Management of the Houtman Abrolhos System
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Where Were Australia's First European Residents Marooned in 1629?
The Landing Site Debate: Where Were Australia’s First European Residents Marooned in 1629? Rupert Gerritsen1 Introduction On 16 November 1629, following the Batavia Mutiny on the Abrolhos Islands, just off the central west coast of Western Australia, Commander Francisco Pelsaert marooned two of the mutineers on the adjacent mainland of Australia. Since 1959 there has been an ongoing debate as to where these two mutineers, Wouter Loos and Jan Pelgrom de Bye van Bemmel, were put ashore. Two contending sites have been proposed, the mouth of the Hutt River and a location 61 kilometres further north, Wittecarra Gully, with an array of evidence having been marshalled by the proponents of each of the sites to support their case. This is no trivial matter, as these two mutineers were in fact the first Europeans to take up permanent residence in Australia, 159 years before the First Fleet. It is therefore a question of some significance in Australian history. This paper will put forward the evidence and arguments for each site for consideration, endeavouring to fairly reflect the contending positions, so that others may judge for themselves which is correct. Background The story begins in the early hours of 4 June 1629, when the Dutch ship the Batavia with 320 people on board, struck Morning Reef in the Northern, or Wallabi Group, of the Abrolhos Islands, 90 kilometres west north west of Geraldton (1). Approximately 275 people survived the initial disaster, finding their way by various means to the nearest islands. But they were in dire straits, they had almost no food or water. -
A Brief Review of the Status of Seabirds at Long Island, Wallabi Group, Houtman Abrolhos
Humfrey Land Developments Avifauna Field Survey January 2006 Citation. This report may be quoted as: Surman, C.A. (2006). Field Survey of Avifauna at Long Island, Wallabi Group, Houtman Abrolhos, September and December 2005. Unpublished report prepared for MBS by Halfmoon Biosciences. 33 pp. Submitted on: 30 January 2006 Prepared by: Dr Chris Surman Halfmoon Biosciences 14 Snook Crescent Hilton, W.A. 6163 [email protected] ©Copyright 2006 Halfmoon Biosciences This document and information contained in it has been prepared by Halfmoon Biosciences under the terms and conditions of his contract with his client. The report is for the client’s use only and may not be used, exploited, copied, duplicated or reproduced in any form or medium whatsoever without the prior written permission of Halfmoon Biosciences or their client. Halfmoon Biosciences i Humfrey Land Developments Avifauna Field Survey January 2006 Table of Contents 1 Introduction................................................................................................................. 1 1.1 Nomenclature...................................................................................................... 2 2 Nesting Habitat ........................................................................................................... 3 2.1 Low Sand Dunes (plates 1-4).............................................................................. 3 2.2 Coral Ridges........................................................................................................ 3 2.3 Tidal -
Towards Ratification: Papers from the 2013 AIMA
Towards Ratification: Papers from the 2013 AIMA Conference Workshop Edited by Graeme Henderson and Andrew Viduka Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology Special Publication No. 17 2014 First published 2014 by the Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology Prepared by Jeremy Green, Department of Maritime Archaeology, Western Australian Museum, Fremantle, Western Australia This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission. Enquiries should be to the publisher. © 2014 Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology Contents Organiser’s welcome, Graeme Henderson 1 Speaker profiles 2 The significance of world-wide ratification of the 2001 UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage, Lyndel Prott 7 