85' N. lat., 12359.07' 
W. long.;
    (159) 3900.90' N. lat., 12357.88' 
W. long.;
    (160) 3859.95' N. lat., 12356.99' 
W. long.;
    (161) 3856.82' N. lat., 12357.74' 
W. long.;
    (162) 3856.40' N. lat., 12359.41' 
W. long.;
    (163) 3850.23' N. lat., 12355.48' 
W. long.;
    (164) 3846.77' N. lat., 12351.49' 
W. long.;
    (165) 3845.28' N. lat., 12351.56' 
W. long.;
    (166) 3842.76' N. lat., 12349.76' 
W. long.;
    (167) 3841.54' N. lat., 12347.76' 
W. long.;
    (168) 3840.98' N. lat., 12348.07' 
W. long.;
    (169) 3838.03' N. lat., 12345.78' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3837.20' N. lat., 12344.01' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3833.44' N. lat., 12341.75' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3829.45' N. lat., 12338.42' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3827.89' N. lat., 12338.38' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3823.68' N. lat., 12335.40' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3819.63' N. lat., 12333.98' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3816.23' N. lat., 12331.83' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3814.79' N. lat., 12329.91' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3814.12' N. lat., 12326.29' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3810.85' N. lat., 12325.77' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3813.15' N. lat., 12328.18' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3812.28' N. lat., 12329.81' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3810.19' N. lat., 12329.04' 
W. long.;
    (183) 3807.94' N. lat., 12328.45' 
W. long.;
    (184) 3806.51' N. lat., 12330.89' 
W. long.;
    (185) 3804.21' N. lat., 12331.96' 
W. long.;
    (186) 3802.07' N. lat., 12331.30' 
W. long.;
    (187) 3800.00' N. lat., 12329.55' 
W. long.;
    (188) 3758.13' N. lat., 12327.21' 
W. long.;
    (189) 3755.01' N. lat., 12327.46' 
W. long.;
    (190) 3751.40' N. lat., 12325.18' 
W. long.;
    (191) 3743.97' N. lat., 12311.49' 
W. long.;
    (192) 3736.00' N. lat., 12302.25' 
W. long.;
    (193) 3713.65' N. lat., 12254.18' 
W. long.;
    (194) 3700.66' N. lat., 12237.84' 
W. long.;
    (195) 3657.40' N. lat., 12228.25' 
W. long.;
    (196) 3659.25' N. lat., 12225.54' 
W. long.;
    (197) 3656.88' N. lat., 12225.42' 
W. long.;
    (198) 3657.40' N. lat., 12222.62' 
W. long.;
    (199) 3655.43' N. lat., 12222.43' 
W. long.;
    (200) 3652.29' N. lat., 12213.18' 
W. long.;
    (201) 3647.12' N. lat., 12207.56' 
W. long.;
    (202) 3647.10' N. lat., 12202.11' 
W. long.;
    (203) 3643.76' N. lat., 12159.11' 
W. long.;
    (204) 3638.85' N. lat., 12202.20' 
W. long.;
    (205) 3623.41' N. lat., 12200.11' 
W. long.;
    (206) 3619.68' N. lat., 12206.93' 
W. long.;
    (207) 3614.75' N. lat., 12201.51' 
W. long.;
    (208) 3609.74' N. lat., 12145.00' 
W. long.;
    (209) 3606.67' N. lat., 12141.06' 
W. long.;
    (210) 3557.07' N. lat., 12134.32' 
W. long.;
    (211) 3552.31' N. lat., 12132.45' 
W. long.;
    (212) 3551.21' N. lat., 12130.91' 
W. long.;
    (213) 3546.32' N. lat., 12130.30' 
W. long.;
    (214) 3533.74' N. lat., 12120.10' 
W. long.;
    (215) 3531.37' N. lat., 12115.23' 
W. long.;
    (216) 3523.32' N. lat., 12111.44' 
W. long.;
    (217) 3515.28' N. lat., 12104.45' 
W. long.;
    (218) 3507.08' N. lat., 12100.30' 
W. long.;
    (219) 3457.46' N. lat., 12058.23' 
W. long.;
    (220) 3444.25' N. lat., 12058.29' 
W. long.;
    (221) 3432.30' N. lat., 12050.22' 
W. long.;
    (222) 3427.00' N. lat., 12042.55' 
W. long.;
    (223) 3419.08' N. lat., 12031.21' 
W. long.;
    (224) 3417.72' N. lat., 12019.26' 
W. long.;
    (225) 3422.45' N. lat., 12012.81' 
W. long.;
    (226) 3421.36' N. lat., 11954.88' 
W. long.;
    (227) 3409.95' N. lat., 11946.18' 
W. long.;
    (228) 3409.08' N. lat., 11957.53' 
W. long.;
    (229) 3407.53' N. lat., 12006.35' 
W. long.;
    (230) 3410.54' N. lat., 12019.07' 
W. long.;
    (231) 3414.68' N. lat., 12029.48' 
W. long.;
    (232) 3409.51' N. lat., 12038.32' 
W. long.;
    (233) 3403.06' N. lat., 12035.54' 
W. long.;
    (234) 3356.39' N. lat., 12028.47' 
W. long.;
    (235) 3350.25' N. lat., 12009.43' 
W. long.;
    (236) 3337.96' N. lat., 12000.08' 
W. long.;
    (237) 3334.52' N. lat., 11951.84' 
W. long.;
    (238) 3335.51' N. lat., 11948.49' 
W. long.;
    (239) 3342.76' N. lat., 11947.77' 
W. long.;
    (240) 3353.62' N. lat., 11953.28' 
W. long.;
    (241) 3357.61' N. lat., 11931.26' 
W. long.;
    (242) 3356.34' N. lat., 11926.40' 
W. long.;
    (243) 3357.79' N. lat., 11926.85' 
W. long.;
    (244) 3358.88' N. lat., 11920.06' 
W. long.;
    (245) 3402.65' N. lat., 11915.11' 
W. long.;
    (246) 3359.02' N. lat., 11902.99' 
W. long.;
    (247) 3357.61' N. lat., 11842.07' 
W. long.;
    (248) 3350.76' N. lat., 11837.98' 
W. long.;
    (249) 3338.41' N. lat., 11817.03' 
W. long.;
    (250) 3337.14' N. lat., 11818.39' 
W. long.;
    (251) 3335.51' N. lat., 11818.03' 
W. long.;
    (252) 3330.68' N. lat., 11810.35' 
W. long.;
    (253) 3332.49' N. lat., 11751.85' 
W. long.;
    (254) 3258.87' N. lat., 11720.36' 
W. long.; and
    (255) 3235.53' N. lat., 11729.67' 
W. long.

    (A) The 200-fm (366-m) depth contour used around San Clemente 
Island is defined by straight lines connecting all of the following 
points in the order stated:

    (1) 3305.89' N. lat., 11839.45' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3302.68' N. lat., 11833.14' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3257.32' N. lat., 11829.12' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3247.51' N. lat., 11817.88' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3241.22' N. lat., 11823.78' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3246.83' N. lat., 11832.10' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3301.61' N. lat., 11840.64' W. 
long.; and
    (8) 335.89' N. lat., 11839.45' W. 
long.

    (B) The 200-fm (66-m) depth contour used around Santa Catalina 
Island off the State of California is defined by straight lines 
connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3332.06' N. lat., 11844.52' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3331.36' N. lat., 11835.28' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3330.10' N. lat., 11830.82' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3327.91' N. lat., 11826.83' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3326.27' N. lat., 11821.35' W. 
long.;
    (6) 3321.34' N. lat., 11815.24' W. 
long.;
    (7) 3313.66' N. lat., 11808.98' W. 
long.;
    (8) 3317.15' N. lat., 11828.35' W. 
long.;
    (9) 3320.94' N. lat., 11834.34' W. 
long.;
    (10) 3323.32' N. lat., 11832.60' 
W. long.;
    (11) 3328.68' N. lat., 11844.93' 
W. long.; and
    (12) 3332.06' N. lat., 11844.52' 
W. long.

    (C) The 200-fm (366-m) depth contour used around Lasuen Knoll off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3325.91' N. lat., 11759.44' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3323.37' N. lat., 11756.97' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3322.82' N. lat., 11759.50' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3325.24' N. lat., 11801.68' W. 
long.; and
    (5) 3325.91' N. lat., 11759.44' W. 
long.

    (D) The 200-fm (366-m) depth contour used around San Diego Rise off 
the State of California is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 3250.30' N. lat., 11750.18' W. 
long.;
    (2) 3244.01' N. lat., 11744.46' W. 
long.;
    (3) 3241.34' N. lat., 11745.86' W. 
long.;
    (4) 3245.45' N. lat., 11750.09' W. 
long.;
    (5) 3250.10' N. lat., 11750.76' W. 
long.; and
    (6) 3250.30' N. lat., 11750.18' W. 
long.

    (xii) The 200-fm (366-m) depth contour used between the U.S. border 
with Canada and the U.S. border with Mexico, modified to allow fishing 
in petrale sole areas, is defined by straight lines connecting all of 
the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4814.75' N. lat., 12541.73' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4812.85' N. lat., 12538.06' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4811.52' N. lat., 12539.45' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4810.14' N. lat., 12542.81' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4808.96' N. lat., 12542.08' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4808.33' N. lat., 12544.91' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4807.19' N. lat., 12545.87' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4805.66' N. lat., 12544.79' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4805.91' N. lat., 12542.16' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4804.11' N. lat., 12540.17' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4804.07' N. lat., 12536.96' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4803.05' N. lat., 12536.38' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4801.98' N. lat., 12537.41' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4801.46' N. lat., 12539.61' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4757.00' N. lat., 12537.00' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4755.50' N. lat., 12528.50' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4757.88' N. lat., 12525.61' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4801.63' N. lat., 12523.75' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4802.21' N. lat., 12522.43' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4803.60' N. lat., 12521.84' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4803.98' N. lat., 12520.65' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4803.26' N. lat., 12519.76' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4801.49' N. lat., 12518.80' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4801.03' N. lat., 12520.12' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4800.04' N. lat., 12520.26' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4758.10' N. lat., 12518.91' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4758.17' N. lat., 12517.50' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4752.28' N. lat., 12516.06' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4751.92' N. lat., 12513.89' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4749.20' N. lat., 12510.67' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4748.69' N. lat., 12506.50' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4746.54' N. lat., 12507.68' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4747.24' N. lat., 12505.38' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4745.95' N. lat., 12504.61' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4744.58' N. lat., 12507.12' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4742.24' N. lat., 12505.15' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4738.54' N. lat., 12506.76' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4734.86' N. lat., 12504.67' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4730.75' N. lat., 12457.52' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4728.51' N. lat., 12456.69' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4729.15' N. lat., 12454.10' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11104]]

