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Antipodes Islands

The Antipodes Islands (Māori: Moutere Mahue, lit.'Abandoned Island') are inhospitable and uninhabited volcanic islands in subantarctic waters to the south of – and territorially part of – New Zealand. The 21 km2 (8.1 sq mi) archipelago lies 860 km (530 mi) to the southeast of Stewart Island/Rakiura, and 730 km (450 mi) to the northeast of Campbell Island.[1] They are very close to being the antipodal point to Normandy in France, meaning that the city farthest away is Cherbourg-en-Cotentin, France.

Antipodes Islands
The Antipodes Islands seen from the north
Position relative to New Zealand and other outlying islands
Geography
Location860 km southeast of Stewart Island
Coordinates49°40′12″S 178°46′48″E / 49.67000°S 178.78000°E / -49.67000; 178.78000
ArchipelagoAntipodes Islands
Major islandsAntipodes, Bollons
Area21[1] km2 (8.1 sq mi)
Highest elevation366 m (1201 ft)
Highest pointMount Galloway
Administration
New Zealand
Demographics
Population0[2] (2006)
Additional information
Nature reserve

The island group consists of one main island, Antipodes Island, of 20 km2 (7.7 sq mi) area, Bollons Island to the north, and numerous small islets and stacks.

The islands are listed with the New Zealand Outlying Islands. The islands are an immediate part of New Zealand, but not part of any region or district, but instead Area Outside Territorial Authority, like all the other outlying islands except the Solander Islands.

Ecologically, the islands are part of the Antipodes Subantarctic Islands tundra ecoregion. The islands are inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List, together with other subantarctic New Zealand islands. The island group is a nature reserve and there is no general public access. They are the southeasternmost point of land in the world outside of Antarctica.

Etymology edit

The word antipodes derives from the Greek: ἀντίποδες,[3] plural of antipous (ἀντίπους) 'with feet opposite (ours)', from anti- 'opposed' and pous 'foot'.[4]

The island group was originally called the Penantipodes meaning 'next to the antipodes', because it lies near to the antipodes of London (located around 51.5°S, 180°W). Over time the name has been shortened to Antipodes. The island's actual antipodes are in the area of the Arrondissement of Dieppe, Normandy.

Geography edit

 
Topographical map

The volcanic Antipodes Islands lie 860 km (530 mi) southeast of Stewart Island/Rakiura. They consist of a main island (Antipodes Island), area 20 km2 (7.7 sq mi), surrounded by a series of small offshore islands and rocks. These islands include Bollons Island, at 0.5 km2 (0.19 sq mi) the second largest in the group, 1,200 m (3,900 ft) to the northeast of the main island's North Cape, and the nearby smaller Archway Island; Leeward Island, situated just off the centre of the main island's east coast (to which it is connected by a rocky bar at low tide); the two Windward Islands, situated 800 m (2,600 ft) apart, the easternmost of which is 600 m (2,000 ft) to the immediate north of Cave Point, the main island's westernmost point; and the tiny Orde Lees Islet, located close to the main island's northwestern shore. Numerous small islets and stacks further surround the coast of the main island.

The islands are steep, and cliffs and rocky reefs line the majority of the coasts. The highest point is Mount Galloway at 366 m (1,201 ft) in the north of the main island, which also forms part of the group's most recently active volcano.[5] Mount Waterhouse, to Galloway's southwest, also reaches over 360 m (1,180 ft). Several other heights on the main island reach above 200 m (660 ft), as does the highest point of Bollons Island. A ridge of peaks, the Reliance Ridge, runs along the main island's south coast. Several small streams run from the slopes of the main island's peaks, with the largest of these being the Dougall Stream, which runs northeast from the eastern slopes of Mount Waterhouse to reach the east coast not far from its closest point to Leeward Island. The Ringdove Stream runs east along the northern flanks of the Reliance Ridge to reach the large, rocky Ringdove Bay in the southeast of the main island. A further prominent stream runs southwest from the northwestern slopes of Mount Waterhouse to reach Stack Bay to the south of the Cave Point Peninsula, and a fourth runs north from the slopes of Mount Galloway, reaching the sea to the west of North Cape, close to Reef Point.

