Cape Barren Island

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Cape Barren Island
Native name: Truwana
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Cape Barren Island (center) from space, January 1997
File:Australia Tasmania location map Cape Barren Island.png
Cape Barren Island (Tasmania)
Geography
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Country
Australia
State Tasmania
LGA Municipality of Flinders Island
Largest settlement The Corner (pop. 60)
Demographics
Population 67 (as of 2014)
Density 0.14 /km2 (0.36 /sq mi)

Cape Barren Island (indigenous name: Truwana[1]) is located off the north east coast of Tasmania, Australia, and is one of the islands of the Furneaux Group in Bass Strait. The largest island of the group, Flinders Island, lies to the north, with the smaller Clarke Island to the south. The highest point on the island is Mount Munro at 715 metres.[2] Mount Munro is probably named after James Munro (c. 1779-1845), a former convict and then sealer, who lived from the 1820s for more than 20 years with several women on nearby Preservation Island.

The south-eastern point of the island was named Cape Barren by Tobias Furneaux in HMS Adventure in March 1773.[3]

The island has an area of 478.4 km2 (184.7 sq mi).[4] The population of the island numbered 268 in 2006,[5] most of them in the settlement Cape Barren Island, also called The Corner, on the northwest coast.[6]

Australia's only native goose, the Cape Barren goose, was first sighted on this island.

History and people

Today the residents of Cape Barren Island consist of an Aboriginal community of approximately 70 people. Most of the residents are descended from a community of mixed descent (European and Aboriginal people) who had originally settled on several smaller nearby islands but relocated to Cape Barren Island in the late 1870s.[7] The Colonial Government of Tasmania established a formal reserve in 1881 and commenced providing basic social services to the community. By 1908 the population had grown to 250 people.

File:Cape Barren Island Settlement 2.jpg
Settlement on Cape Barren Island

More active government intervention began in 1912 with the passage of the Cape Barren Act.[8] The stated purpose of this act was to encourage the community to become self-sufficient through both incentives and disincentives. Government visits throughout the 1920s and 1930s reported poor health and education and proposals were made to remove children from their parents, ostensibly for their own benefit. Under threat of losing their children many families relocated to mainland Tasmania. By 1944 the population had fallen to 106.[7] From the 1950s the government did indeed remove children from their parents. This forced removal of children was part of a wider policy implemented in many parts of Australia and over a number of decades that resulted in the phenomenon known as the 'stolen generations'. From the 1970s a series of changed government policies were implemented that provided increasingly greater recognition of the personal and social rights of individuals.[9]

On 10 May 2005, the government released Crown lands on both Cape Barren and Clarke Island to be overseen by the local Aboriginal association.[10] This marked the first official handover of Crown land to an Aboriginal community in Tasmania.

East coast lagoons Ramsar site

On 16 November 1982, the east coast lagoons were recognised as being wetlands of international importance by being designated Ramsar site no.256. The site comprises a 4,370 ha complex of shallow, saline lagoons among stretches of coastal dunes and beaches. It supports various plants of special botanical interest, including nationally rare species, as well as many waterbirds.[11]

Access

Airlines of Tasmania operates a twice-weekly scheduled air service from Launceston. Various charter flight operators offer charter flights from either Tasmania, Australia or Victoria, Australia.

From Flinders Island, Cape Barren island is only a short boat trip away. Cape Barren, with the other islands in the Furneaux Group, are a popular destination for sea kayakers who attempt the crossing of Bass Strait from the Australian mainland at Wilsons Promontory, Victoria to the Tasmanian mainland.

References

  1. Island's name is now Truwana
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  5. http://reareports.realestate.com.au/viewFreeReport.do?state=TAS&suburb=CAPE%20BARREN%20ISLAND&postcode=7257
  6. http://www.nma.gov.au/exhibitions/community/snapshots_of_remote_communities/cape_barren_island/
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