    (42) 4728.43' N. lat., 12451.58' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4724.13' N. lat., 12447.51' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4718.31' N. lat., 12446.17' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4719.57' N. lat., 12451.01' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4718.12' N. lat., 12453.66' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4717.59' N. lat., 12452.94' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4717.71' N. lat., 12451.63' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4716.90' N. lat., 12451.23' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4716.10' N. lat., 12453.67' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4714.24' N. lat., 12453.02' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4712.16' N. lat., 12456.77' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4713.35' N. lat., 12458.70' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4709.53' N. lat., 12458.32' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4709.54' N. lat., 12459.50' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4705.87' N. lat., 12459.29' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4703.65' N. lat., 12456.26' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4700.91' N. lat., 12459.73' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4658.74' N. lat., 12459.40' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4658.55' N. lat., 12500.70' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4655.57' N. lat., 12501.61' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4655.77' N. lat., 12455.04' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4653.16' N. lat., 12453.69' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4652.39' N. lat., 12455.24' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4644.88' N. lat., 12451.97' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4633.28' N. lat., 12436.96' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4633.20' N. lat., 12430.64' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4627.85' N. lat., 12431.95' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4618.16' N. lat., 12439.39' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4616.48' N. lat., 12427.41' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4616.73' N. lat., 12423.20' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4616.00' N. lat., 12424.88' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4614.22' N. lat., 12426.28' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4611.53' N. lat., 12439.58' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4608.77' N. lat., 12441.71' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4605.86' N. lat., 12442.27' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4603.85' N. lat., 12448.20' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4602.34' N. lat., 12448.51' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4558.99' N. lat., 12444.42' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4549.74' N. lat., 12443.69' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4549.68' N. lat., 12442.37' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4540.83' N. lat., 12440.90' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4534.88' N. lat., 12432.58' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4513.04' N. lat., 12421.92' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4500.17' N. lat., 12429.28' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4450.99' N. lat., 12435.40' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4446.87' N. lat., 12438.20' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4448.25' N. lat., 12440.62' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4441.34' N. lat., 12449.20' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4423.30' N. lat., 12450.17' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4413.19' N. lat., 12458.66' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4357.37' N. lat., 12458.71' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4352.32' N. lat., 12449.43' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4351.35' N. lat., 12437.94' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4349.73' N. lat., 12440.26' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4339.06' N. lat., 12438.55' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4328.85' N. lat., 12439.99' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4320.22' N. lat., 12443.05' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4313.29' N. lat., 12447.00' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4310.64' N. lat., 12449.95' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4304.26' N. lat., 12453.05' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4253.93' N. lat., 12454.60' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4247.57' N. lat., 12448.12' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4246.19' N. lat., 12444.52' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4241.75' N. lat., 12444.69' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4238.81' N. lat., 12443.09' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4231.83' N. lat., 12446.23' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4232.08' N. lat., 12443.58' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4230.96' N. lat., 12443.84' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4228.41' N. lat., 12449.17' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4224.80' N. lat., 12445.93' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4219.71' N. lat., 12441.60' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4215.12' N. lat., 12438.34' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4212.35' N. lat., 12438.09' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4200.00' N. lat., 12436.83' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4159.98' N. lat., 12436.80' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4147.79' N. lat., 12429.48' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4121.01' N. lat., 12429.01' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4113.50' N. lat., 12424.40' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4111.00' N. lat., 12422.99' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4106.69' N. lat., 12423.30' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4054.73' N. lat., 12428.15' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4053.95' N. lat., 12426.04' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4049.96' N. lat., 12426.04' 
W. long.;
    (125) 4044.49' N. lat., 12430.81' 
W. long.;
    (126) 4040.58' N. lat., 12432.06' 
W. long.;
    (127) 4036.09' N. lat., 12440.11' 
W. long.;
    (128) 4034.19' N. lat., 12441.20' 
W. long.;
    (129) 4032.93' N. lat., 12441.86' 
W. long.;
    (130) 4031.28' N. lat., 12440.98' 
W. long.;
    (131) 4029.68' N. lat., 12438.06' 
W. long.;
    (132) 4025.01' N. lat., 12436.36' 
W. long.;
    (133) 4022.28' N. lat., 12431.83' 
W. long.;
    (134) 4016.96' N. lat., 12431.91' 
W. long.;
    (135) 4017.59' N. lat., 12445.28' 
W. long.;
    (136) 4013.23' N. lat., 12432.40' 
W. long.;
    (137) 4010.00' N. lat., 12424.55' 
W. long.;
    (138) 4006.45' N. lat., 12419.24' 
W. long.;
    (139) 4007.08' N. lat., 12417.80' 
W. long.;
    (140) 4005.55' N. lat., 12418.11' 
W. long.;
    (141) 4004.74' N. lat., 12418.11' 
W. long.;
    (142) 4002.35' N. lat., 12416.53' 
W. long.;
    (143) 4001.13' N. lat., 12412.98' 
W. long.;
    (144) 4001.55' N. lat., 12409.80' 
W. long.;
    (145) 3958.54' N. lat., 12412.43' 
W. long.;
    (146) 3955.72' N. lat., 12407.44' 
W. long.;
    (147) 3942.64' N. lat., 12402.52' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3935.96' N. lat., 12359.47' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3934.61' N. lat., 12359.58' 
W. long.;
    (150) 3934.79' N. lat., 12358.47' 
W. long.;
    (151) 3933.79' N. lat., 12356.77' 
W. long.;
    (152) 3933.03' N. lat., 12357.06' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3932.20' N. lat., 12359.12' 
W. long.;
    (154) 3907.81' N. lat., 12359.06' 
W. long.;
    (155) 3903.06' N. lat., 12357.77' 
W. long.;
    (156) 3852.26' N. lat., 12356.18' 
W. long.;
    (157) 3850.21' N. lat., 12355.48' 
W. long.;
    (158) 3846.81' N. lat., 12351.49' 
W. long.;
    (159) 3845.28' N. lat., 12351.55' 
W. long.;
    (160) 3842.76' N. lat., 12349.73' 
W. long.;
    (161) 3841.53' N. lat., 12347.80' 
W. long.;
    (162) 3841.41' N. lat., 12346.74' 
W. long.;
    (163) 3838.01' N. lat., 12345.74' 
W. long.;
    (164) 3837.19' N. lat., 12343.98' 
W. long.;
    (165) 3835.26' N. lat., 12341.99' 
W. long.;
    (166) 3833.38' N. lat., 12341.76' 
W. long.;
    (167) 3819.95' N. lat., 12332.90' 
W. long.;
    (168) 3814.38' N. lat., 12325.51' 
W. long.;
    (169) 3809.39' N. lat., 12324.39' 
W. long.;
    (170) 3810.09' N. lat., 12327.21' 
W. long.;
    (171) 3803.76' N. lat., 12331.90' 
W. long.;
    (172) 3802.06' N. lat., 12331.26' 
W. long.;
    (173) 3800.01' N. lat., 12329.56' 
W. long.;
    (174) 3758.07' N. lat., 12327.21' 
W. long.;
    (175) 3755.02' N. lat., 12327.44' 
W. long.;
    (176) 3751.39' N. lat., 12325.22' 
W. long.;
    (177) 3743.94' N. lat., 12311.49' 
W. long.;
    (178) 3735.96' N. lat., 12302.23' 
W. long.;
    (179) 3723.48' N. lat., 12257.76' 
W. long.;
    (180) 3723.23' N. lat., 12253.78' 
W. long.;
    (181) 3713.97' N. lat., 12249.91' 
W. long.;
    (182) 3709.98' N. lat., 12245.61' 
W. long.;
    (183) 3707.38' N. lat., 12246.38' 
W. long.;
    (184) 3700.64' N. lat., 12237.70' 
W. long.;
    (185) 3657.40' N. lat., 12228.36' 
W. long.;
    (186) 3659.21' N. lat., 12225.64' 
W. long.;
    (187) 3656.90' N. lat., 12225.42' 
W. long.;
    (188) 3657.43' N. lat., 12222.55' 
W. long.;
    (189) 3655.43' N. lat., 12222.43' 
W. long.;
    (190) 3652.27' N. lat., 12213.16' 
W. long.;
    (191) 3647.10' N. lat., 12207.53' 
W. long.;
    (192) 3647.10' N. lat., 12202.08' 
W. long.;
    (193) 3643.76' N. lat., 12159.15' 
W. long.;
    (194) 3638.84' N. lat., 12202.20' 
W. long.;
    (195) 3630.82' N. lat., 12201.13' 
W. long.;
    (196) 3630.94' N. lat., 12200.54' 
W. long.;
    (197) 3625.99' N. lat., 12159.50' 
W. long.;
    (198) 3626.43' N. lat., 12159.76' 
W. long.;
    (199) 3622.00' N. lat., 12201.02' 
W. long.;
    (200) 3619.01' N. lat., 12205.01' 
W. long.;
    (201) 3614.73' N. lat., 12201.55' 
W. long.;
    (202) 3614.03' N. lat., 12158.09' 
W. long.;
    (203) 3609.74' N. lat., 12145.01' 
W. long.;
    (204) 3606.75' N. lat., 12140.73' 
W. long.;
    (205) 3558.19' N. lat., 12134.63' 
W. long.;
    (206) 3552.21' N. lat., 12132.46' 
W. long.;
    (207) 3551.21' N. lat., 12130.94' 
W. long.;
    (208) 3546.28' N. lat., 12130.29' 
W. long.;
    (209) 3533.67' N. lat., 12120.09' 
W. long.;
    (210) 3531.33' N. lat., 12115.22' 
W. long.;
    (211) 3523.29' N. lat., 12111.41' 
W. long.;
    (212) 3515.26' N. lat., 12104.49' 
W. long.;
    (213) 3507.05' N. lat., 12100.26' 
W. long.;
    (214) 3507.46' N. lat., 12057.10' 
W. long.;
    (215) 3444.29' N. lat., 12054.28' 
W. long.;
    (216) 3444.23' N. lat., 12058.27' 
W. long.;
    (217) 3432.33' N. lat., 12050.23' 
W. long.;
    (218) 3427.00' N. lat., 12042.55' 
W. long.;
    (219) 3419.08' N. lat., 12031.21' 
W. long.;
    (220) 3417.72' N. lat., 12019.26' 
W. long.;
    (221) 3422.45' N. lat., 12012.81' 
W. long.;
    (222) 3421.36' N. lat., 11954.88' 
W. long.;
    (223) 3409.95' N. lat., 11946.18' 
W. long.;
    (224) 3409.08' N. lat., 11957.53' 
W. long.;
    (225) 3407.53' N. lat., 12006.35' 
W. long.;
    (226) 3410.54' N. lat., 12019.07' 
W. long.;
    (227) 3414.68' N. lat., 12029.48' 
W. long.;
    (228) 3409.51' N. lat., 12038.32' 
W. long.;
    (229) 3403.06' N. lat., 12035.54' 
W. long.;
    (230) 3356.39' N. lat., 12028.47' 
W. long.;
    (231) 3350.25' N. lat., 12009.43' 
W. long.;
    (232) 3337.96' N. lat., 12000.08' 
W. long.;
    (233) 3334.52' N. lat., 11951.84' 
W. long.;
    (234) 3335.51' N. lat., 11948.49' 
W. long.;
    (235) 3342.76' N. lat., 11947.77' 
W. long.;
    (236) 3353.62' N. lat., 11953.28' 
W. long.;
    (237) 3357.61' N. lat., 11931.26' 
W. long.;
    (238) 3356.34' N. lat., 11926.40' 
W. long.;
    (239) 3357.79' N. lat., 11926.85' 
W. long.;
    (240) 3358.88' N. lat., 11920.06' 
W. long.;
    (241) 3402.65' N. lat., 11915.11' 
W. long.;
    (242) 3359.02' N. lat., 11902.99' 
W. long.;
    (243) 3357.61' N. lat., 11842.07' 
W. long.;
    (244) 3350.76' N. lat., 11837.98' 
W. long.;
    (245) 3339.54' N. lat., 11818.70' 
W. long.;
    (246) 3337.14' N. lat., 11818.39' 
W. long.;
    (247) 3335.51' N. lat., 11818.03' 
W. long.;
    (248) 3330.68' N. lat., 11810.35' 
W. long.;
    (249) 3332.49' N. lat., 11751.85' 
W. long.;
    (250) 3258.87' N. lat., 11720.36' 
W. long.; and
    (251) 3235.53' N. lat., 11729.67' 
W. long.

    (xiii) The 250-fm (457-m) depth contour used between the U.S. 
border with Canada and 38 N. lat. is defined by straight 
lines connecting all of the following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4814.68' N. lat., 12542.10' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4813.00' N. lat., 12539.00' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4812.73' N. lat., 12538.87' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4812.43' N. lat., 12539.12' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4811.83' N. lat., 12540.01' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4811.78' N. lat., 12541.70' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4810.62' N. lat., 12543.41' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4809.23' N. lat., 12542.80' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4808.79' N. lat., 12543.79' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4808.50' N. lat., 12545.00' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4807.43' N. lat., 12546.36' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11105]]