Islands edit

The following table includes named islands according to Land Information New Zealand.[6]

Location Area
(ha)
Antipodes Island 2,014.8
Bollons Island 52.6
Leeward Island 12.5
East Windward Island 8.5
West Windward Island 7.0
Archway Island 6.3
Orde Lees Islet 1.8
Total
2,103.7

History edit

Prehistory edit

There is no archaeological evidence of human visitation prior to European discovery of the islands. Descriptions[7] of a shard of early Polynesian pottery having been discovered 76 cm (2 ft 6 in) below the surface on the main island in 1886, and housed in the collections of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa are unsubstantiated. The museum has not been able to locate such a shard in its collection, and the original reference to the object in the museum's collection documentation indicates no reference to Polynesian influences.[8]

Sealing edit

The island group was seen on March 25, 1800, by Captain Henry Waterhouse commanding HMS Reliance. Matthew Flinders was first lieutenant, and his younger brother Samuel was a midshipman on the vessel; Samuel prepared the chart of the islands.[9] Waterhouse reported the presence of seals. In 1803 Waterhouse's brother-in-law George Bass applied to Governor Philip Gidley King of New South Wales for a fishing monopoly from a line bisecting southern New Zealand from Dusky Sound to the Otago Harbour to cover all the lands and seas to the south, including the Antipodes Islands, probably because he knew the latter were home to large populations of fur seals.[10] Bass sailed from Sydney to the south that year and was never heard of again, but his information led to a sealing boom at the islands in 1805 to 1807. In February 1805, the first sealing gangs arrived on the island from the American schooners Favorite and Independence.[11] They killed about 60,000 seals over the course of the year they were stationed on the islands.

At one time eighty men were present; there was a battle between American and British-led gangs and a single cargo of more than 80,000 skins—one of the greatest ever shipped from Australasia—was on-sold in Canton for one pound sterling a skin, a multimillion-dollar return in modern terms. Prominent Sydney merchants such as Simeon Lord, Henry Kable and James Underwood were engaged in the trade as well as the Americans Daniel Whitney and Owen Folger Smith. William W. Stewart, who claimed to have charted Stewart Island, and probably William Tucker who started the retail trade in preserved Maori heads, were present during the boom. After 1807, sealing was occasional and cargoes small, no doubt because the animals had been all but exterminated.[12]

Shipwrecks edit

 
Spirit of the Dawn's survivors landed at South Bay

A much later attempt to establish cattle on the islands was short-lived (as were the cattle). When the ship Spirit of the Dawn (with a crew of 16) foundered off the main island's coast in 1893, the eleven surviving crew spent nearly three months living as castaways on the island, living on raw muttonbirds, mussels and roots for 87 days before gaining the attention of the government steamer NZGSS Hinemoa by a flag made from their sail.[citation needed]

 
Castaway hut at Antipodes' northern end

A well-supplied castaway depot[13] was available on the other end of the island, but the survivors' weak condition and the island's mountainous terrain prevented them from searching for depots.

The depot was found and used by the crew of the French barque President Felix Faure, wrecked in Anchorage bay in 1908, who were stranded for sixty days until rescued by HMS Pegasus.[14]

The last wreck at the Antipodes was the yacht Totorore with the loss of two lives, Gerry Clark and Roger Sale, in June 1999.[15]

Nuclear testing proposals edit

In 1955 the British Government required a large site remote from population centres to test the new thermonuclear devices it was developing. Various islands in the South Pacific and Southern Oceans were considered, along with Antarctica. The Admiralty suggested the Antipodes Islands.[16]

Flora and fauna edit

 
Penguin colony in Anchorage Bay

The flora of the islands has been recorded in detail, and includes megaherbs. The islands are also home to numerous bird species including the endemic Antipodes snipe, Antipodes parakeet, Reischek's parakeet, as well as several albatrosses, petrels and penguins, including half of the world population of the erect-crested penguin.

