Jacquinot Bay

Jacquinot Bay is a bay in East New Britain Province, south-eastern New Britain, Papua New Guinea, at 5.5666667°S 151.5°E / -5.5666667; 151.5. It is near the mountain where twenty-eight people died when a Royal Australian Air Force plane crashed in November 1945.[1] To its west is the Gasmata Bay and the Wide Bay and Rabaul Bay are situated to the north-east.[2]

Jacquinot Bay (west) and Waterfall Bay seen from space

Before the Second World War, a palm tree plantation was started here, known as Palmalmal Plantation (Pal Mal Mal). The area also had a Catholic Mission, headed by Father Edward Charles "Ted" Harris.[2]

Wartime history

In April 1942, 156 Australian soldiers and civilians gathered at Pal Mal Mal after fleeing Rabaul. They were rescued by MV Laurabada, which then transported them to Port Moresby. Later, the port was taken over by the Japanese, and remained in their hands until the area was liberated on 4 November 1944. The Australian Army constructed Jacquinot Bay Airfield in 1944–1945, following an amphibious landing at Jacquinot Bay.[2]

Surrendered planes in Jacquinot Bay
gollark: I generally like simpler things. Also, less attack surface.
gollark: I mean, admittedly being CISC is better in some ways and RISC is worse in others, but I kind of prefer RISC.
gollark: ARM positives:- originally more riscy- more implementations- better power efficiencyARM negatives:- literally has a JS floating point conversion instruction???- horrendous software compatibility; most Android devices run ancient kernels with weird device-specific patches and can never be updated, the bootloaders are weird and inconsistent- now very CISC anyway
gollark: Yes, x86 sort of bad, ARM also horrible in similar ways.
gollark: My laptop spends something like 5 to 10 seconds in UEFI when booting. It *ruins* my boot times. I have to wait 25 seconds, it's ridiculous.

References

  1. Piper, Bob (April 6, 2006). "Dakota crash premonition: Young nurse foresees own death in World War 2 tragedy". Air Force News. Volume 48 (No. 5). Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  2. "Jacquinot Bay". Pacific Wrecks Incorporated. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
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