The reasons for the Convention’s drafting, Patrick O’Keefe 9 The reasons for the Convention’s drafting: a museum-based maritime archaeologist’s perspective, Graeme Henderson 11 Why Australia should ratify the Convention, Craig Forrest 14 Australia’s consideration of the ratification process and current position, Andrew Viduka 17 Maritime and underwater cultural heritage developments in sub-Saharan Africa, Bill Jeffery, Shawn Berry, and Chris Ngivingivi 21 The Netherlands towards ratification: activities in the light of the Convention, Martijn Manders 24 Status and development of ratifications, Ulrike Guerin, 27 The processes and strategies employed in Spain, Mariano J. Aznar-Gómez 29 The processes and strategies employed in Belgium, Marnix Pieters 33 Panel discussion, Patrick O’Keefe (Convenor) 36 Editors’ notes 39 Graeme Henderson Opening address Graeme Henderson Western Australian Museum, Cliff Street, Fremantle, WA 6160. -
SUSTAINABLE TOURISM for the HOUTMAN ABROLHOS ISLANDS Progress Update July 2020
SUSTAINABLE TOURISM FOR THE HOUTMAN ABROLHOS ISLANDS Progress update July 2020 On 6 October 2017, the Premier, Hon Mark McGowan Progress towards achieving the Government’s For more information about the IPT or the sustainable MLA, announced that the State Government’s vision sustainable tourism vision for the Abrolhos has tourism project, please visit the DBCA website at: for the Abrolhos Islands was to create a world-class included: dbca.wa.gov.au/houtman-abrolhos-islands-national-park tourism experience while maintaining world’s • Creation of the Houtman Abrolhos Islands National best-practice environmental management. Park (national park) Planning for the Abrolhos land and waters Following this, a whole-of-Government planning • Development of an interagency Strategic Direction The Houtman Abrolhos Islands Strategic Direction process commenced to develop the most appropriate 2020–24 2020–24 management framework for the marine and terrestrial • Development of a draft Visitor Master Plan for the The Strategic Direction outlines the State Government’s areas of the Abrolhos and an Interagency Project Team national park vision and goals for management of the Abrolhos (lands (IPT) was established to ensure the effective delivery of • Commencement of a management plan for the and waters) with interagency collaboration between the Government’s commitment. The membership of the national park DBCA, DPIRD and the Western Australian Museum as a IPT includes agencies with legislative responsibilities or • Planning for the development of visitor facilities key focus. Other agencies supporting the realisation of an interest in the management of the Abrolhos, including initially in the Wallabi group the vision for the Abrolhos include Tourism WA, City of the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Greater Geraldton, Abrolhos Islands Bodies Corporate, Attractions (DBCA), Department of Primary Industries • Licensing of commercial tour operators in the national Mid West Development Commission, Department of and Regional Development (DPIRD), Western Australian park. -
WA999 Wallabi Group
999 WA HOUTMAN ABROLHOS - WALLABI GROUP WALLABI - ABROLHOS HOUTMAN SEE RELATED PUBLICATIONS: Notice to Mariners (http://www.transport.wa.gov.au/imarine/coastaldata/), Symbols, Abbreviations DEPTHS IN METRES and Terms (INT 1), Tide Tables, Sailing Directions. For surveys beyond this chart refer to RAN Charts AUS 83 and AUS 751. E= 7 52 000 E= 7 60 000 E= 7 68 000 E= 7 76 000 34' 35' 36' 37' 38' 39' 113°40' E 41' 42' 43' 44' 45' 46' 47' 48' 49' 52 46 44 43 42 44 28° 13' 24" S 51 49 113° 40' E Zone of Confidence (ZOC) Diagram 28° 13' 24" S 28° 13' 24" S HOUTMAN ABROLHOS AUSTRALIA - WEST COAST 50 48 43 CHART LAYOUT WESTERN AUSTRALIA 113° 49' 48" E 14’ 14’ 113° 49' 48" E 46 46 113° 49' 48" E 52 HOUTMAN ABROLHOS C 46 WALLABI GROUP 41 36 SCALE 1 : 50 000 000 44 72 44 46 68 DEPTHS 41 N= 23 44 Depths are shown in metres and decimetres, reduced to Sounding Datum, which is 15’ 35 approximately lowest water level. 15’ 21 B HEIGHTS Heights are shown in metres. Underlined figures are drying heights above Sounding 11 30 13 Datum. Overhead clearance heights are above Highest Astronomical Tide. All other 000 16 8 8 2 29 heights are above Mean Higher High Water. 72 128 C 68 62 POSITIONS 24 6 41 N= 6 Positions on this chart are referenced to the Map Grid of Australia, Zone 50, 18 43 Wallabi Group WA 999 Side A based on the Geocentric Datum of Australia 1994 (GDA94). -
