Nightingale Island

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Nightingale Island

Tristan da Cunha
(St Helena, Ascension
and Tristan da Cunha
)

Nightingale Island, British overseas territory-20March2012.jpg
Location

Tristan da Cunha and its islands

Location: 37°25’0"S, 12°28’0"W
Data

Nightingale Island is an active volcanic island in the South Atlantic Ocean, 1.2 square miles in area, part of the Tristan da Cunha group of islands, which are part of the overseas territory of St Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha.

Nightingale Island is part of the Nightingale Islands, which also includes islets Middle Island and Stoltenhoff Island. All three are uninhabited, but are regularly visited for scientific purposes and research.

Geography

Nightingale has two peaks on its north end. One is 1,106 feet high[1] while the other is 961 feet high. The rest of the island is ringed by cliffs. However, these cliffs are not nearly as high as those surrounding Nightingale's neighbour Inaccessible Island, which is approximately 10 miles away and has cliffs approximately 1,000 feet high. Thus human access is much easier on Nightingale than on Inaccessible. The island is a volcano, composed of early and late stage ash deposits. Massive Trachytic lava flows have been extruded in the past. Prior to 2004, the last eruption may have been over 39,000 years ago.

Caves in Nightingale Island seem to indicate that the whoel island has been elevated by seismic activity.

Large amounts of kelp surround the island, which makes it harder to anchor ships in bad weather.

History

Nightingale was possibly sighted along with Tristan da Cunha in 1506 by Tristão da Cunha, however he made no record of it.

Originally named "Gebrooken Eyland" (Broken island) by the Dutch ship the Nachtglas under Jan Jacobszoon in January 1656, they found no safe anchorage and did not make the first landing until 1696 (most likely by Willem de Vlamingh in August of that year). French captain D'Etchevery also visited the island in September 1767, first recording the two nearby islets now named Stoltenhoff and Middle.

The island was later renamed after British captain Gamaliel Nightingale, who explored the island in 1760.[1]

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the Dutch and French governments as well as the British East India Company considered taking possession of Nightingale (as well as Tristan and Inaccessible), but declined due to lack of landing space.

Nightingale has been said to contain pirate loot. Captain John Thomas, on an expedition to the South Atlantic, supposedly left a fortune of Spanish doubloons and pieces-of-eight in caves on Nightingale for safekeeping. However, no recovery of this treasure (if it is there) has ever been confirmed.

In 1811, the American pirate Jonathan Lambert laid claim to Tristan and its neighbouring islands. He wanted to call Inaccessible 'Pinsard Island', and Nightingale 'Lavel Island'. He died less than one year later.

In 1961, the volcano on Tristan da Cunha erupted and forced the inhabitants of Tristan da Cunha to evacuate to Nightingale. They eventually moved to the United Kingdom, returning to Tristan in 1963.

Wildlife conservation efforts are ongoing on Nightingale. The previous conservation workers' sheds were severely damaged during a storm produced by an extratropical cyclone in 2001 that reportedly included winds up to 120 mph.[2] Repair is ongoing, but to continue carrying out the conservation work, all of the damaged shacks on the island need to be repaired. The United Kingdom established funding for a conservation effort on Nightingale for 2004-2006.

2004 eruption

A six hour long earthquake swarm occurred on Nightingale Island on 29 July 2004, followed by sightings of floating phonolitic pumice, the event came from a submarine flank of the island. It was the first known eruption on the island in 10,000 years.[3]

2011 oil spill

Before daybreak on 16 March 2011, the Maltese-registered MS Oliva cargo carrier ran aground at Spinners Point on the island's northwestern shore.[4]

The resulting oil spill, which spread around the island, is expected to have a significant impact on the seabird colonies of Nightingale and Middle Island.[5] The ship contained 1,500 metric tons of crude oil and a cargo of 60,000 metric tons of soya beans. As many as 200,000 penguins are threatened, and there is a risk that rats from the ship could make it ashore to eventually prey on the chicks and eggs of native seabirds.[6] Nightingale Island has no fresh water, so the penguins are being transported to Tristan da Cunha for cleaning.[7][8] The Greek captain and his 21 Filipino crew stayed in Edinburgh of the Seven Seas and assisted the islanders in their work.[9]

Wildlife

Nightingale Island is known as a breeding ground for various types of seabirds; over a million birds are estimated to breed on the island, with Great Shearwaters being among the most abundant. There are four wetland areas on the island which each contain hundreds of Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatrosses. As with Inaccessible Island, Nightingale also has a breeding colony of northern rockhopper penguins, now an endangered species, with a fraction the 1950s population remaining.

The island is part of the Nightingale Islands group “Important Bird Area”, identified as such by BirdLife International as a breeding site for seabirds and endemic land birds.[10]

Tourism

Inaccessible and Gough Islands are strict nature reserves with no tourism permitted. However, tourists are permitted to go to Nightingale.

Many tourists to Tristan da Cunha visit Nightingale Island for the wildlife. Non-Tristanians can travel to Nightingale only with a guide from Tristan. Part of the money they pay the guide goes toward paying for the conservation work being done on the island. Once a year, filmmakers and journalists are permitted to work on the island (for a fee), but they are not allowed to interfere with the private lives of the Tristanian islanders. Also, Tristan natives visit Nightingale on holiday.

Economy

Fishing companies fish off the coast of Nightingale, just as they do with Inaccessible.

Nightingale also has guano deposits.

References

  1. Gizimap's St Helena & Dependencies (2011)
  2. Barwick, Sandra (7 June 2001). "120 mph storm devastates Tristan da Cunha". The Daily Telegraph (London). http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1311749/120-mph-storm-devastates-Tristan-da-Cunha.html. 
  3. Global Volcanism Program, Nightingale Island
  4. Tristan da Cunha Government and Tristan da Cunha Association, News, MS Oliva, http://www.tristandc.com/newsmsoliva.php, retrieved 2011-03-19 
  5. Rudolf, John Collins (22 March 2011). "Oil Spill in South Atlantic Threatens Endangered Penguins". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/23/science/earth/23spill.html?_r=1&hpw. 
  6. "Oil Spill Menaces Penguins". Science 331: 1499. 25 March 2011. doi:10.1126/science.331.6024.1499-b. 
  7. BBC News Oil-soaked rockhopper penguins in rehabilitation
  8. Hansard 26 Apr 2011 : Column 397W
  9. St Helena Independent 25 March 2011 p. 3
  10. "Nightingale Island group". Important Bird Areas factsheet. BirdLife International. 2012. http://www.birdlife.org. Retrieved 2012-10-26. 

References in literature

  • Edgar Allan Poe's The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket alluded to Nightingale Island, Inaccessible Island, and Tristan da Cunha.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Nightingale Island)