Beauchene Island

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Beauchene Island
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Beauchene Island

Beauchene Island is one of the Falkland Islands, lying thirty miles south of Sea Lion Island, the nearest land. It was discovered in 1701 by Jacques Gouin de Beauchene and named for him.

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[edit] Geography

Beauchene is the most isolated island of the Falkland archipelago. It is uninhabited, and is approximated 2 square miles in size.

It is divided into two parts connected by a sandy isthmus: the south, with a hill of 82 metres in height, and a north eastern part with bare rocks.

There is a natural anchorage on the east side of the island, but this can only be used in fair weather.

[edit] History

Antoine de la Roche may have sighted Beauchene island as early as April 1675. However, this is by no means certain; De la Roche had been circling Cape Horn and was blown off course. What he saw is usually said to be South Georgia, which fits his descriptions better, particularly of high ice covered mountains [1], but supporters of Argentina's claim to South Georgia more often claim it was Beauchene.

A while after its official discovery in 1701 by Jacques Gouin de Beauchene, seal trappers tried to settle the island unsuccessfully.

In 1834, the American McArthur landed 100 people on the island, driving the local sea lions to extinction (they have since returned).

The island is currently uninhabited, but there the ruins of a group of houses built in the 1830s, on the west side of the island.

The first proper scientific expedition landed in 1951 by helicopter, staying for a month.

During the Falklands War, there was a Argentine wreck on a reef just south of the islands, and British soldiers lived for around four weeks there.

[edit] Flora and fauna

The island is a nature reserve and is covered in tussac grass and is known for its colony of black-browed albatrosses. Other wildlife includes rockhopper penguins, while the coast is known for its caves. It is also known for its peat, which forms at around ten times the rate of anywhere else in the world. The process by which it forms so fast is not understood fully.

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