    (12) 4806.00' N. lat., 12546.50' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4805.38' N. lat., 12542.82' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4804.19' N. lat., 12540.40' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4803.50' N. lat., 12537.00' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4801.50' N. lat., 12540.00' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4757.00' N. lat., 12537.00' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4755.21' N. lat., 12537.22' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4754.02' N. lat., 12536.57' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4753.67' N. lat., 12535.06' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4754.14' N. lat., 12532.35' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4755.50' N. lat., 12528.56' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4757.03' N. lat., 12526.52' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4757.98' N. lat., 12525.08' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4800.54' N. lat., 12524.38' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4801.45' N. lat., 12523.70' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4801.97' N. lat., 12522.34' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4803.68' N. lat., 12521.20' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4801.96' N. lat., 12519.56' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4800.98' N. lat., 12520.43' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4800.00' N. lat., 12520.68' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4758.00' N. lat., 12519.50' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4757.65' N. lat., 12519.18' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4758.00' N. lat., 12518.00' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4756.59' N. lat., 12518.15' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4751.30' N. lat., 12518.32' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4749.88' N. lat., 12514.49' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4749.00' N. lat., 12511.00' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4747.99' N. lat., 12507.31' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4746.47' N. lat., 12508.63' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4746.00' N. lat., 12506.00' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4744.50' N. lat., 12507.50' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4743.39' N. lat., 12506.57' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4742.37' N. lat., 12505.74' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4740.61' N. lat., 12506.48' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4737.43' N. lat., 12507.33' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4733.68' N. lat., 12504.80' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4730.00' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4728.00' N. lat., 12458.50' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4728.88' N. lat., 12454.71' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4727.70' N. lat., 12451.87' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4724.84' N. lat., 12448.45' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4721.76' N. lat., 12447.42' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4718.84' N. lat., 12446.75' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4719.82' N. lat., 12451.43' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4718.13' N. lat., 12454.25' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4713.50' N. lat., 12454.69' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4715.00' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4708.00' N. lat., 12459.83' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4705.79' N. lat., 12501.00' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4703.34' N. lat., 12457.49' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4701.00' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4655.00' N. lat., 12502.00' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4651.00' N. lat., 12457.00' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4647.00' N. lat., 12455.00' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4634.00' N. lat., 12438.00' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4630.50' N. lat., 12441.00' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4633.00' N. lat., 12432.00' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4629.00' N. lat., 12432.00' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4620.00' N. lat., 12439.00' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4618.16' N. lat., 12440.00' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4616.00' N. lat., 12427.01' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4615.00' N. lat., 12430.96' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4613.17' N. lat., 12437.87' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4613.17' N. lat., 12438.75' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4610.50' N. lat., 12442.00' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4606.21' N. lat., 12441.85' 
W. long.;
    (78) 4603.02' N. lat., 12450.27' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4557.00' N. lat., 12445.52' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4546.85' N. lat., 12445.91' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4545.81' N. lat., 12447.05' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4544.87' N. lat., 12445.98' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4543.44' N. lat., 12446.03' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4535.82' N. lat., 12445.72' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4535.70' N. lat., 12442.89' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4524.45' N. lat., 12438.21' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4511.68' N. lat., 12439.38' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4457.94' N. lat., 12437.02' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4444.28' N. lat., 12450.79' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4432.63' N. lat., 12454.21' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4423.20' N. lat., 12449.87' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4413.17' N. lat., 12458.81' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4357.92' N. lat., 12458.29' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4350.12' N. lat., 12453.36' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4349.53' N. lat., 12443.96' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4342.76' N. lat., 12441.40' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4324.00' N. lat., 12442.61' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4319.74' N. lat., 12445.12' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4319.62' N. lat., 12452.95' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4317.41' N. lat., 12453.02' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4249.15' N. lat., 12454.93' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4246.74' N. lat., 12453.39' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4243.76' N. lat., 12451.64' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4245.41' N. lat., 12449.35' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4243.92' N. lat., 12445.92' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4238.87' N. lat., 12443.38' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4234.78' N. lat., 12446.56' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4231.47' N. lat., 12446.89' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4231.00' N. lat., 12444.28' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4229.22' N. lat., 12446.93' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4228.39' N. lat., 12449.94' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4226.28' N. lat., 12447.60' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4219.58' N. lat., 12443.21' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4213.75' N. lat., 12440.06' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4205.12' N. lat., 12439.06' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4159.99' N. lat., 12437.72' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4200.00' N. lat., 12437.76' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4147.93' N. lat., 12431.79' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4121.35' N. lat., 12430.35' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4107.11' N. lat., 12425.25' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4057.37' N. lat., 12430.25' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4048.77' N. lat., 12430.69' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4041.03' N. lat., 12433.21' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4037.40' N. lat., 12438.96' 
W. long.;
    (125) 4033.70' N. lat., 12442.50' 
W. long.;
    (126) 4031.31' N. lat., 12441.59' 
W. long.;
    (127) 4025.00' N. lat., 12436.65' 
W. long.;
    (128) 4022.42' N. lat., 12432.19' 
W. long.;
    (129) 4017.17' N. lat., 12432.21' 
W. long.;
    (130) 4018.68' N. lat., 12450.44' 
W. long.;
    (131) 4013.55' N. lat., 12434.26' 
W. long.;
    (132) 4010.11' N. lat., 12428.25' 
W. long.;
    (133) 4006.72' N. lat., 12421.40' 
W. long.;
    (134) 4001.63' N. lat., 12417.25' 
W. long.;
    (135) 4000.68' N. lat., 12411.19' 
W. long.;
    (136) 3959.09' N. lat., 12414.92' 
W. long.;
    (137) 3951.85' N. lat., 12410.33' 
W. long.;
    (138) 3936.90' N. lat., 12400.63' 
W. long.;
    (139) 3932.41' N. lat., 12400.01' 
W. long.;
    (140) 3905.40' N. lat., 12400.52' 
W. long.;
    (141) 3904.32' N. lat., 12359.00' 
W. long.;
    (142) 3858.02' N. lat., 12358.18' 
W. long.;
    (143) 3858.19' N. lat., 12401.90' 
W. long.;
    (144) 3850.27' N. lat., 12356.26' 
W. long.;
    (145) 3846.73' N. lat., 12351.93' 
W. long.;
    (146) 3844.64' N. lat., 12351.77' 
W. long.;
    (147) 3832.97' N. lat., 12341.84' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3814.56' N. lat., 12332.18' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3813.85' N. lat., 12329.94' 
W. long.;
    (150) 3811.88' N. lat., 12330.57' 
W. long.;
    (151) 3808.72' N. lat., 12329.56' 
W. long.;
    (152) 3805.62' N. lat., 12332.38' 
W. long.;
    (153) 3801.90' N. lat., 12332.00' 
W. long.; and
    (154) 3800.00' N. lat., 12330.00' 
W. long.

    (xiv) The 250-fm (457-m) depth contour used between the U.S. border 
with Canada and 38 N. lat., modified to allow fishing in 
petrale sole areas, is defined by straight lines connecting all of the 
following points in the order stated:

    (1) 4814.71' N. lat., 12541.95' W. 
long.;
    (2) 4813.00' N. lat., 12539.00' W. 
long.;
    (3) 4808.50' N. lat., 12545.00' W. 
long.;
    (4) 4806.00' N. lat., 12546.50' W. 
long.;
    (5) 4803.50' N. lat., 12537.00' W. 
long.;
    (6) 4801.50' N. lat., 12540.00' W. 
long.;
    (7) 4757.00' N. lat., 12537.00' W. 
long.;
    (8) 4755.50' N. lat., 12528.50' W. 
long.;
    (9) 4758.00' N. lat., 12525.00' W. 
long.;
    (10) 4800.50' N. lat., 12524.50' 
W. long.;
    (11) 4803.50' N. lat., 12521.00' 
W. long.;
    (12) 4802.00' N. lat., 12519.50' 
W. long.;
    (13) 4800.00' N. lat., 12521.00' 
W. long.;
    (14) 4758.00' N. lat., 12520.00' 
W. long.;
    (15) 4758.00' N. lat., 12518.00' 
W. long.;
    (16) 4752.00' N. lat., 12516.50' 
W. long.;
    (17) 4749.00' N. lat., 12511.00' 
W. long.;
    (18) 4746.00' N. lat., 12506.00' 
W. long.;
    (19) 4744.50' N. lat., 12507.50' 
W. long.;
    (20) 4742.00' N. lat., 12506.00' 
W. long.;
    (21) 4738.00' N. lat., 12507.00' 
W. long.;
    (22) 4730.00' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (23) 4728.00' N. lat., 12458.50' 
W. long.;
    (24) 4728.88' N. lat., 12454.71' 
W. long.;
    (25) 4727.70' N. lat., 12451.87' 
W. long.;
    (26) 4724.84' N. lat., 12448.45' 
W. long.;
    (27) 4721.76' N. lat., 12447.42' 
W. long.;
    (28) 4718.84' N. lat., 12446.75' 
W. long.;
    (29) 4719.82' N. lat., 12451.43' 
W. long.;
    (30) 4718.13' N. lat., 12454.25' 
W. long.;
    (31) 4713.50' N. lat., 12454.69' 
W. long.;
    (32) 4715.00' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (33) 4708.00' N. lat., 12459.82' 
W. long.;
    (34) 4705.79' N. lat., 12501.00' 
W. long.;
    (35) 4703.34' N. lat., 12457.49' 
W. long.;
    (36) 4701.00' N. lat., 12500.00' 
W. long.;
    (37) 4655.00' N. lat., 12502.00' 
W. long.;
    (38) 4651.00' N. lat., 12457.00' 
W. long.;
    (39) 4647.00' N. lat., 12455.00' 
W. long.;
    (40) 4634.00' N. lat., 12438.00' 
W. long.;
    (41) 4630.50' N. lat., 12441.00' 
W. long.;
    (42) 4633.00' N. lat., 12432.00' 
W. long.;
    (43) 4629.00' N. lat., 12432.00' 
W. long.;
    (44) 4620.00' N. lat., 12439.00' 
W. long.;
    (45) 4618.16' N. lat., 12440.00' 
W. long.;
    (46) 4616.00' N. lat., 12427.01' 
W. long.;
    (47) 4615.00' N. lat., 12430.96' 
W. long.;
    (48) 4613.17' N. lat., 12438.76' 
W. long.;
    (49) 4610.51' N. lat., 12441.99' 
W. long.;
    (50) 4606.24' N. lat., 12441.81' 
W. long.;
    (51) 4603.04' N. lat., 12450.26' 
W. long.;
    (52) 4556.99' N. lat., 12445.45' 
W. long.;
    (53) 4549.94' N. lat., 12445.75' 
W. long.;
    (54) 4549.94' N. lat., 12442.33' 
W. long.;
    (55) 4545.73' N. lat., 12442.18' 
W. long.;
    (56) 4545.73' N. lat., 12443.82' 
W. long.;
    (57) 4541.94' N. lat., 12443.61' 
W. long.;
    (58) 4541.58' N. lat., 12439.86' 
W. long.;
    (59) 4538.45' N. lat., 12439.94' 
W. long.;
    (60) 4535.75' N. lat., 12442.91' 
W. long.;
    (61) 4524.49' N. lat., 12438.20' 
W. long.;
    (62) 4514.43' N. lat., 12439.05' 
W. long.;
    (63) 4514.30' N. lat., 12434.19' 
W. long.;
    (64) 4508.98' N. lat., 12434.26' 
W. long.;
    (65) 4509.02' N. lat., 12438.81' 
W. long.;
    (66) 4457.98' N. lat., 12436.98' 
W. long.;
    (67) 4456.62' N. lat., 12438.32' 
W. long.;
    (68) 4450.82' N. lat., 12435.52' 
W. long.;
    (69) 4446.89' N. lat., 12438.32' 
W. long.;
    (70) 4450.78' N. lat., 12444.24' 
W. long.;
    (71) 4444.27' N. lat., 12450.78' 
W. long.;
    (72) 4432.63' N. lat., 12454.24' 
W. long.;
    (73) 4423.25' N. lat., 12449.78' 
W. long.;
    (74) 4413.16' N. lat., 12458.81' 
W. long.;
    (75) 4357.88' N. lat., 12458.25' 
W. long.;
    (76) 4356.89' N. lat., 12457.33' 
W. long.;
    (77) 4353.41' N. lat., 12451.95' 
W. long.;

[[Page 11106]]

