Klein Curaçao

Klein Curaçao (English: Little Curaçao) is a 1.7-square-kilometre (170 ha; 0.66 sq mi) uninhabited island south-east of Curaçao in the Caribbean Sea, and is part of the Dutch country of Curaçao. Klein Curaçao has a desert climate (in the Köppen climate classification BWh and BWk), a climate in which there is an excess of evaporation over precipitation. The only structures on the island are an old lighthouse, a beach house, and several huts. Klein Curaçao is well known as a beautiful diving spot because of its coral and underwater caves. The island was designated as a protected Ramsar site in 2018.[4]

Klein Curaçao Lighthouse
The lighthouse at Klein Curaçao. The tower is 22 meters (66 feet) tall and lit by a solar-powered LED light.[1]
Curaçao
LocationKlein Curaçao
Curaçao
Coordinates11°59′23.3″N 68°38′35.5″W
Year first constructed1850 (first)
1879 (rebuilt)
Year first lit1913 (rebuilt)
Constructionmasonry tower
Tower shapecylindrical tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / patternwhite tower, red lantern
Tower height20 metres (66 ft)
Focal height25 metres (82 ft)
Light sourcesolar power
Range15 nautical miles (28 km; 17 mi)
CharacteristicFl (2) W 15s.
Admiralty numberJ6399
NGA number16054
ARLHS numberNEA-006[2][3]
Official nameKlein Curaçao
Designated31 July 2018
Reference no.2355[4]

Goats were once allowed to roam the island, which contributed to desertification. In 1871, John Godden, an English mining engineer, visited the island, and until 1886 phosphate was mined and exported to Europe. The island was mined out, the level of the island dropped, and seabird populations plummeted. Reforestation is being undertaken by CARMABI Marine Research Station, Curaçao. The island also played a part in the slave trade. The Dutch West India Company brought many slaves from Africa to Curaçao. Before these slaves came ashore in Curaçao, the sick were placed in quarantine at Klein Curaçao. The remains of this first quarantine building can still be found in the northwest of the island. The slaves, and other passengers who did not survive the voyage, were buried at Klein Curaçao. There are several graves in the southern part of the island.

The Dutch West India Company were also given licenses to hunt monk seal (highly endangered now) on Klein Curaçao. Like its mother island of Curaçao, the island is little affected by hurricanes, but several storms have left their mark. The first was the hurricane of 1877, which destroyed the first lighthouse on the island. The next lighthouse, which still survives, was built in the interior of the island.

Klein Curaçao has no permanent inhabitants, only a few palm-frond covered sheds for day trippers from Curaçao, and apart from some coconut palms has little vegetation. There are some fishermen's huts where fishermen normally stay for some days. They get water from the Coast Guard of Curaçao. The windward side is a graveyard for boats that did not stay out far enough or lost power. A small tanker, the Maria Bianca Guidesman, is gradually being demolished by the constant pounding of the waves since 1988.[5] The remains of another four or five boats have been washed far onshore.

See also

References

  1. michaeljohngrist.com
  2. Curaçao The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 6 September 2016
  3. List of Lights, Buoys and Fog Signals Atlantic Coast. Retrieved 6 September 2016
  4. "Klein Curaçao". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  5. Bianca Marie (Fundación Histarmar − Historia y Arqueología Marítima, Retrieved 11 May 2020.)
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