International Programme for Maritime Heritage Report 2017-2019 Contents
International Programme for Maritime Heritage Report 2017-2019 Contents Foreword 3 3.8 Provision of information and data management 19 3.8.1 Data management 19 Summary 4 3.8.2 MACHU 19 Sailing in the right direction 4 3.8.3 Maritime Stepping Stones (MaSS) 19 Reader’s guide 4 3.9 The Caribbean Netherlands 20 Archaeology, Policy and Heritage Management 4 3.9.1 Survey of maritime heritage management Individual and contextual protection 4 in the Caribbean Netherlands 20 Debate, cooperation and education 4 3.10 Forensic marking 21 Discovering and sharing stories 5 The International Programme for Maritime 4 Pillar II projects: Managing maritime Heritage in brief 5 heritage within the Shared Cultural Heritage Programme 22 1 Introduction 6 4.1 Australia 22 Legal frameworks 7 4.1.1 The Roaring 40s 22 Pillars 7 4.1.2 VOC Golden Age 22 Pillar I: Management of shipwrecks abroad 7 4.1.3 Broome 1942: field research in 2020 22 Pillar II: Managing maritime heritage within 4.2 Indonesia 23 the Shared Cultural Heritage Programme 8 4.2.1 Wrecks from the Battle of the Java Sea 23 4.3 Japan 24 2 Developments in 2017, 2018 and 2019 9 4.3.1 The search for the maritime heritage Interdepartmental Board on Shipwrecks 9 of the Kanrin-maru 24 Ratification of the 2001 UNESCO Convention 9 4.3.2 Van Bosse Stories 25 Cultural diplomacy 9 4.4 South Africa 25 Media coverage and outreach 9 4.4.1 Modern Oral History: Internships 10 Dutch Wrecks in South Africa 25 4.4.2 Dutch East India Company burial 3 Pillar I projects: Management of ground in Simonstown 26 shipwrecks abroad 11 4.5 United States 27 3.1 Finland 11 4.5.1 De Braak 27 3.1.1. -
Special Issue3.7 MB
Volume Eleven Conservation Science 2016 Western Australia Review and synthesis of knowledge of insular ecology, with emphasis on the islands of Western Australia IAN ABBOTT and ALLAN WILLS i TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ABSTRACT 1 INTRODUCTION 2 METHODS 17 Data sources 17 Personal knowledge 17 Assumptions 17 Nomenclatural conventions 17 PRELIMINARY 18 Concepts and definitions 18 Island nomenclature 18 Scope 20 INSULAR FEATURES AND THE ISLAND SYNDROME 20 Physical description 20 Biological description 23 Reduced species richness 23 Occurrence of endemic species or subspecies 23 Occurrence of unique ecosystems 27 Species characteristic of WA islands 27 Hyperabundance 30 Habitat changes 31 Behavioural changes 32 Morphological changes 33 Changes in niches 35 Genetic changes 35 CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK 36 Degree of exposure to wave action and salt spray 36 Normal exposure 36 Extreme exposure and tidal surge 40 Substrate 41 Topographic variation 42 Maximum elevation 43 Climate 44 Number and extent of vegetation and other types of habitat present 45 Degree of isolation from the nearest source area 49 History: Time since separation (or formation) 52 Planar area 54 Presence of breeding seals, seabirds, and turtles 59 Presence of Indigenous people 60 Activities of Europeans 63 Sampling completeness and comparability 81 Ecological interactions 83 Coups de foudres 94 LINKAGES BETWEEN THE 15 FACTORS 94 ii THE TRANSITION FROM MAINLAND TO ISLAND: KNOWNS; KNOWN UNKNOWNS; AND UNKNOWN UNKNOWNS 96 SPECIES TURNOVER 99 Landbird species 100 Seabird species 108 Waterbird -
Downloaded from Brill.Com10/07/2021 10:27:03AM Via Free Access □ OÉ Marlies Stoter LU O