    (78) 4351.56' N. lat., 12447.38' 
W. long.;
    (79) 4351.49' N. lat., 12437.77' 
W. long.;
    (80) 4348.02' N. lat., 12443.31' 
W. long.;
    (81) 4342.77' N. lat., 12441.39' 
W. long.;
    (82) 4324.09' N. lat., 12442.57' 
W. long.;
    (83) 4319.73' N. lat., 12445.09' 
W. long.;
    (84) 4315.98' N. lat., 12447.76' 
W. long.;
    (85) 4304.14' N. lat., 12452.55' 
W. long.;
    (86) 4304.00' N. lat., 12453.88' 
W. long.;
    (87) 4254.69' N. lat., 12454.54' 
W. long.;
    (88) 4245.46' N. lat., 12449.37' 
W. long.;
    (89) 4243.91' N. lat., 12445.90' 
W. long.;
    (90) 4238.84' N. lat., 12443.36' 
W. long.;
    (91) 4234.82' N. lat., 12446.56' 
W. long.;
    (92) 4231.57' N. lat., 12446.86' 
W. long.;
    (93) 4230.98' N. lat., 12444.27' 
W. long.;
    (94) 4229.21' N. lat., 12446.93' 
W. long.;
    (95) 4228.52' N. lat., 12449.40' 
W. long.;
    (96) 4226.06' N. lat., 12446.61' 
W. long.;
    (97) 4221.82' N. lat., 12443.76' 
W. long.;
    (98) 4217.47' N. lat., 12438.89' 
W. long.;
    (99) 4213.67' N. lat., 12437.51' 
W. long.;
    (100) 4213.76' N. lat., 12440.03' 
W. long.;
    (101) 4205.12' N. lat., 12439.06' 
W. long.;
    (102) 4202.67' N. lat., 12438.41' 
W. long.;
    (103) 4202.67' N. lat., 12435.95' 
W. long.;
    (104) 4200.00' N. lat., 12435.88' 
W. long.;
    (105) 4159.99' N. lat., 12435.92' 
W. long.;
    (106) 4156.38' N. lat., 12434.96' 
W. long.;
    (107) 4153.98' N. lat., 12432.50' 
W. long.;
    (108) 4150.69' N. lat., 12430.46' 
W. long.;
    (109) 4147.79' N. lat., 12429.52' 
W. long.;
    (110) 4121.00' N. lat., 12429.00' 
W. long.;
    (111) 4111.00' N. lat., 12423.00' 
W. long.;
    (112) 4105.00' N. lat., 12423.00' 
W. long.;
    (113) 4054.00' N. lat., 12426.00' 
W. long.;
    (114) 4050.00' N. lat., 12426.00' 
W. long.;
    (115) 4044.51' N. lat., 12430.83' 
W. long.;
    (116) 4040.61' N. lat., 12432.06' 
W. long.;
    (117) 4037.36' N. lat., 12429.41' 
W. long.;
    (118) 4035.64' N. lat., 12430.47' 
W. long.;
    (119) 4037.43' N. lat., 12437.10' 
W. long.;
    (120) 4036.00' N. lat., 12440.00' 
W. long.;
    (121) 4031.59' N. lat., 12440.72' 
W. long.;
    (122) 4024.64' N. lat., 12435.62' 
W. long.;
    (123) 4023.00' N. lat., 12432.00' 
W. long.;
    (124) 4023.39' N. lat., 12428.70' 
W. long.;
    (125) 4022.28' N. lat., 12425.25' 
W. long.;
    (126) 4021.90' N. lat., 12425.17' 
W. long.;
    (127) 4022.00' N. lat., 12428.00' 
W. long.;
    (128) 4021.35' N. lat., 12429.53' 
W. long.;
    (129) 4019.75' N. lat., 12428.98' 
W. long.;
    (130) 4018.15' N. lat., 12427.01' 
W. long.;
    (131) 4017.45' N. lat., 12425.49' 
W. long.;
    (132) 4018.00' N. lat., 12424.00' 
W. long.;
    (133) 4016.00' N. lat., 12426.00' 
W. long.;
    (134) 4017.00' N. lat., 12435.00' 
W. long.;
    (135) 4016.00' N. lat., 12436.00' 
W. long.;
    (136) 4010.00' N. lat., 12422.75' 
W. long.;
    (137) 4003.00' N. lat., 12414.75' 
W. long.;
    (138) 3949.25' N. lat., 12406.00' 
W. long.;
    (139) 3934.75' N. lat., 12358.50' 
W. long.;
    (140) 3903.07' N. lat., 12357.81' 
W. long.;
    (141) 3852.25' N. lat., 12356.25' 
W. long.;
    (142) 3841.42' N. lat., 12346.75' 
W. long.;
    (143) 3839.47' N. lat., 12346.59' 
W. long.;
    (144) 3835.25' N. lat., 12342.00' 
W. long.;
    (145) 3819.97' N. lat., 12332.95' 
W. long.;
    (146) 3815.00' N. lat., 12326.50' 
W. long.;
    (147) 3808.09' N. lat., 12323.39' 
W. long.;
    (148) 3810.08' N. lat., 12326.82' 
W. long.;
    (149) 3804.08' N. lat., 12332.12' 
W. long.; and
    (150) 3800.00' N. lat., 12329.85' 
W. long.

    (xv) Farallon Islands. The Farallon Islands, off San Francisco and 
San Mateo Counties, include Southeast Farallon Island, Middle Farallon 
Island, North Farallon Island and Noon Day Rock. Under California law, 
commercial fishing for all groundfish and recreational fishing for 
certain species of groundfish is prohibited between the shoreline and 
the 10-fm (18-m) depth contour around the Farallon Islands. (See 
section B.(1) Table 3 (South) and Table 4 (South), section C.(1) Table 
5 (South), and section D.(3))
    (xvi) Cordell Banks. Cordell Banks are located offshore of 
California's Marin County. Recreational fishing for certain species of 
groundfish is prohibited within a 5 nautical mile radius around a point 
located at 3802' N. lat. and 12325' W. 
long. (See section D.(3))
    (18) Rockfish categories. Rockfish (except thornyheads) are divided 
into categories north and south of 4010' N. lat., 
depending on the depth where they most often are caught: nearshore, 
shelf, or slope (scientific names appear in Table 2). Nearshore 
rockfish are further divided into shallow nearshore and deeper 
nearshore categories south of 4010' N. lat. Trip limits 
are established for ``minor rockfish'' species according to these 
categories (see Tables 3-5).
    (a) Nearshore rockfish consists entirely of the minor nearshore 
rockfish species listed in Table 2, which includes California 
scorpionfish.
    (i) Shallow nearshore rockfish consists of black-and-yellow 
rockfish, China rockfish, gopher rockfish, grass rockfish, and kelp 
rockfish.
    (ii) Deeper nearshore rockfish consists of black rockfish, blue 
rockfish, brown rockfish, calico rockfish, copper rockfish, olive 
rockfish, quillback rockfish, and treefish.
    (iii) California scorpionfish.
    (b) Shelf rockfish consists of canary rockfish, shortbelly 
rockfish, widow rockfish, yelloweye rockfish, yellowtail rockfish, 
bocaccio, chilipepper, cowcod, and the minor shelf rockfish species 
listed in Table 2.
    (c) Slope rockfish consists of Pacific ocean perch, splitnose 
rockfish, darkblotched rockfish, and the other minor slope rockfish 
species listed in Table 2.
    (19) Flatfish complex. Flatfish managed under the FMP include: 
arrowtooth flounder, butter sole, curlfin sole, Dover sole, English 
sole, flathead sole, Pacific sanddab, petrale sole, rex sole, rock 
sole, sand sole, and starry flounder. Where Tables 3, 4, and/or 5 of 
sections IV.B. and IV.C. refer to landings limits for ``all other 
flatfish,'' those limits apply to all flatfish cumulatively taken from 
the group of flatfish species listed in this section except for those 
flatfish species listed with species-specific limits.
    (20) Application of requirements. Paragraphs IV.B. and IV.C. 
pertain to the commercial groundfish fishery, but not to Washington 
coastal tribal fisheries, which are described in section V. The 
provisions in paragraphs IV.B. and IV.C. that are not covered under the 
headings ``limited entry'' or ``open access'' apply to all vessels in 
the commercial fishery that take and retain groundfish, unless 
otherwise stated. Paragraph IV.D. pertains to the recreational fishery.

         Table 2.--Minor Rockfish Species (Excludes Thornyheads)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          South of 4010'
 North of 4010' N. lat.               N. lat.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                NEARSHORE
------------------------------------------------------------------------
black, Sebastes melanops...............  black, Sebastes melanops.
black and yellow, S. chrysolmelas......  black and yellow, S.
                                          chrysolmelas.
blue, S. mystinus......................  blue, S. mystinus.
brown, S. auriculatus..................  brown, S. auriculatus.
calico, S. dalli.......................  calico, S. dalli.
China, S. nebulosus....................  California scorpionfish,
                                          Scorpaena guttata.
copper, S. caurinus....................  China, Sebastes nebulosus.
gopher, S. carnatus....................  copper, S. caurinus.
grass, S. rastrelliger.................  gopher, S. carnatus.
kelp, S. atrovirens....................  grass, S. rastrelliger.
olive, S. serranoides..................  kelp, S. atrovirens.
quillback, S. maliger..................  olive, S. serranoides.
treefish, S. serriceps.................  quillback, S. maliger.

[[Page 11107]]

 
                                         treefish, S. serriceps.
----------------------------------------
                                  SHELF
------------------------------------------------------------------------
bronzespotted, S. gilli................  bronzespotted, S. gilli.
bocaccio, S. paucispinis...............  chameleon, S. phillipsi.
chameleon, S. phillipsi................  dwarf-red, S. rufianus.
chilipepper, S. goodei.................  flag, S. rubrivinctus.
cowcod, S. levis.......................  freckled, S. lentiginosus.
dwarf-red, S. rufianus.................  greenblotched, S. rosenblatti.
flag, S. rubrivinctus..................  greenspotted, S. chlorostictus.
freckled, S. lentiginosus..............  greenstriped, S. elongatus.
greenblotched, S. rosenblatti..........  halfbanded, S. semicinctus.
greenspotted, S. chlorostictus.........  honeycomb, S. umbrosus.
greenstriped, S. elongatus.............  Mexican, S. macdonaldi.
halfbanded, S. semicinctus.............  pink, S. eos.
honeycomb, S. umbrosus.................  pinkrose, S. simulator.
Mexican, S. macdonaldi.................  pygmy, S. wilsoni.
pink, S. eos...........................  redstriped, S. proriger.
pinkrose, S. simulator.................  rosethorn, S. helvomaculatus.
pygmy, S. wilsoni......................  rosy, S. rosaceus.
redstriped, S. proriger................  silvergrey, S. brevispinis.
rosethorn, S. helvomaculatus...........  speckled, S. ovalis.
rosy, S. rosaceus......................  squarespot, S. hopkinsi.
silvergrey, S. brevispinis.............  starry, S. constellatus.
speckled, S. ovalis....................  stripetail, S. saxicola.
squarespot, S. hopkinsi................  swordspine, S. ensifer.
starry, S. constellatus................  tiger, S. nigorcinctus.
stripetail, S. saxicola................  vermilion, S. miniatus.
swordspine, S. ensifer.................  yelloweye, S. ruberrimus.
tiger, S. nigorcinctus.................  yellowtail, S. flavidus.
vermilion, S. miniatus.................
yelloweye, S. ruberrimus...............
----------------------------------------
                                  SLOPE
------------------------------------------------------------------------
aurora, S. aurora......................  aurora, S. aurora.
bank, S. rufus.........................  bank, S. rufus.
blackgill, S. melanostomus.............  blackgill, S. melanostomus.
darkblotched, S. crameri...............  darkblotched, S. crameri.
redbanded, S. babcocki.................  Pacific ocean perch (POP), S.
                                          alutus.
rougheye, S. aleutianus................  redbanded, S. babcocki.
sharpchin, S. zacentrus................  rougheye, S. aleutianus.
shortraker, S. borealis................  sharpchin, S. zacentrus.
splitnose, S. diploproa................  shortraker, S. borealis.
yellowmouth, S. reedi..................  yellowmouth, S. reedi.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Limited Entry Fishery
    (1) General. Most species taken in limited entry fisheries will be 
managed with cumulative trip limits (see paragraph IV.A.(1)(d)), size 
limits (see paragraph IV.A.(6)), seasons (see paragraph IV.A.(7)), and 
areas that are closed to specific gear types. The trawl fishery has 
gear requirements and trip limits that differ by the type of trawl gear 
on board (see paragraph IV.A.(14)). Cowcod retention is prohibited in 
all fisheries and groundfish vessels operating south of Point 
Conception must adhere to CCA restrictions (see paragraph 
IV.A.(17)(b)). Yelloweye rockfish and canary rockfish retention is 
prohibited in the limited entry fixed gear fisheries. Most of the 
management measures for the limited entry fishery are listed above and 
in the following tables: Table 3 (North), Table 3 (South), Table 4 
(North), and Table 4 (South).
    A header in Table 3 (North), Table 3 (South), Table 4 (North) and 
Table 4 (South) generally describes the Rockfish Conservation Area 
(RCA) (i.e., closed area) for vessels participating in the limited 
entry fishery. The RCA boundaries are defined by latitude and longitude 
coordinates (see paragraph IV.A.(17)), except that under state law 
fishing is prohibited by limited entry vessels from the shoreline to a 
10-fm (18-m) depth contour around the Farallon Islands. For a 
definition of the Farallon Islands, see paragraph IV.A.(17)(f).
    Management measures may be changed during the year by announcement 
in the Federal Register pursuant to the requirements of the APA. 
However, the management regimes for several fisheries (nontrawl 
sablefish, Pacific whiting, and black rockfish) do not neatly fit into 
these tables and are addressed immediately following Table 3 (North), 
Table 3 (South), Table 4 (North), and Table 4 (South).
    Federal commercial groundfish regulations are not intended to 
supersede any more restrictive State commercial groundfish regulations 
relating to federally-managed groundfish.
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    (2) Sablefish. The limited entry sablefish allocation is further 
allocated 58 percent to trawl gear and 42 percent to nontrawl gear. See 
footnote e/ of Table 1a.
    (a) Trawl trip limits. Management measures for the limited entry 
trawl fishery for sablefish are listed in Table 3 (North) and Table 3 
(South).
    (b) Nontrawl (fixed gear) trip limits. To take, retain, possess, or 
land sablefish during the primary season for the limited entry fixed 
gear sablefish fishery, the owner of a vessel must hold a limited entry 
permit for that vessel, affixed with both a gear endorsement for 
longline or trap (or pot) gear, and a sablefish endorsement (see 50 CFR 
660.323(a)(2)(i).) A sablefish endorsement is not required to 
participate in the limited entry daily trip limit fishery.
    (i) Primary season. The primary season begins at 12 noon l.t. on 
April 1, 2004, and ends at 12 noon l.t. on October 31, 2004. There are 
no pre-season or post-season closures. During the primary season, each 
vessel with at least one limited entry permit with a sablefish 
endorsement that is registered for use with that vessel may land up to 
the cumulative trip limit for each of the sablefish-endorsed limited 
entry permits registered for use with that vessel, for the tier(s) to 
which the permit(s) are assigned. For 2004, the following limits are in 
effect: Tier 1, 62,000 lb (28,123 kg); Tier 2, 28,000 lb (12,701 kg); 
Tier 3, 16,000 lb (7,257 kg). (Note: These tier limits are likely to 
change as new observer data is released in the spring of 2004. Limits 
will be finalized before the start of the primary season.) All limits 
are in round weight. If a vessel is registered for use with a 
sablefish-endorsed limited entry permit, all sablefish taken after 
April 1, 2004 count against the cumulative limits associated with the 
permit(s) registered for use with that vessel.
    (ii) Daily trip limit. Daily and/or weekly sablefish trip limits 
listed in Table 4 (North) and Table 4 (South) apply to any limited 
entry fixed gear vessels not participating in the primary sablefish 
season described in paragraph (i) of this section. North of 
36 N. lat., the daily and/or weekly trip limits apply to 
fixed gear vessels that are not registered for use with a sablefish-
endorsed limited entry permit, and to fixed gear vessels that are 
registered for use with a sablefish-endorsed limited entry permit when 
those vessels are not fishing against their primary sablefish season 
cumulative limits. South of 36 N. lat., the daily and/or 
weekly trip limits for taking and retaining sablefish that are listed 
in Table 4 (South) apply throughout the year to all vessels registered 
for use with a limited entry fixed gear permit.
    (iii) Participating in both the primary and daily trip limit 
fisheries. A vessel that is eligible to participate in the primary 
sablefish season may participate in the daily trip limit fishery for 
sablefish once that vessel's primary season sablefish limit(s) have 
been taken or after October 31, 2004, whichever occurs first. No vessel 
may land sablefish against both its primary season cumulative sablefish 
limits and against the daily trip limit fishery limits within the same 
24 hour period of 0001 hour l.t. to 2400 hours l.t. If a vessel has 
taken all of its tier limit except for an amount that is smaller than 
the daily trip limit amount, that vessel's subsequent sablefish 
landings are automatically subject to daily and/or weekly trip limits.
    (3) Whiting. Additional regulations that apply to the whiting 
fishery are found at 50 CFR 660.306 and at 50 CFR 660.323(a)(3) and 
(a)(4).
    (a) Allocations. The non-tribal allocations, based on percentages 
that are applied to the commercial OY of (commercial OY to be announced 
before the start of the primary season) in 2004 (see 50 CFR 
660.323(a)(4)), are as follows:
    (i) Catcher/processor sector--TBA(24 percent);
    (ii) Mothership sector--TBA (34 percent);
    (iii) Shore-based sector--TBA (42 percent). No more than 5 percent 
(TBA) of the shore-based whiting allocation may be taken before the 
shore-based fishery begins north of 42 N. lat. on June 
15, 2003.
    (iv) Tribal allocation--See paragraph V.
    (b) Seasons. After the start of a primary season for a sector of 
the whiting fishery, the season remains open for that sector until the 
quota is taken and the fishery season for that sector is closed by 
NMFS. The 2004 primary seasons for the whiting fishery start on the 
same dates as in 2003, as follows (see 50 CFR 660.323(a)(3)):
    (i) Catcher/processor sector--May 15;
    (ii) Mothership sector--May 15;
    (iii) Shore-based sector--June 15 north of 42 N. 
lat.; April 1 between 42-4030' N. lat.; 
April 15 south of 4030' N. lat.
    (c) Trip limits.
    (i) Before and after the regular (primary) season. The ``per trip'' 
limit for whiting before and after the regular (primary) season for the 
shore-based sector is announced in Table 3 (North) and Table 3 (South), 
as authorized at 50 CFR 660.323(a)(3) and (a)(4). This trip limit 
includes any whiting caught shoreward of 100 fathoms (183 m) in the 
Eureka, CA area. The ``per trip'' limit for other groundfish species 
before, during and after the regular (primary) season are announced in 
Table 3 (North) and Table 3 (South) and apply as follows:
    (A) Before the primary whiting season, vessels may use either small 
and/or large footrope gear during a cumulative limit period, but are 
subject to the more restrictive trip limits for the entire cumulative 
period.
    (B) Once the primary whiting season begins for a sector of the 
fishery, then the midwater trip limits apply and are additive to the 
trip limits for other

