Easter Group

The Easter Group is the central of three groups of islands that make up the Houtman Abrolhos island chain. Nominally located at 28°44′S 113°46′E,[1] it is about 20 kilometres by 12 kilometres, and consists of a number of islands including

The group was discovered and named in April 1840 by the crew of HMS Beagle, under the command of John Clements Wickham. Stoke's journal, published as Discoveries in Australia in 1846, records the following for April 11:

"At daylight we found that the summit of a large island, in the centre of the group to the northward, bore N. 21½° W. about nine miles. We now beat to the southward in search of a harbour, where the ship might lie in safety whilst we went to work with the boats, and were fortunate enough to discover one close to the north-east point of a large island lying in the centre of the group to the southward; which we named Easter Group, and the harbour Good Friday Harbour, to commemorate the season of the Christian year, at which we visited it. Perhaps at some future period, when the light of the gospel shall have penetrated to every part of the vast Australian continent, these sacred names, bestowed by us upon some of its outworks, may be pronounced with pleasure, as commemorative of the time when the darkness of ignorance and superstition was just beginning to disperse."[4]

See also

References

  1. "Easter Group". Gazetteer of Australia online. Geoscience Australia, Australian Government.
  2. "Houtman Abrolhos". oceandots.com. Archived from the original on 23 December 2010. Retrieved 13 October 2007.
  3. "IBA: Houtman Abrolhos". Birdata. Birds Australia. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
  4. Stokes, John Lort (1846). Discoveries in Australia, Volume 2. London: T. and W. Boone.

Further reading

Stanbury, Myra (1993), Historic sites of the Easter Group, Houtman Abrolhos, WA : report prepared for the Abrolhos Islands Consultative Council, Fremantle: Dept. of Maritime Archaeology, Western Australian Maritime Museum, (Report number 66) with contribution from Ross White, Jenni Potts and Caroline Heine.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.