Downloaded from Brill.com10/07/2021 10:27:03AM via free access □ OÉ Marlies Stoter LU O HENDRICK VAN BUIJTENHEM EN < DE REIS VAN ZIJN JAPANSE LAKKOKER De ontdekking van een koker van Japans lakwerk in de collectie van het Fries Museum was in 2007 even groot nieuws. Zowel binnen als buiten het co museum wekte het verbazing dat dit 17e-eeuwse Japanse voorwerp met daarin vier authentieke documenten van de Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie nog niet eerder voor het voetlicht was verschenen. Lakwerkexpert Christiaan Jörg was onder de indruk van de kwaliteit en de gaafheid van de vondst, bovendien gaat het om een zeer zeldzame vorm: Jörg had niet eerder een documentenkoker van lakwerk gezien. De inhoud is ook uit historisch oogpunt van belang: de vier documenten, voorzien van handtekeningen, officiële lakstempels en jaartallen zijn de aanstellingsbrieven van Hendrick van Buijtenhem als opperhoofd van Japan. O Tientallen meters officieel VOC-archief zijn bewaard gebleven, maar persoonlijke VOC-documenten zijn betrekkelijk zeldzaam. Met opperhoofd wordt een hoge functionaris van de VOC aangeduid en in dit < geval gaat het om de belangrijkste man van Deshima, een klein kunstmatig eiland in de baai van Nagasaki in Japan. Daar moesten de Hollandse koop lieden in dienst van de VOC sinds 1641 verplicht wonen, wilden zij handel i/j kunnen drijven met de Japanners. Naast de Chinezen waren zij de enigen, die goederen uit Japan mochten uitvoeren en ze accepteerden de serie dwingen LU de en kostbare maatregelen die de Japanners hen oplegden. Vooral de uitvoer 0^ van Japans zilver (tot 1668) en koper was voor hen van cruciaal belang voor de intra-Aziatische handel. -
Abrolhos Painted Button-Quail (Turnix Varius Scintillans) Interim Recovery Plan
Abrolhos Painted Button-Quail (Turnix varius scintillans) Interim Recovery Plan Wildlife Management Program No. 63 Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions May 2018 Wildlife Management Program No. 63 Abrolhos Painted Button-Quail (Turnix varius scintillans) Interim Recovery Plan Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions Locked Bag 104, Bentley Delivery Centre, Western Australia 6983 Foreword Recovery plans are developed within the framework laid down in the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions Corporate Policy Statement No. 35 (Parks and Wildlife, 2015b) and Corporate Guideline No. 36 (Parks and Wildlife, 2015a). Interim recovery plans outline the recovery actions that are needed to urgently address those threatening processes most affecting the ongoing survival of threatened taxa or ecological communities, and begin the recovery process. The attainment of objectives and the provision of funds necessary to implement actions are subject to budgetary and other constraints affecting the parties involved, as well as the need to address other priorities. This interim recovery plan was approved by the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, Western Australia. Approved interim recovery plans are subject to modification as dictated by new findings, changes in status of the taxon or ecological community, and the completion of recovery actions. Information in this interim recovery plan was accurate as of May 2018. Interim recovery plan preparation: -
Locational Factors Determining the Distribution of Nesting Sites for A
Edith Cowan University Research Online Theses : Honours Theses 1998 Locational factors determining the distribution of nesting sites for a colony of wedge-tailed shearwaters, puffinus pacificus, onest W Wallabi Island, Houtman Abrolhos, Western Australia Julie Davis Edith Cowan University Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses_hons Part of the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Commons, and the Ornithology Commons Recommended Citation Davis, J. (1998). Locational factors determining the distribution of nesting sites for a colony of wedge- tailed shearwaters, puffinus pacificus, onest W Wallabi Island, Houtman Abrolhos, Western Australia. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses_hons/473 This Thesis is posted at Research Online. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses_hons/473 Edith Cowan University Copyright Warning You may print or download ONE copy of this document for the purpose of your own research or study. The University does not authorize you to copy, communicate or otherwise make available electronically to any other person any copyright material contained on this site. You are reminded of the following: Copyright owners are entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. A reproduction of material that is protected by copyright may be a copyright infringement. Where the reproduction of such material is done without attribution of authorship, with false attribution of authorship or the authorship is treated in a derogatory manner, this may be a breach of the author’s moral rights contained in Part IX of the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth). Courts have the power to impose a wide range of civil and criminal sanctions for infringement of copyright, infringement of moral rights and other offences under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth). -