[[Page 11115]]

groundfish species for that fishing period (i.e., vessels are not 
constrained by the lower midwater limits and can harvest up to the 
footrope-specific trawl limits plus the midwater trawl limits for that 
cumulative limit period).
    (C) Following the primary whiting season, vessels can access either 
the small and/or large footrope limits, but any landings of other 
groundfish species made during the primary whiting season count against 
the cumulative limits for that period.
    (ii) Inside the Eureka, CA 100-fm (183-m) contour. No more than 
10,000 lb (4,536 kg) of whiting may be taken and retained, possessed, 
or landed by a vessel that, at any time during a fishing trip, fished 
in the fishery management area shoreward of the 100 fathom (183 m) 
contour (as shown on NOAA Charts 18580, 18600, and 18620) in the 
Eureka, CA area.
    (4) Black rockfish. The regulations at 50 CFR 660.323(a)(1) state: 
``The trip limit for black rockfish (Sebastes melanops) for commercial 
fishing vessels using hook-and-line gear between the U.S.-Canada border 
and Cape Alava, WA (4809'30'' N. lat.) and between 
Destruction Island, WA (4740'00'' N. lat.) and 
Leadbetter Point, WA (4638'10'' N. lat.), is 100 lb (45 
kg) or 30 percent, by weight of all fish on board, whichever is 
greater, per vessel per fishing trip.'' These ``per trip'' limits apply 
to limited entry and open access fisheries, in conjunction with the 
cumulative trip limits and other management measures listed in Tables 4 
(North) and Table 5 (North) of section IV. The crossover provisions at 
paragraphs IV.A.(12) do not apply to the black rockfish per-trip 
limits.
C. Trip Limits in the Open Access Fishery
    (1) General. Open access gear is gear used to take and retain 
groundfish from a vessel that does not have a valid permit for the 
Pacific Coast groundfish fishery with an endorsement for the gear used 
to harvest the groundfish. This includes longline, trap, pot, hook-and-
line (fixed or mobile), setnet and trammel net (south of 
38 N. lat. only), and exempted trawl gear (trawls used 
to target non-groundfish species: pink shrimp or prawns, and, south of 
Pt. Arena, CA (3857'30'' N. lat.), California halibut or 
sea cucumbers). Unless otherwise specified, a vessel operating in the 
open access fishery is subject to, and must not exceed any trip limit, 
frequency limit, and/or size limit for the open access fishery. 
Groundfish species taken in open access fisheries will be managed with 
cumulative trip limits (see paragraph IV.A.(1)(d)), size limits (see 
paragraph IV.A.(6)), seasons (see paragraph IV.A.(7)), and closed 
areas. Cowcod retention is prohibited in all fisheries and groundfish 
vessels operating south of Point Conception, CA must adhere to CCA 
restrictions (see paragraph IV.A.(17)(b)). Retention of yelloweye 
rockfish and canary rockfish is prohibited in all open access 
fisheries. The trip limits, size limits, seasons, and other management 
measures for open access groundfish gear, including exempted trawl 
gear, are listed in Table 5 (North) and Table 5 (South).
    A header in Table 5 (North) and Table 5 (South) approximates the 
RCA (i.e., closed area) for vessels participating in the open access 
fishery. Vessels targeting groundfish may not fish in the RCA. Vessels 
targeting species other than groundfish may fish in the RCA but may not 
retain groundfish caught within the RCA nor groundfish caught outside 
of the RCA boundaries on the same fishing trip. The RCA boundaries are 
defined by latitude and longitude coordinates (see paragraph 
IV.A.(17)), except that under State law, fishing is prohibited by open 
access fixed gear and exempted trawl vessels from the shoreline to a 
10-fm (18-m) depth contour around the Farallon Islands. For a 
definition of the Farallon Islands, see paragraph IV.A.(17)(f).
    For the exempted trawl gear fisheries, exempted trawl gear RCAs, if 
applicable, are detailed in the exempted trawl gear sections at the 
bottom of Table 5 (North) and Table 5 (South). Retention of groundfish 
caught by exempted trawl gear is prohibited in the designated RCAs, 
except that pink shrimp trawl may retain groundfish caught both inside 
and outside the exempted trawl RCA subject to the limits in Table 5 
(North) and Table 5 (South). Retention of groundfish caught by salmon 
troll gear is prohibited in the designated RCAs, except that salmon 
trollers may retain yellowtail rockfish caught both inside and outside 
the non-trawl RCA subject to the limits in Table 5 (North). The trip 
limit at 50 CFR 660.323(a)(1) for black rockfish caught with hook-and-
line gear also applies. (The black rockfish limit is repeated at 
paragraph IV.B.(4).)
    Federal commercial groundfish regulations are not intended to 
supersede any more restrictive State commercial groundfish regulations 
relating to federally-managed groundfish.
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BILLING CODE 3510-22-C
    (2) Groundfish taken with exempted trawl gear by vessels engaged in 
fishing for ridgeback prawns, California halibut, or sea cucumbers. 
Trip limits for groundfish retained in the ridgeback prawn, California 
halibut, or sea cucumber fisheries are in Table 5 (South). The table 
also generally describes the RCAs for vessels participating in these 
fisheries.
    (a) Participation in the California halibut fishery. A trawl vessel 
will be considered participating in the California halibut fishery if:
    (i) It is not fishing under a valid limited entry permit issued 
under 50 CFR 660.333 for trawl gear;
    (ii) All fishing on the trip takes place south of Pt. Arena, CA 
(3857'30'' N. lat.); and
    (iii) The landing includes California halibut of a size required by 
California Fish and Game Code section 8392(a), which states: ``No 
California halibut may be taken, possessed or sold which measures less 
than 22 in (56 cm) in total length, unless it weighs 4 lb (1.8144 kg) 
or more in the round, 3 and one-half lbs (1.587 kg) or more dressed 
with the head on, or 3 lbs (1.3608 kg) or more dressed with the head 
off. Total length means the shortest distance between the tip of the 
jaw or snout, whichever extends farthest while the mouth is closed, and 
the tip of the longest lobe of the tail, measured while the halibut is 
lying flat in natural repose, without resort to any force other than 
the swinging or fanning of the tail.''
    (b) Participation in the sea cucumber fishery. A trawl vessel will 
be considered to be participating in the sea cucumber fishery if:
    (i) It is not fishing under a valid limited entry permit issued 
under 50 CFR 660.333 for trawl gear;
    (ii) All fishing on the trip takes place south of Pt. Arena, CA 
(3857'30'' N. lat.); and
    (iii) The landing includes sea cucumbers taken in accordance with 
California Fish and Game Code, section 8405, which requires a permit 
issued by the State of California.
    (3) Groundfish taken with exempted trawl gear by vessels engaged in 
fishing for pink shrimp. Trip limits for groundfish retained in the 
pink shrimp fishery are in Table 5 (North) and Table 5 (South). 
Notwithstanding section IV.A.(11), a vessel that takes and retains pink 
shrimp and also takes and retains groundfish in either the limited 
entry or