The original population of fur seals seems to be regionally extinct or in serious peril where "Upland Seals" once found on Antipodes and Macquarie Island have been claimed as a distinct subspecies with thicker furs by scientists although it is unclear whether these seals were genetically distinct.[17]

Important Bird Area edit

The Antipodes group has been identified as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because of its significance as a breeding site for several species of seabirds. The seabirds are southern rockhopper and erect-crested penguins, Antipodean, black-browed, light-mantled and white-capped albatrosses, and northern giant, grey and white-chinned petrels.[18]

Conservation edit

As with many other islands, introduced rodents have caused problems by preying on the indigenous wildlife. A "Million Dollar Mouse" campaign was launched in 2012 to raise funds for an eradication programme as part of the New Zealand government's "Predator Free 2050" project.[19] In the winter of 2016, the Department of Conservation carried out bait drops totalling 65 tonnes from three helicopters, and searched with trained dogs for any remaining rodents, which eliminated the estimated 200,000 mice on Antipodes Island.[20][21]

The island group is surrounded by the 2,173 km2 (839 sq mi) Moutere Mahue / Antipodes Island Marine Reserve.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Antipodes Islands". doc.govt.nz. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  2. ^ Final counts – census night and census usually resident populations, and occupied dwellings – Area outside territorial authority 25 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, 2006 Census, Statistics New Zealand. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  3. ^ Antipodes, Liddell and Scott, "A Greek-English Lexicon", on Perseus.
  4. ^ antipodes, Online Etymology Dictionary
  5. ^ "Antipodes Island". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  6. ^ "NZ Primary Parcels". linz.govt.nz. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  7. ^ "NGA-IWI-O-AOTEA". Te Ao Hou. 1967. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  8. ^ "Captain Fairchild to the Secretary, Marine Department, Wellington". Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1886 Session I, H-24. Wellington: Marine Department. p. 6. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  9. ^ Rowley Taylor, Straight through from London: the Antipodes and Bounty Islands, New Zealand, Christchurch, Heritage Expeditions New Zealand, 2006, p.34. Isle Penantipode, discovered by HMS Reliance, H.Waterhouse, commander, March 25, 1800.
  10. ^ Keith Macrae Bowden, George Bass, 1771–1803: his discoveries, romantic life and tragic disappearance, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1952, pp.118–119.
  11. ^ The Sydney Gazette, 5 May 1805; 16 March 1806.
  12. ^ Peter Entwisle, Taka: a Vignette life of William Tucker 1784–1817: Convict, Sealer, Trader in Human Heads, Otago Settler, New Zealand's First Art Dealer, Dunedin, Port Daniel Press, 2005, p.40-41.
  13. ^ Items from the 1880s depot recovered in 1947 and now in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
  14. ^ "Castaways rescued". Evening Post. New Zealand. 16 May 1908. p. 6.
  15. ^ Imber, Michael J.; Scofield, R. Paul; Goodwin, Anthea; Tennyson, Alan J.D. (2000). (PDF). Notornis. 49 (1): 55–58. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 October 2008.
  16. ^ Arnold & Pyne 2001, p. 96.
  17. ^ Richards, Rhys (1994). ""The upland seal" of the Antipodes and Macquarie Islands: A historian's perspective". Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand. 24 (3): 289–295. Bibcode:1994JRSNZ..24..289R. doi:10.1080/03014223.1994.9517473.
  18. ^ BirdLife International. (2012). Important Bird Areas factsheet: Antipodes Islands. Downloaded from . Archived from the original on 10 July 2007. Retrieved 7 May 2013. on 27 January 2012.
  19. ^ "Department of Conservation selling access to rare species". Stuff.co.nz. 10 June 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  20. ^ "Million Dollar Mouse successfully eradicates mice from Antipodes Island". The Beehive. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  21. ^ Shuklin, George (21 March 2018). "NZ hails 'Million Dollar Mouse' success". BBC News. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  22. ^ "Data Table – Protected Areas – LINZ Data Service (recorded area 217286.6633 ha)". Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 27 August 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Wise's New Zealand Guide (4th ed.; 1969). Dunedin: H. Wise & Co. (N.Z.) Ltd.
  • "NGA-IWI-O-AOTEA". No. 59 (June 1967). Te Ao Hou – The Maori Magazine, pp. 43.
  • Godley, E.J. The Botany of Antipodes Island. New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1989, Vol. 27: 531–563
  • Entwisle, Peter (2005). Taka, A Vignette Life of William Tucker 1784–1817. Dunedin: Port Daniel Press. ISBN 0-473-10098-3.
  • Taylor, Rowley, (2006) Straight Through from London, the Antipodes and Bounty Islands, New Zealand. Christchurch: Heritage Expeditions New Zealand. ISBN 0-473-10650-7.
  • Marris, J.W.M. (2000): The beetle (Coleoptera) fauna of the Antipodes Islands, with comments on the impact of mice; and an annotated checklist of the insect and arachnid fauna. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 30: 169–195. ISSN 0303-6758 doi:10.1080/03014223.2000.9517616 PDF
  • Warham, J.; Johns, P.M. 1975: The University of Canterbury Antipodes Island Expedition 1969. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 5(2): 103–131. ISSN 0303-6758 Google books