The 1629 Mass Grave for Batavia Victims, Beacon Island, Houtman Abrolhos Islands, Western Australia
AUSTRALASIAN HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY, 22, 2004 The 1629 mass grave for Batavia victims, Beacon Island, Houtman Abrolhos Islands, Western Australia ALISTAIR PATERSON AND DANIEL FRANKLIN The excavation of a multiple burial on Beacon Island recovered victims of the Batavia mutiny of 1629. Skeletal analysis indicates the grave contained three adult males, two youths, and an infant. Some of the individuals were buried with clothing and personal items. A dense soil feature at the centre of the grave was unusual, being a completely different soil to the local crushed shell and coral. Based on chemical analysis, Accelerator Mass Spectrometry dates and excavation, we believe the feature was formed in the recent past after cray-fishers began using the island and did not derive from the seventeenth century. This paper describes the excavation of a multiple burial on Beacon Island that recovered victims of the Batavia mutiny of 1629. Many of the 125 victims were murdered, and several multiple killings and burials are described in historical sources. The excavation of this grave was completed in 2001 after earlier excavations had removed skeletal material (Gibbs 1994; Hunneybun 1995; Pasveer et al. 1998). This paper focuses on the results of the 2001 excavation which completed the removal of human remains and excavated a dense soil feature located at the centre of the grave. The soil feature was removed from the grave intact and transported to the Western Australian Maritime Museum (WAMM) for further excava- tion. This excavation recovered human skeletal material and metal artefacts (buttons, wire, a thimble) which could be added to artefacts recovered in 1999 (metal buttons, wire, a buckle, a pewter spoon). -
6 X 10.5 Long Title.P65
Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-12562-8 - Archaeology and the Social History of Ships, 2nd Edition Richard A. Gould Index More information general index Abandoned Shipwreck Act of 1987, Birka, Sweden, 182–183 343–345 Blackwall Frigates, 304 Actian rams, 144 blockade-runners (Confederate), 265, Aeolian Islands, Italy, 153 269, 271–273, 276–277, 280 Aland˚ Islands, Finland, 178–179, bombardeta cannon, 218–220, 226, 186–187 243 Alexandria, Egypt, 146, 319, 321, 335 Bouguer, Pierre, 75 alternative archaeologies, 354 Boutakov, Admiral Grigorie, 289 amphora, 49, 51, 128–129, 131–132, Braudel, Fernand, 155–156, 173 136, 142, 145–148 Brouwer, Hendrik, 239 Anaconda Plan, 270, 277, 310 buoyancy, center of, 74 archery (at sea), 137, 219, 224–225, Bukit Tengkorak, Borneo, 170 228 bulk cargoes, 4, 76–77, 159, 163, 185, arithmetic mean center (AMC), 39–40 206–207, 248–249 arms race, early modern, 285–286 association, physical Cabot, John, 211 primary, 54, 57–59 Caesarea Maritima, Israel, 320, 329 secondary, 58–60 captain’s walk (see also widow’s walk), tertiary, 60 267 autonomous underwater vehicles caravel, 210, 212–213, 218 (AUVs), 2, 49, 346 caravela latina, 210 caravela redonda, 210 baidarka, 93, 95, 99 cargo-preference trade, 6 Baker, Matthew, 70 carrack, 191, 195, 204, 216, 223, 246 Banda, Indonesia, 239 carvel construction, 191, 200 barratry, 264 Catherine of Aragon, 225 Bass, George F., 2, 20, 26, 50–52, 81, Cederlund, Carl Olof, 54, 61, 234–236 127–128, 130, 155–157, Celtic tradition in shipbuilding, 114 173–174, 176–177 cerbatana cannon, 219 Bayeux Tapestry, 180–181, 207 chaos theory (of underwater Beardman jug, 242 archaeology), 2–3 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-12562-8 - Archaeology and the Social History of Ships, 2nd Edition Richard A.