[[Page 11119]]

another open access fishery during the same applicable cumulative limit 
period that it takes and retains pink shrimp (which may be 1 month or 2 
months, depending on the fishery and the time of year), may retain the 
larger of the two limits, but only if the limit(s) for each gear or 
fishery are not exceeded when operating in that fishery or with that 
gear. The limits are not additive; the vessel may not retain a separate 
trip limit for each fishery.
D. Recreational Fishery
    Federal recreational groundfish regulations are not intended to 
supersede any more restrictive State recreational groundfish 
regulations relating to federally-managed groundfish.
    (1) Washington. For each person engaged in recreational fishing in 
the EEZ seaward of Washington, the groundfish bag limit is 15 
groundfish, including rockfish and lingcod, and is open year-round 
(except for lingcod). The following sublimits and closed areas apply:
    (a) Closed Areas.
    (i) Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation Area. The Yelloweye Rockfish 
Conservation Area, or YRCA, is a ``C-shaped'' area which is closed to 
recreational groundfish and halibut fishing. The YRCA is defined by 
latitude and longitude coordinates specified at 50 CFR 660.304(d).
    (ii) Recreational Rockfish Conservation Area. The recreational 
Rockfish Conservation Area, or recreational RCA, is an area which may 
be closed to recreational groundfish fishing inseason. If recreational 
fishing for all groundfish is prohibited seaward of a boundary line 
approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour, a document will be 
published in the Federal Register inseason pursuant to the requirements 
of the APA. Coordinates for the boundary line approximating the 30-fm 
(55-m) depth contour are listed in section IV.A.(17)(f).
    (b) Rockfish. In areas of the EEZ seaward of Washington that are 
open to recreational groundfish fishing, there is a 10 rockfish per day 
bag limit. Taking and retaining canary rockfish and yelloweye rockfish 
is prohibited.
    (c) Lingcod. Recreational fishing for lingcod is closed between 
January 1 and March 12, and between October 17 and December 31. In 
areas of the EEZ seaward of Washington that are open to recreational 
groundfish fishing and when the recreational season for lingcod is open 
(i.e., between March 13-October 16), there is a bag limit of 2 lingcod 
per day, which may be no smaller than 24 in (61 cm) total length.
    (2) Oregon.
    (a) Seasons, closed areas. Recreational fishing for groundfish is 
open from January 1 through December 31 in all areas, except that from 
June 1 through September 30, recreational fishing for groundfish is 
prohibited seaward of a recreational RCA boundary line approximating 
the 40-fm (73-m) depth contour, subject to the provisions in paragraph 
IV.D.(2)(b). Coordinates for the boundary line approximating the 40-fm 
(73-m) depth contour are listed in section IV.A.(17)(f). Recreational 
fishing for all groundfish may be prohibited inseason seaward of a 
boundary line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour. If a 
boundary line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour is 
implemented inseason, a document will be published in the Federal 
Register pursuant to the requirements of the APA. Coordinates for the 
boundary line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour are listed 
in section IV.A.(17)(f).
    (b) Bag limits, size limits. The bag limits for each person engaged 
in recreational fishing in the EEZ seaward of Oregon are two lingcod 
per day, which may be no smaller than 24 in (61 cm) total length; and 
10 marine fish per day, which excludes salmon, tuna, perch species, 
sturgeon, sanddabs, lingcod, striped bass and baitfish (herring, smelt, 
anchovies and sardines), but which includes rockfish, greenling, 
cabezon and other groundfish species. The minimum size limit for 
cabezon retained in the recreational fishery is 16 in (41 cm) and for 
greenling is 10 in (26 cm). Taking and retaining canary rockfish and 
yelloweye rockfish is prohibited. During the all-depth recreational 
fisheries for Pacific halibut, vessels with halibut on board may not 
take and retain, possess or land yelloweye rockfish or canary rockfish.
    (3) California. Seaward of California (north and south of 
4010' N. lat.), California law provides that, in times 
and areas when the recreational fishery is open, there is a 20-fish bag 
limit for all species of finfish, within which no more than 10 fish of 
any one species may be taken or possessed by any one person. Retention 
of cowcod, yelloweye rockfish and canary rockfish is prohibited in the 
recreational fishery seaward of California all year in all areas.
    (a) North of 4010' N. lat. For each person engaged 
in recreational fishing in the EEZ seaward of California north of 
4010' N. lat. to the California/Oregon border, the 
following seasons, bag limits, and size limits apply:
    (i) RCG Complex. The California rockfish, cabezon, greenling 
complex (RCG Complex), as defined in state regulations (Section 1.91, 
Title 14, California Code of Regulations), includes all rockfish, kelp 
greenling, rock greenling, and cabezon. This category does not include 
California scorpionfish, also known as ``sculpin.''
    (A) Seasons. North of 4010' N. lat., recreational 
fishing for the RCG Complex is open from January 1 through December 31.
    (B) Bag limits, boat limits, hook limits. North of 
4010' N. lat., in times and areas when the recreational 
season for the RCG Complex is open, there is a limit of two hooks and 
one line when fishing for rockfish, and the bag limit is 10 rockfish 
per day, of which no more than 2 may be bocaccio. The following daily 
bag limits also apply: no more than 10 cabezon per day and no more than 
10 kelp greenling and 10 rock greenling per day. Multi-day limits are 
authorized by a valid permit issued by California and must not exceed 
the daily limit multiplied by the number of days in the fishing trip.
    (C) Size limits. The following size limits apply: bocaccio may be 
no smaller than 10 in (25 cm) total length; cabezon may be no smaller 
than 15 in (38 cm) total length; and kelp and rock greenling may be no 
smaller than 12 in (30 cm) total length.
    (D) Dressing/Filleting. Cabezon, kelp greenling, and rock greenling 
taken in the recreational fishery may not be filleted at sea. Rockfish 
skin may not be removed when filleting or otherwise dressing rockfish 
taken in the recreational fishery. The following rockfish fillet size 
limits apply: bocaccio fillets may be no smaller than 5 in (12.8 cm) 
and brown-skinned rockfish fillets may be no smaller than 6.5 in (16.6 
cm). ``Brown-skinned'' rockfish include the following species: brown, 
calico, copper, gopher, kelp, olive, speckled, squarespot, and 
yellowtail.
    (ii) Lingcod.
    (A) Seasons. North of 4010' N. lat., recreational 
fishing for lingcod is open from January 1 through December 31.
    (B) Bag limits, boat limits, hook limits. North of 
4010' N. lat., in times and areas when the recreational 
season for lingcod is open, there is a limit of two hooks and one line 
when fishing for lingcod. The bag limit is two lingcod per day from 
January 1 through March 31 and one lingcod per day from April 1 through 
December 31. Multi-day limits are authorized by a valid permit issued 
by California and must not exceed the daily limit multiplied by the 
number of days in the fishing trip.
    (C) Size limits. Lingcod may be no smaller than 24 in (61 cm) total 
length from January 1 through March 31 and

[[Page 11120]]

no smaller than 30 in (77 cm) total length from April 1 through 
December 31.
    (D) Dressing/Filleting. Lingcod fillets may be no smaller than 16 
in (41 cm) in length from January 1 through March 31 and no smaller 
than 21 in (54 cm) from April 1 through December 31 in length.
    (b) South of 4010' N. lat. For each person engaged 
in recreational fishing in the EEZ seaward of California south of 
4010' N. lat., the following seasons, bag limits, size 
limits and closed areas apply:
    (i) Closed Areas.
    (A) Cowcod Conservation Areas. Coordinates defining the boundaries 
of the Cowcod Conservation Areas (CCAs) are described in Federal 
regulations at 50 CFR 660.304(c). Recreational fishing for all 
groundfish is prohibited within the CCAs, except that fishing for 
sanddabs is permitted subject to the provisions in paragraph 
IV.D.(3)(b)(v) and that fishing for species managed under this section 
(not including cowcod, canary, and yelloweye rockfish) are permitted in 
waters shoreward of the 20-fm (37-m) depth contour within the CCAs from 
March 1 through December 31, subject to the bag limits in this section.
    (B) Recreational Rockfish Conservation Areas. The recreational 
Rockfish Conservation Areas, or recreational RCAs, are areas that are 
closed to recreational fishing for groundfish.
    (1) Between 4010' N. lat. and 3427' 
N. lat., recreational fishing for all groundfish, except sanddabs, is 
prohibited seaward of a boundary line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) 
depth contour along the mainland coast and along islands and offshore 
seamounts during January 1 through February 29 and September 30 through 
December 31; is prohibited seaward of the 20-fm (37-m) depth contour 
during May 1 through August 31; and is closed entirely during March 1 
through April 30 (i.e., prohibited seaward of the shoreline). 
Coordinates for the boundary line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth 
contour are listed in section IV.A.(17)(f). Under state law, 
recreational fishing for rockfish, lingcod, and associated species 
limited to cabezon, greenlings of the genus Hexagrammos, California 
scorpionfish, California sheephead, and ocean whitefish are prohibited 
between the shoreline and the 10-fm (18-m) depth contour around the 
Farallon Islands. For a definition of the Farallon Islands, see 
paragraph IV.A.(17)(f). Recreational fishing for certain groundfish 
species is also prohibited in waters of the Cordell Banks, located at 
3802' N. lat. and 12325' W. long., and 
within a 5 nautical mile radius around this point. This portion of the 
Cordell Banks is closed to fishing for rockfish, lingcod, cabezon, kelp 
greenlings and California scorpionfish. (Note: California state 
regulations also prohibit the retention of other greenlings of the 
genus Hexagrammos, California sheephead and ocean whitefish.) For a 
definition of Cordell Banks, see paragraph IV.A.(17)(f).
    (2) South of 3427' N. lat., recreational fishing for 
all groundfish, except sanddabs, is prohibited seaward of a boundary 
line approximating the 60-fm (110-m) depth contour along the mainland 
coast and along islands and offshore seamounts during March 1 through 
December 31 and is closed entirely during January 1 through February 29 
(i.e., prohibited seaward of the shoreline), except in the CCA where 
fishing is prohibited seaward of the 20-fm (37-m) depth contour in 
paragraph (A) of this section. Coordinates for the boundary line 
approximating the 60-fm (110-m) depth contour are listed in section 
IV.A.(17)(f).
    (ii) RCG Complex. The California rockfish, cabezon, greenling 
complex (RCG Complex), as defined in State regulations (section 1.91, 
Title 14, California Code of Regulations), includes all rockfish, kelp 
greenling, rock greenling, and cabezon. This category does not include 
California scorpionfish, also known as ``sculpin.''
    (A) Seasons. Between 4010' N. lat. and 
3427' N. lat., recreational fishing for the RCG Complex 
is open from January 1 through February 29 and from May 1 through 
December 31 (i.e., it's closed from March 1 through April 30). South of 
3427' N. lat., recreational fishing for the RCG Complex 
is open from March 1 through December 31 (i.e., it's closed from 
January 1 through February 29). When recreational fishing for the RCG 
Complex is open, it is permitted only shoreward of the recreational 
RCA, as described in paragraph IV.D.(3)(b)(i)(B) above.
    (B) Bag limits, boat limits, hook limits. South of 
4010' N. lat., in times and areas when the recreational 
season for the RCG Complex is open, there is a limit of two hooks and 
one line when fishing for rockfish, and the bag limit is 10-RCG Complex 
fish per day (not including canary rockfish, yelloweye rockfish and 
cowcod, which are prohibited), of which up to 10 may be rockfish, no 
more than 1 of which may be bocaccio and no more than two of which may 
be shallow nearshore rockfish. (Note: The shallow nearshore rockfish 
group off California are composed of kelp, grass, black-and-yellow, 
China, and gopher rockfishes.) Also within the 10-RCG Complex fish per 
day limit, no more than two fish per day may be greenling (kelp and/or 
other greenlings) and no more than 3 fish per day may be cabezon. 
Lingcod, California scorpionfish and sanddabs taken in recreational 
fisheries off California do not count toward the 10 RCG Complex fish 
per day bag limit. Multi-day limits are authorized by a valid permit 
issued by California and must not exceed the daily limit multiplied by 
the number of days in the fishing trip.
    (C) Size limits. The following size limits apply: Bocaccio may be 
no smaller than 10 in (25 cm) total length, cabezon may be no smaller 
than 15 in (38 cm), and kelp and other greenlings may be no smaller 
than 12 in (30 cm).
    (D) Dressing/Filleting. Cabezon, kelp greenling, and rock greenling 
taken in the recreational fishery may not be filleted at sea. Rockfish 
skin may not be removed when filleting or otherwise dressing rockfish 
taken in the recreational fishery. The following rockfish filet size 
limits apply: Bocaccio filets may be no smaller than 5 in (12.8 cm) and 
brown-skinned rockfish filets may be no smaller than 6.5 in (16.6 cm). 
``Brown-skinned'' rockfish include the following species: brown, 
calico, copper, gopher, kelp, olive, speckled, squarespot, and 
yellowtail.
    (iii) California scorpionfish. California scorpionfish only occur 
south of 4010' N. lat.
    (A) Seasons. Between 4010' N. lat. and 
3427' N. lat., recreational fishing for California 
scorpionfish is open from January 1 through February 29 and from May 1 
through December 31 (i.e., it's closed from March 1 through April 30). 
South of 3427' N. lat., recreational fishing for 
California scorpionfish is open from March 1 through April 31 and from 
November 1 through December 31 (i.e., it's closed from January 1 
through February 29 and from May 1 through October 31). When 
recreational fishing for California scorpionfish is open, it is 
permitted only shoreward of the recreational RCA, as described in 
paragraph IV.D.(3)(b)(i)(B) above.
    (B) Bag limits, boat limits, hook limits. South of 
4010' N. lat., in times and areas where the recreational 
season for California scorpionfish is open, and the bag limit is 5 
California scorpionfish per day. California scorpionfish do not count 
against the 10 RCG Complex fish per day limit. Multi-day limits are 
authorized by a valid permit issued by California and must not exceed 
the daily limit multiplied by the number of days in the fishing trip.