External links edit

  • at the Department of Conservation
  • Island Conservation: Antipodes Islands Project

antipodes, islands, māori, moutere, mahue, abandoned, island, inhospitable, uninhabited, volcanic, islands, subantarctic, waters, south, territorially, part, zealand, archipelago, lies, southeast, stewart, island, rakiura, northeast, campbell, island, they, ve. The Antipodes Islands Maori Moutere Mahue lit Abandoned Island are inhospitable and uninhabited volcanic islands in subantarctic waters to the south of and territorially part of New Zealand The 21 km2 8 1 sq mi archipelago lies 860 km 530 mi to the southeast of Stewart Island Rakiura and 730 km 450 mi to the northeast of Campbell Island 1 They are very close to being the antipodal point to Normandy in France meaning that the city farthest away is Cherbourg en Cotentin France Antipodes IslandsThe Antipodes Islands seen from the northPosition relative to New Zealand and other outlying islandsGeographyLocation860 km southeast of Stewart IslandCoordinates49 40 12 S 178 46 48 E 49 67000 S 178 78000 E 49 67000 178 78000ArchipelagoAntipodes IslandsMajor islandsAntipodes BollonsArea21 1 km2 8 1 sq mi Highest elevation366 m 1201 ft Highest pointMount GallowayAdministrationNew ZealandDemographicsPopulation0 2 2006 Additional informationNature reserve The island group consists of one main island Antipodes Island of 20 km2 7 7 sq mi area Bollons Island to the north and numerous small islets and stacks The islands are listed with the New Zealand Outlying Islands The islands are an immediate part of New Zealand but not part of any region or district but instead Area Outside Territorial Authority like all the other outlying islands except the Solander Islands Ecologically the islands are part of the Antipodes Subantarctic Islands tundra ecoregion The islands are inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List together with other subantarctic New Zealand islands The island group is a nature reserve and there is no general public access They are the southeasternmost point of land in the world outside of Antarctica Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Islands 3 History 3 1 Prehistory 3 2 Sealing 3 3 Shipwrecks 3 4 Nuclear testing proposals 4 Flora and fauna 4 1 Important Bird Area 5 Conservation 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology editThe word antipodes derives from the Greek ἀntipodes 3 plural of antipous ἀntipoys with feet opposite ours from anti opposed and pous foot 4 The island group was originally called the Penantipodes meaning next to the antipodes because it lies near to the antipodes of London located around 51 5 S 180 W Over time the name has been shortened to Antipodes The island s actual antipodes are in the area of the Arrondissement of Dieppe Normandy Geography edit nbsp Topographical map The volcanic Antipodes Islands lie 860 km 530 mi southeast of Stewart Island Rakiura They consist of a main island Antipodes Island area 20 km2 7 7 sq mi surrounded by a series of small offshore islands and rocks These islands include Bollons Island at 0 5 km2 0 19 sq mi the second largest in the group 1 200 m 3 900 ft to the northeast of the main island s North Cape and the nearby smaller Archway Island Leeward Island situated just off the centre of the main island s east coast to which it is connected by a rocky bar at low tide the two Windward Islands situated 800 m 2 600 ft apart the easternmost of which is 600 m 2 000 ft to the immediate north of Cave Point the main island s westernmost point and the tiny Orde Lees Islet located close to the main island s northwestern shore Numerous small islets and stacks further surround the coast of the main island The islands are steep and