Tryal Rocks
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Tryal Rocks, sometimes spelled Trial Rocks or Tryall Rocks, formerly known as Ritchie's Reef or the Greyhound's Shoal, is a reef of rock located in the Indian Ocean off the northwest coast of Australia, about 16 kilometres (10 mi) northwest of the outer edge of the Montebello Islands group. It is named for the Tryall, the first known shipwreck in Australian waters, which sunk after striking the then-uncharted rocks in 1622. Described as "the theme and dread of every voyager to the eastern islands for the last two centuries", their location was sought for over three centuries before finally being determined in the 1960s.
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[edit] Location and description
According to the Gazetteer of Australia, the Australian Hydrographic Service places them at ,[1] whereas Western Australia's Department of Land Information places them two minutes further east at .[2] They are about 16 kilometres (10 mi) north west of the Montebello Islands, and around 100 kilometres (60 mi) off the Australian mainland. Politically, they are part of Western Australia.
Another source[3] places the rocks at and describes them and the immediate locale as: "two coral reefs, close together, about 1.25 miles in length NE-SW; the S reef dries 2.7m. The rocks are located about 9 miles NW of Montebello Islands. Depths of less than 20m lie within 6 miles SW and 4 miles NW of Tryal Rocks; the sea breaks on these shallower depths in bad weather. A 5.5m patch lies 3 miles W of North West Island Light. The channel between Tryal Rocks and Montebello Islands is 7 miles wide, with depths of 31 to 40m, and may be used by vessels proceeding to the E side of Barrow Island."
[edit] History
[edit] Wreck of the Tryall
The Tryall was only the second English ship to attempt to sail from the Cape of Good Hope to Batavia (now Jakarta, Indonesia) along the Brouwer Route, a route pioneered by the Dutch and used routinely by them since 1616. The Brouwer Route drastically shortened voyage times by keeping ships sailing eastwards in the Roaring Forties for as long as possible before turning north. The captain of the Tryall, John Brookes, grossly underestimated the longitude of the ship, and ended up around 1000 kilometres (600 mi) further east than the route specified. On turning north, the Tryall found itself skirting the west coast of Australia. Around 11pm on 25 May 1622, it struck the Tryal Rocks and sunk. 46 of 139 lives were saved, including Brookes'.[4]
Brookes' subsequent report was extremely vague; it did not even give a position for the wreck. James Henderson characterises this as deliberate obfuscation, an attempt to avoid the blame for being so far off course. Consequently, the Tryal Rocks were originally thought to be well to the west of their actual location.[4] Concerned for the threat to their own ships, the Dutch placed the reef on their charts, but "exactly south of the western extremity of Java according to the statements made by the English sailors".[5] This represents an error of around ten degrees of longitude.
[edit] Searches
Numerous Dutch and English sailors searched for the rocks over the centuries. The first attempt was in 1636, when two Dutch ships were sent to search for the Tryal Rocks at their purported location.[4] Sickness prevented William Dampier from searching for the rocks in 1700; on 11 June of that year he wrote: "I kept on my course to the westward till the 15th, and then altered it. My design was to seek for the Tryal Rocks; but, having been sick 5 or 6 days without any fresh provision or other good nourishment aboard, and seeing no likelihood of my recovery, I rather chose to go to some port in time than to beat here any longer."[6]
The Tryal Rocks continued to be marked on charts, but gradually sailors began to doubt their existence. In 1705, the captain of the Jane wrote in his journal: "Hove to, according to custom, on account of the Tryal Rocks (if they exist), for although they are reported to extend 20 league in length I was informed by the Commodore of the Dutch Ships... that he had never heard of these rocks being seen." He went on to correctly surmise that "If they exist they must lie much further east than in the route toward Java Head."[4]
Matthew Flinders undertook a thorough search for the Tryal Rocks in April 1803, but found nothing, and concluded that "It should appear from our examination, that the Trial Rocks do not lie in the space comprehended between the latitudes 20° 15' and 21° south, and the longitudes 103° 25' and 106° 30' east."[7] Consequently, the British Admiralty declared that they didn't exist.[4]
In 1818, the British brig Greyhound, captained by Lieutenant Ritchie, encountered the true Tryal Rocks. They were not recognised as such, however, as the Tryal Rocks were then thought not to exist, and they had previously been thought to be well to the west of Ritchie's reef. In 1920, Ritchie's discovery was published as "Ritchie's Reef"; it was also sometimes referred to as "the Greyhound's Shoal".[4]
In October 1820, Phillip Parker King suggested that the Tryal Rocks were the Montebello Islands: "May not the Tryal Rocks also be some of the low islands that skirt the coast? ...There remains no doubt in my mind but that Barrow's Island and Trimouille Island, and the numerous reefs around them, are the identical Tryal Rocks which have been the theme and dread of every voyager to the eastern islands for the two last centuries... the only argument against the probability of this supposition is their longitude; but during the month of July the current sets with great strength to the westward and might occasion considerable errors in ships' reckoning, which, in former days, were so imperfectly kept that no dependence can be placed upon them."[8] This error was repeated in August 1840, when John Lort Stokes placed the Tryal Rocks between the Montebello Islands and Barrow Island.[9] Admiralty Sailing Directions of 1917 further claimed that "Tryal Rocks awash at high water are near the outer edge of the S.W. part of Monte Bello Islands reef and five miles off the North extreme of Barrow Island".[4]
In 1928, Commander Rupert Gould made a survey of the area and declared that Ritchie Reef was definitely the Tryal Rocks. Final confirmation of this came in 1969, when an exploration team found the wreck of the Tryall there.[4]
[edit] References
- ^ Tryal Rocks (Australian Hydrographic Service). Gazetteer of Australia online. Geoscience Australia, Australian Government.
- ^ Tryal Rocks (Western Australia). Gazetteer of Australia online. Geoscience Australia, Australian Government.
- ^ Northwest Coast of Australia - Cape Leveque to North West Cape. US Government Printing Office 175. Retrieved on December 15, 2006.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Henderson, James A. (1993). Phantoms of the Tryall. Perth: St George Books. ISBN 0 86778 053 3.
- ^ Heeres, J. E. (1899). The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia. London: Luzac and Co.. Retrieved on December 12, 2006.
- ^ Dampier, William (1729). A Continuation of a Voyage to New Holland, Etc. in the Year 1699. London: Printed for James and John Knapton at the Crown in St. Paul's Churchyard. Retrieved on December 12, 2006.
- ^ Flinders, Matthew (1814). A Voyage to Terra Australis. London: G. and W. Nicol. Retrieved on December 12, 2006.
- ^ King, Phillip Parker (1825). Narrative of a Survey of the Intertropical and Western Coasts of Australia: Volume 1. London: John Murray. Retrieved on December 12, 2006.
- ^ Stokes, John Lort (1846). Discoveries in Australia: Volume 2. London: T. and W. Boone. Retrieved on December 12, 2006.
[edit] Further reading
- Henn, P. U. (1935). "The Tryal Rocks". Journal and Proceedings of the Western Australian Historical Society 2 (17): 38–43.