[[Page 11121]]

    (C) Size limits. California scorpionfish may be no smaller than 10 
in (25 cm) total length.
    (D) Dressing/Filleting. California scorpionfish fillets may be no 
smaller than 5 in (12.8 cm).
    (iv) Lingcod.
    (A) Seasons. Between 4010' N. lat. and 
3427' N. lat., recreational fishing for lingcod is open 
from January 1 through February 29 and from May 1 through December 31 
(i.e., it's closed from March 1 through April 30). South of 
3427' N. lat., recreational fishing for lingcod is open 
from March 1 through December 31 (i.e., it's closed from January 1 
through February 29). When recreational fishing for lingcod is open, it 
is permitted only shoreward of the recreational RCA, as described in 
paragraph IV.D.(3)(b)(i)(B) above.
    (B) Bag limits, boat limits, hook limits. South of 
4010' N. lat., in times and areas when the recreational 
season for lingcod is open, there is a limit of two hooks and one line 
when fishing for lingcod. The bag limit is two lingcod per day from 
January 1 through March 31 and one lingcod per day from April 1 through 
December 31. Lingcod do not count against the 10-RCG Complex fish per 
day limit. Multi-day limits are authorized by a valid permit issued by 
California and must not exceed the daily limit multiplied by the number 
of days in the fishing trip.
    (C) Size limits. In times and areas when the recreational season 
for lingcod is open, lingcod may be no smaller than 24 in (61 cm) total 
length from January 1 through March 31 and no smaller than 30 in (77 
cm) total length from April 1 through December 31.
    (D) Dressing/Filleting. In times and areas when the recreational 
season for lingcod is open, lingcod fillets may be no smaller than 16 
in (41 cm) in length from January 1 through March 31 and no smaller 
than 21 in (54 cm) from April 1 through December 31 in length.
    (v) Sanddabs. South of 4010' N. lat., recreational 
fishing for sanddabs is permitted both shoreward of and within the 
closed areas, as described in section IV.D.(3)(b)(i) above. 
Recreational fishing for sanddabs is permitted within the closed areas, 
subject to a limit of up to 12 hooks, ``Number 2'' or smaller, which 
measure 11 mm (0.44 inches) point to shank, and up to 2 lb (0.91 kg) of 
weight per line. There is no bag limit, season, or size limit for 
sanddabs, however, it is prohibited to fillet sanddabs at sea.

V. Washington Coastal Tribal Fisheries

    In 1994, the United States formally recognized that the four 
Washington coastal treaty Indian tribes (Makah, Quileute, Hoh, and 
Quinault) have treaty rights to fish for groundfish in the Pacific 
Ocean, and concluded that, in general terms, the quantification of 
those rights is 50 percent of the harvestable surplus of groundfish 
that pass through the tribes usual and accustomed fishing areas 
(described at 50 CFR 660.324). For further information, see the 
proposed rule for this action at 69 FR 1380, January 8, 2004.
    The Assistant Administrator (AA) announces the following tribal 
allocations for 2004, including those that are the same as in 2003. 
Trip limits for certain species were recommended by the tribes and the 
Council and are specified here with the tribal allocations.
A. Sablefish
    The tribal allocation is 728.5 mt, 10 percent of the total catch 
OY, less 3 percent estimated discard mortality.
B. Rockfish
    (1) For the commercial harvest of black rockfish off Washington 
State, a harvest guideline of: 20,000 lb (9,072 kg) north of Cape 
Alava, WA (4809'30'' N. lat.) and 10,000 lb (4,536 kg) 
between Destruction Island, WA (4740'00'' N. lat.) and 
Leadbetter Point, WA (4638'10'' N. lat.).
    (2) Thornyheads are subject to a 300-lb (136-kg) trip limit.
    (3) Canary rockfish are subject to a 300-lb (136-kg) trip limit.
    (4) Yelloweye rockfish are subject to a 100-lb (45-kg) trip limit.
    (5) Yellowtail rockfish taken in the tribal mid-water trawl 
fisheries are subject to a cumulative limit of 150,000 lb (13,608 kg) 
per 2-month period for the entire fleet. Landings of widow rockfish 
must not exceed 10 percent of the weight of yellowtail rockfish landed 
in any two-month period. These limits may be adjusted by an individual 
tribe inseason to minimize the incidental catch of canary rockfish and 
widow rockfish.
    (6) Other rockfish, including minor nearshore, minor shelf, and 
minor slope rockfish groups are subject to a 300-lb (136-kg) trip limit 
per species or species group, or to the non-tribal limited entry trip 
limit for those species if those limits are less restrictive than 300 
lb (136 kg) per trip.
    (7) Rockfish taken during open competition tribal commercial 
fisheries for Pacific halibut will not be subject to trip limits.
C. Lingcod
    Lingcod are subject to a 450-lb (204-kg) daily trip limit and a 
1,350-lb (612-kg) weekly limit.
D. Flatfish and Other Fish
    Treaty fishing vessels using bottom trawl gear will be subject to 
the limits applicable to the non-tribal limited entry trawl fishery for 
Pacific cod, English sole, rex sole, arrowtooth flounder, and other 
flatfish. Treaty fishing vessels are restricted to a 30,000 lb (13,608 
kg) per 2-month limit for petrale sole for the entire year.
E. Pacific Whiting
    Whiting allocations will be announced when the final OY is 
announced.

Classification

    These final specifications and management measures for 2004 are 
issued under the authority of, and are in accordance with, the 
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the FMP, and 50 CFR part 660 subpart G (the 
regulations implementing the FMP).
    The 2004 specifications and management measures are intended to 
protect overfished and other depressed stocks while also allowing as 
much harvest of more abundant groundfish stocks as possible during the 
course of the year. NMFS received the Council's recommendations on 
specifications and management measures in September 2003. Because of 
the timing of the receipt, development, review, and analysis of the 
fishery information necessary for publishing the proposed rule for the 
specifications and management measures, the proposed rule could not be 
made available for public comment prior to January 8, 2004. The timing 
of this final rule balances the need to publish and make effective a 
final rule as early as possible in the calendar year against the need 
to provide public comments on the proposed rule.
    Except for amendments to Sec.  660.370, a 30-day delay in 
effectiveness for this final rule would in fact be a 60-day delay, 
because most of the trip limits are 2-month limits, so most fishers 
could exceed the entire 2-month limit before the rules went into effect 
after 30 days. In addition, none of the large RCAs would be in place, 
thus a delay in effectiveness would allow fishing in an area this final 
rule closes for conservation purposes. For example, if fishing were 
permitted in areas that this rule designates as RCAs, overharvests of 
overfished species would occur. Depending on the extent of the 
overharvest, fishing for co-occurring abundant stocks would need to be 
more severely restricted, or possibly closed for the remainder of the 
year to protect overfished species. If overfished species

[[Page 11122]]

harvest levels were completely taken early in the fishing year, fishing 
opportunities for co-occurring abundant stocks would have to be closed 
for the remainder of the year to protect overfished stocks. Thus, 
excessive harvest could cause harm to overfished species. Delay in 
publishing these measures could also require unnecessarily restrictive 
measures, including possible fishery closures, later in the year to 
make up for the excessive harvest that would be caused by late 
implementation of these regulations. Thus, a delay in effectiveness 
could ultimately cause economic harm to the fishing industry and 
associated fishing communities. For these reasons, the AA finds good 
cause under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3) to waive the requirement to delay the 
effective date of this rule for 30 days, except for amendments to Sec.  
660.370, which are effective April 8, 2004.
    The Council prepared an FEIS for this action; a notice of 
availability was published on January 16, 2004 (69 FR 2593). A copy of 
this FEIS is available from the Council (see ADDRESSES). On February 
26, 2004, NMFS issued a ROD that documents the agency's final decisions 
concerning the decision by the NMFS Northwest Region to approve the 
Council's preferred OY alternative for 2004 groundfish ABC and OY 
specifications and management measures for Pacific Coast groundfish. 
The 2004 specifications and management measures are expected to have 
positive effects on the biological environment and negative effects on 
fishing communities and the socio-economic environment. The 2004 
management regime is structured to protect overfished groundfish 
species and includes the depth based management regime introduced in 
2003 that closes large areas of the continental shelf to groundfish 
fishing. Closure of important fishing areas is expected to have 
significant impacts on the human environment.
    This final rule has been determined to not be significant for 
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
    Pursuant to Executive Order 13175, this final rule was developed 
after meaningful consultation and collaboration with tribal officials 
from the area covered by the FMP. Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act at 16 
U.S.C. 1852(b)(5), one of the voting members of the Pacific Council 
must be a representative of an Indian tribe with federally recognized 
fishing rights from the area of the Council's jurisdiction. In 
addition, regulations implementing the FMP establish a procedure by 
which the tribes with treaty fishing rights in the area covered by the 
FMP request new allocations or regulations specific to the tribes, in 
writing, before the first of the two Council meetings at which the 
Council considers groundfish specifications and management measures. 
The regulations at 50 CFR 660.324(d) further states ``the Secretary 
will develop tribal allocations and regulations under this paragraph in 
consultation with the affected tribe(s) and, insofar as possible, with 
tribal consensus.'' The tribal management measures in this final rule 
were developed following these procedures. The tribal representative on 
the Council made a motion to adopt the tribal management measures, 
which was passed by the Council, and those management measures, which 
were developed and proposed by the tribes, are included in this 
proposed rule.
    NMFS prepared an FRFA describing the impact of this action on small 
entities. The IRFA was summarized in the proposed rule published on 
January 8, 2004 (69 FR 1380). The following is the summary of the FRFA. 
The need for and objectives of this final rule are contained in the 
SUMMARY and in the Background section under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. 
NMFS did not receive any comments on the IRFA or on the proposed rule 
regarding the economic effects of this final rule.
    These final 2004 annual specifications and management measures 
allow West Coast commercial and recreational fisheries participants to 
fish the harvestable surplus of more abundant groundfish stocks, while 
also ensuring that those fisheries do not exceed the allowable catch 
levels intended to protect overfished and depleted stocks. The form of 
the specifications, in ABCs and OYs, follows the guidance of the 
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the national standard guidelines, and the FMP for 
protecting and conserving fish stocks. Annual management measures 
include trip and bag limits, size limits, time/area closures, gear 
restrictions, and other measures intended to allow year-round West 
Coast groundfish landings without compromising overfished species 
rebuilding measures.
    Approximately 1,560 vessels participate in the West Coast 
groundfish fisheries. Of those, about 410 vessels are registered to 
limited entry permits issued for either trawl, longline, or pot gear. 
About 1,150 vessels land groundfish against open access limits while 
either directly targeting groundfish or taking groundfish incidentally 
in fisheries directed at non-groundfish species. All but 10-20 of those 
vessels are considered small businesses by the Small Business 
Administration. There are also about 450 groundfish buyers on the West 
Coast, approximately 5 percent of which are responsible for about 80 
percent of West Coast groundfish purchases. In the 2001 recreational 
fisheries, there were 106 Washington charter vessels engaged in salt 
water fishing outside of Puget Sound, 232 charter vessels active on the 
Oregon coast and 415 charter vessels active on the California coast.
    The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that actions taken to implement 
FMPs be consistent with the 10 national standards. National standard 8 
(section 301(a)(8)) requires that conservation and management measures, 
consistent with the conservation requirements of the Act, ``take into 
account the importance of fishery resources to fishing communities in 
order to (A) provide for the sustained participation of such 
communities and (B), to the extent practicable, minimize adverse 
economic impacts on such communities.'' Commercial and recreational 
fisheries for Pacific Coast groundfish contribute to the economies and 
shape the cultures of numerous fishing communities in Washington, 
Oregon, and California. Meeting the needs of fishing communities has 
become increasingly difficult because the Council manages a fishery 
that is overcapitalized and contains stocks that are overfished. In 
recommending this year's specifications and management measures, the 
Council tried to accommodate some of the needs of those communities 
within the constraints of Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements to rebuild 
overfished stocks, prevent overfishing, and minimize bycatch. In 
general, the Council recommended the largest harvest of the more 
abundant stocks as possible, consistent with conservation needs of the 
fish stocks.
    The Council considered five alternative specifications and 
management measures regimes for 2004: The no action alternative, which 
would have implemented the 2003 management regime for 2004; the low OY 
alternative, which set a series of conservative groundfish harvest 
levels that were either intended to achieve high probabilities of 
rebuilding within TMAX for overfished species or modest 
levels of harvest for more abundant stocks; the high OY alternative, 
which set harvest levels that were either intended to achieve lower 
probabilities of rebuilding within TMAX for overfished 
species or higher harvest levels for more abundant stocks, within 
Council harvest parameters described earlier in this document; the 
medium OY alternative, which set harvest levels intermediate to those 
of the low and

