One of the best Lists for Ships list is the ISTG, the International Ships Transciption Guild (I believe). This can be accessed on "Cyndi's List" and possibly on Rootsweb's lists. The ISTG is staffed by volunteers and is continually being up-dated, so if you don't find it now, it's worth repeat visits. This site contains port of departure, arrival and most passenger lists. Two things to bear in mind is that many people did not leave from ports near their home or if they did, the last port of departure from Scotland may have been in Ireland or England, which closed down emigration for about 20 years, ca. 1638-1660 (during the Restoration). The other is that some people crossed the Atlantic via fishing vessels to the fishing grounds off Newfoundland or ships to the Carribean, so they did not appear on the passenger ship lists in the expected ports, according to David Cressy in "Coming Over, Migration and Communication between England and New England in the Senteenth Century", 1989, Cam- bridge Press, ISBN 0- 521- 33850-6 (ppbk). This book is extremely informative about occupations of migrants, costs of passage, necessary supplies, etc. and has a good biography for more data. From this book, I found 2 ancestors who were unrelated on a single ship. Daphne Jacob