The Brisons (the name is French: brisant, 'reef, breaker') are and high and are said to resemble General
Charles de Gaulle lying on his back ("General de Gaulle in his bath"). The rocks are connected to Gribba Point (, meaning
head of the reefs) by the Guthen Gwidden reef (, meaning
white hidden one). The gap in the reef is called the Adgiwar Gap (, meaning
green gap). In 1878, an article in
the Cornishman newspaper names the reef between the ″Brissons″ and the land as Bridges, and the reef had three gaps; the nearest known as Rose-an-pons. ==Wildlife and ecology==