[[Page 11123]]

high alternatives; and the Council OY alternative (preferred 
alternative) which was the same as the medium OY alternative, but with 
more precautionary OY levels for bocaccio and darkblotched rockfish and 
more precautionary recreational fisheries management than the medium OY 
alternative. Each of these alternatives included both harvest levels 
(specifications) and management measures needed to achieve those 
harvest levels, with the most restrictive management measures 
corresponding to the lowest OYs.
    Each of the alternatives analyzed by the Council was expected to 
have different overall effects on the economy. Among other factors, the 
FEIS for this action reviewed alternatives other than the no action 
alternative for expected declines in revenue and income from 2003 
levels. The low OY alternative was expected to reduce commercial ex-
vessel revenue by $11.5 million in 2004, reduce overall commercial 
harvest income by $6.2 million, and reduce recreational fishery income 
(mainly charter businesses) by $95 million. The high OY alternative was 
expected to increase commercial ex-vessel revenue by $3.3 million in 
2004, increase overall commercial harvest income by $6.9 million, and 
increase recreational fishery income by $122 million. The medium OY 
alternative was expected to increase commercial ex-vessel revenue by 
$3.3 million in 2004, increase overall commercial harvest income by 
$4.8 million, and increase recreational fishery income by $112 million. 
The Council's OY alternative was expected to increase commercial ex-
vessel revenue by $2.8 million in 2004, increase overall commercial 
harvest income by $4 million, and increase recreational fishery income 
by $55 million. The Council's OY alternative was chosen as the 
preferred alternative because it met the conservation requirements of 
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, while reducing to the extent possible the 
adverse economic impacts of these conservation measures on the fishing 
industries and associated communities.
    For the 2003 management cycle, NMFS had introduced depth-based 
management, which had a greater effect on both commercial and 
recreational fisheries income between 2002 and 2003 than retaining 
depth-based management will have between 2003 and 2004. The modest 
increases in income expected for the various fishing communities in 
2004 are expected to result from a larger bocaccio OY based on a new 
bocaccio stock assessment. With a larger bocaccio OY, fisheries that 
target more abundant stocks that co-occur with bocaccio will have 
greater access to those stocks in 2004.
    The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Act of 1996 requires a 
plain language guide to assist small entities in complying with this 
final rule. NMFS has produced a public notice for the 2004 fishing 
season that includes trip limit tables and descriptions of the 2004 
management measures. Contact NMFS to request a copy of this public 
notice (see ADDRESSES) or see the NMFS Northwest Region's groundfish 
Web site at http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/1sustfsh/gdfsh01.htm.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660

    Administrative practice and procedure, American Samoa, Fisheries, 
Fishing, Guam, Hawaiian Natives, Indians, Northern Mariana Islands, 
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

    Dated: February 27, 2004.
Rebecca Lent,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.

0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is amended as 
follows:

PART 660--FISHERIES OFF WEST COAST STATES AND IN THE WESTERN 
PACIFIC

0
l. The authority citation for part 660 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.


0
2. In Sec.  660.302, the definitions of ``Closure,'' ``Fishery 
Management Area,'' and ``Trip limits'' are revised and the definitions 
for ``Exempted gear,'' ``Legal fish,'' and ``North-South management 
area'' are added in alphabetical order to read as follows:


Sec.  660.302  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Closure, when referring to closure of a fishery, means that taking 
and retaining, possessing, or landing the particular species or species 
group is prohibited. Unless otherwise announced in the Federal 
Register, offloading must begin before the time the fishery closes.
* * * * *
    Exempted gear means all types of fishing gear except longline, trap 
(or pot), and groundfish trawl gear. Exempted gear includes trawl gear 
used to take pink shrimp, ridgeback prawns, California halibut south of 
Pt. Arena, CA, and sea cucumber south of Pt. Arena, CA under the 
authority of a State of California limited entry permit for the sea 
cucumber fishery.
* * * * *
    Fishery management area means the EEZ off the coasts of Washington, 
Oregon, and California between 3 and 200 nm offshore, and bounded on 
the north by the Provisional International Boundary between the United 
States and Canada, and bounded on the south by the International 
Boundary between the United States and Mexico. All groundfish possessed 
between 0-200 nm offshore or landed in Washington, Oregon, or 
California are presumed to have been taken and retained from the EEZ, 
unless otherwise demonstrated by the person in possession of those 
fish.
* * * * *
    Legal fish means fish legally taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed in accordance with the provisions of 50 CFR part 660, the 
Magnuson-Stevens Act, any document issued under part 660, and any other 
regulation promulgated or permit issued under the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
* * * * *
    North-South management area means the management areas defined at 
Sec.  660.304(a) or defined and bounded by one or more of the commonly 
used geographic coordinates at Sec.  660.304(b) for the purposes of 
implementing different management measures in separate sections of the 
U.S. West Coast.
* * * * *
    Trip limits. Trip limits are used in the commercial fishery to 
specify the maximum amount of a fish species or species group that may 
legally be taken and retained, possessed, or landed, per vessel, per 
fishing trip, or cumulatively per unit of time, or the number of 
landings that may be made from a vessel in a given period of time, as 
follows:
    (1) A per trip limit is the total allowable amount of a groundfish 
species or species group, by weight, or by percentage of weight of 
legal fish on board, that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel from a single fishing trip.
    (2) A daily trip limit is the maximum amount of a groundfish 
species or species group that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel in 24 consecutive hours, starting at 0001 hours local 
time (l.t.) Only one landing of groundfish may be made in that 24-hour 
period. Daily trip limits may not be accumulated during multiple day 
trips.
    (3) A weekly trip limit is the maximum amount of a groundfish 
species or species group that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel in 7 consecutive days, starting at 0001 hours l.t. on 
Sunday and ending at 2400 hours l.t. on Saturday. Weekly trip limits 
may not be accumulated during multiple week

[[Page 11124]]

trips. If a calendar week includes days within two different months, a 
vessel is not entitled to two separate weekly limits during that week.
    (4) A cumulative trip limit is the maximum amount of a groundfish 
species or species group that may be taken and retained, possessed, or 
landed per vessel in a specified period of time without a limit on the 
number of landings or trips, unless otherwise specified. The cumulative 
trip limit periods for limited entry and open access fisheries, which 
start at 0001 hours l.t. and end at 2400 hours l.t., are as follows, 
unless otherwise specified:
    (i) The 2-month or ``major'' cumulative limit periods are: January 
1-February 28/29, March 1-April 30, May 1-June 30, July 1-August 31, 
September 1-October 31, and, November 1-December 31.
    (ii) One month means the first day through the last day of the 
calendar month.
    (iii) One week means 7 consecutive days, Sunday through Saturday.
* * * * *

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3. In Sec.  660.303, paragraphs (d)(1) and (d)(5)(i)(D) are added to 
read as follows:


Sec.  660.303  Reporting and recordkeeping.

* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (1) Declaration reports for trawl vessels intending to fish in a 
conservation area. The operator of any vessel registered to a limited 
entry permit with a trawl endorsement; any vessel using trawl gear, 
including exempted gear used to take pink shrimp, ridgeback prawns, 
California halibut and sea cucumber; or any tribal vessel using trawl 
gear must provide NMFS with a declaration report, as specified at Sec.  
660.303(d)(5) of this section to identify the intent to fish within the 
CCA, as defined at Sec.  660.304, or any trawl RCA, as defined in the 
groundfish annual or biennial management measures that are published in 
the Federal Register.
* * * * *
    (5) * * *
    (i) * * *
    (D) Trawl gear including exempted gear used to take pink shrimp, 
ridgeback prawns, California halibut south of Pt. Arena, CA, and sea 
cucumber.
* * * * *
    4. In Sec.  660.304, the second paragraph (c)(2) is correctly 
redesignated as paragraph (c)(2)(ii), paragraph (d) is redesignated as 
paragraph (c)(3), paragraph (e) is redesignated as paragraph (d), and 
paragraph (b) is added to read as follows:


Sec.  660.304  Management areas, including conservation areas, and 
commonly used geographic coordinates.

* * * * *
    (b) Commonly used geographic coordinates.
    (1) Washington/Oregon border--4616' N. lat.
    (2) Cape Falcon, OR--4546' N. lat.
    (3) Cape Lookout, OR--4520'15'' N. lat.
    (4) Cape Blanco, OR--4250' N. lat.
    (5) Oregon/California border--4200' N. lat.
    (6) Cape Mendocino, CA--4030' N. lat.
    (7) North/South management line--4010' N. lat.
    (8) Point Arena, CA--3857'30'' N. lat.
    (9) Point San Pedro, CA--3735'40'' N. lat.
    (10) Point Lopez, CA--3600' N. lat.
    (11) Point Conception, CA--3427' N. lat.
* * * * *

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5. In Sec.  660.306, paragraphs (b), (aa), (bb), and (cc) are added to 
read as follows:


Sec.  660.306  Prohibitions.

* * * * *
    (b) Retain any prohibited species (defined in Sec.  660.302 and 
restricted in Sec.  660.323(c)) caught by means of fishing gear 
authorized under this subpart or unless authorized by part 600 of this 
chapter. Prohibited species must be returned to the sea as soon as 
practicable with a minimum of injury when caught and brought on board.
* * * * *
    (aa) Fishing in conservation areas. Fish with any trawl gear, 
including exempted gear used to take pink shrimp, ridgeback prawns, 
California halibut south of Pt. Arena, CA, and sea cucumber; or with 
trawl gear from a tribal vessel or with any gear from a vessel 
registered to a groundfish limited entry permit in a conservation area 
unless the vessel owner or operator has a valid declaration 
confirmation code or receipt for fishing in a conservation area as 
specified at Sec.  660.303(d)(5).
    (bb) Operate any vessel registered to a limited entry permit with a 
trawl endorsement and trawl gear on board in a Trawl Rockfish 
Conservation Area or a Cowcod Conservation Area (as defined at Sec.  
660.302), except for purposes of continuous transiting, with all 
groundfish trawl gear stowed in accordance with Sec.  660.322(b)(8), or 
except as authorized in the annual or biennial groundfish management 
measures published in the Federal Register.
    (cc) Operate any vessel registered to a limited entry permit with a 
longline or trap (pot) endorsement and longline and/or trap gear 
onboard in a Nontrawl Rockfish Conservation Area or a Cowcod 
Conservation Area (as defined at Sec.  660.302), except for purposes of 
continuous transiting, or except as authorized in the annual or 
biennial groundfish management measures published in the Federal 
Register.

0
6. In Sec.  660.323, the introductory text to paragraph (c) is added to 
read as follows:


Sec.  660.323  Catch restrictions.

* * * * *
    (c) Prohibited species. Groundfish species or species groups under 
the PCGFMP for which quotas have been achieved and/or the fishery 
closed are prohibited species. In addition the following are prohibited 
species: * * *
* * * * *

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7. In Sec.  660.335, paragraph (e)(3)(i) is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  660.335  Limited entry permits-renewal, combination, stacking, 
change of permit ownership or permit holdership, and transfer.

    (e) * * *
    (3) * * *
    (i) Changes in vessel registration on permits will take effect no 
sooner than the first day of the next major limited entry cumulative 
limit period following the date that SFD receives the signed permit 
transfer form and the original limited entry permit. Major cumulative 
limit periods are defined as two-month trip limit periods in Sec.  
660.302. Unless otherwise specified in the Federal Register, the major 
cumulative limit periods begin on January 1, March 1, May 1, July 1, 
September 1, and November 1. No transfer is effective until the limited 
entry permit has been reissued as registered with the new vessel.
* * * * *

0
8. In Sec.  660.370, paragraphs (a) and (b) are added to read as 
follows:


Sec.  660.370  Overfished species rebuilding plans.

* * * * *
    (a) Darkblotched rockfish. The target year for rebuilding the 
darkblotched rockfish stock to BMSY is 2030. The harvest 
control rule to be used to rebuild the darkblotched rockfish stock is 
an annual harvest rate of F=0.032.
    (b) Pacific ocean perch (POP). The target year for rebuilding the 
POP stock to BMSY is 2027. The harvest control rule to be 
used to rebuild the POP stock is an annual harvest rate of F=0.0257.

[FR Doc. 04-4744 Filed 3-1-04; 11:32 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P