West Wallabi Island

West Wallabi Island
Geography
Location Indian Ocean, off the coast of Western Australia
Coordinates [1][2]
Archipelago Houtman Abrolhos
Area 6.21 km2 (2.398 sq mi)
Coastline 14.93 km (9.277 mi)
Country
Australia
State Western Australia
Demographics
Population Uninhabited

West Wallabi Island is an island in the Wallabi Group of the Houtman Abrolhos, located in the Indian Ocean off the west coast of mainland Australia.

Contents

History

West Wallabi Island played an important role in the story of the Batavia shipwreck and massacre. Following the shipwreck in 1629, a group of soldiers under the command of Wiebbe Hayes were put ashore there to search for water. A group of mutineers who took control of the other survivors left them there in the hope that they would starve or die of thirst. However the soldiers discovered that they were able to wade to East Wallabi Island, where there was a fresh water spring. Furthermore, West and East Wallabi Island are the only islands in the group upon which the Tammar Wallaby lives. Thus the soldiers had access to sources of both food and water that were unavailable to the mutineers. Later the mutineers mounted a series of attacks, which the soldiers beat off. The remnants of improvised defensive walls and stone shelters built by Wiebbe Hayes and his men on West Wallabi Island are Australia's oldest known European structures,[3][4] more than a century and a half before expeditions to the Australian continent by James Cook and Arthur Phillip.[5]

In the context of the Batavia mutiny and massacre, East Wallabi Island is often referred to as "Wiebbe Hayes' Island" . This was the name given it in contemporary sources, and was used by historians for as long as it remained a lost toponym.

Geography

Nominally located at ,[1][2] West Wallabi Island is the largest island in the Houtman Abrolhos, with an area of 6.21 km², which is more than a third of the total aggregate land area of the entire archipelago. It is located in the north-west of the Wallabi Group, the northernmost of three island groups in the Houtman Abrolhos.

The island contains three named points: Slaughter Point, Blowfish Point and Pelican Point. Between Blowfish Point and Pelican Point is a bay named Shag Bay, and south of Pelican Point is a bay named Horseyard Bay.

The island is surrounded by submerged coral reef. This is narrow at Shag Bay, but fairly extensive along the rest of the coast. To the north-east, the reef is high enough that a person may wade from island to island; islands connected to West Wallabi Island in this way include Barge Rock, Turnstone Island, Seagull Island, Oystercatcher Island and East Wallabi Island.

Geology and physiography

The basement of West Wallabi Island is the Wallabi Limestone, a dense calcretised, coral limestone platform that underlies the entire Wallabi Group. This platform, which arises abruptly from a flat shelf, is about 40 metres thick, and is of Quaternary origin. Reef that formed during the Eemian interglacial (about 125,000 years ago), when sea levels were higher than at present, are now emergent in places, and constitute the basement of the group's central platform islands, which include West Wallabi Island.[6][7]

The basement is capped in some places by an aeolianite pavement, and this is in turn overlain in places by sand dunes.[7][8]

Flora

As one of the few islands in the Houtman Abrolhos large enough to support dune systems, West Wallabi Island supports a relatively high diversity of plant life: according to survey published in 2001, 97 plant species occur on the island. Both the dunes and the pavement limestone support species-rich vegetation complexes dominated by chenopod shrubs, and these communities have been identified has having species conservation importance, because they are so diverse, yet so easily disturbed and so slow to recover.[9]

Birds

The island is part of the Houtman Abrolhos Important Bird Area, identified as such by BirdLife International because of its importance for supporting large numbers of breeding seabirds.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b Gazetteer of Australia (1996). Belconnen, ACT: Australian Surveying and Land Information Group.
  2. ^ a b "East Wallabi Island". Gazetteer of Australia online. Geoscience Australia, Australian Government. http://www.ga.gov.au/bin/gazd01?rec=267431. 
  3. ^ Australian Broadcasting Company (2003). Shipwrecks: Batavia.
  4. ^ Batavia Shipwreck Site and Survivor Camps Area 1629 (2008). Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts.
  5. ^ Elder, Bruce (2005). The Brutal Shore. The Sydney Morning Herald.
  6. ^ Collins, Lindsay B.; Zhu, Zhong Rong; Wyrwoll, Karl-Heinz (1998). "Late Tertiary-Quaternary Geological Evolution of the Houtman Abrolhos Carbonate Platforms, Northern Perth Basin". In Purcell, R. and Purcell, P. (eds). The sedimentary basins of Western Australia. 2. Perth, Western Australia: Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia. pp. 647–663. http://espace.lis.curtin.edu.au/archive/00000155/. Retrieved 2008-05-02. 
  7. ^ a b Collins, Lindsay B.; Zhu, Zhong Rong; Wyrwoll, Karl-Heinz (2004). "Geology of the Houtman Abrolhos Islands". In Vacher, Leonard and Quinn, Terrence (eds). Geology and hydrogeology of carbonate islands (Developments in Sedimentology 54). Elsevier Science. pp. 811–834. 
  8. ^ Storr, Glen (1964). "The physiography, vegetation and vertebrate fauna of the Wallabi Group, Houtman Abrolhos". Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 48 (1): 1–14. 
  9. ^ Harvey, J. M., Alford, J. J., Longman, V. M. and Keighery, G. J. (2001). "A flora and vegetation survey of the Houtman Abrolhos, Western Australia". CALMScience 3 (4): 521–623. 
  10. ^ "IBA: Houtman Abrolhos". Birdata. Birds Australia. http://www.birdata.com.au/iba.vm. Retrieved 2011-08-12.