cliffs and rocky reefs line the majority of the coasts The highest point is Mount Galloway at 366 m 1 201 ft in the north of the main island which also forms part of the group s most recently active volcano 5 Mount Waterhouse to Galloway s southwest also reaches over 360 m 1 180 ft Several other heights on the main island reach above 200 m 660 ft as does the highest point of Bollons Island A ridge of peaks the Reliance Ridge runs along the main island s south coast Several small streams run from the slopes of the main island s peaks with the largest of these being the Dougall Stream which runs northeast from the eastern slopes of Mount Waterhouse to reach the east coast not far from its closest point to Leeward Island The Ringdove Stream runs east along the northern flanks of the Reliance Ridge to reach the large rocky Ringdove Bay in the southeast of the main island A further prominent stream runs southwest from the northwestern slopes of Mount Waterhouse to reach Stack Bay to the south of the Cave Point Peninsula and a fourth runs north from the slopes of Mount Galloway reaching the sea to the west of North Cape close to Reef Point Islands edit The following table includes named islands according to Land Information New Zealand 6 Location Area ha Antipodes Island 2 014 8 Bollons Island 52 6 Leeward Island 12 5 East Windward Island 8 5 West Windward Island 7 0 Archway Island 6 3 Orde Lees Islet 1 8 Total 2 103 7History editPrehistory edit There is no archaeological evidence of human visitation prior to European discovery of the islands Descriptions 7 of a shard of early Polynesian pottery having been discovered 76 cm 2 ft 6 in below the surface on the main island in 1886 and housed in the collections of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa are unsubstantiated The museum has not been able to locate such a shard in its collection and the original reference to the object in the museum s collection documentation indicates no reference to Polynesian influences 8 Sealing edit The island group was seen on March 25 1800 by Captain Henry Waterhouse commanding HMS Reliance Matthew Flinders was first lieutenant and his younger brother Samuel was a midshipman on the vessel Samuel prepared the chart of the islands 9 Waterhouse reported the presence of seals In 1803 Waterhouse s brother in law George Bass applied to Governor Philip Gidley King of New South Wales for a fishing monopoly from a line bisecting southern New Zealand from Dusky Sound to the Otago Harbour to cover all the lands and seas to the south including the Antipodes Islands probably because he knew the latter were home to large populations of fur seals 10 Bass sailed from Sydney to the south that year and was never heard of again but his information led to a sealing boom at the islands in 1805 to 1807 In February 1805 the first sealing gangs arrived on the island from the American schooners Favorite and Independence 11 They killed about 60 000 seals over the course of the year they were stationed on the islands At one time eighty men were present there was a battle between American and British led gangs and a single cargo of more than 80 000 skins one of the greatest ever shipped from Australasia was on sold in Canton for one pound sterling a skin a multimillion dollar return in modern terms Prominent Sydney merchants such as Simeon Lord Henry Kable and James Underwood were engaged in the trade as well as the Americans Daniel Whitney and Owen Folger Smith William W Stewart who claimed to have charted Stewart Island and probably William Tucker who started the retail trade in preserved Maori heads were present during the boom After 1807 sealing was occasional and cargoes small no doubt because the animals had been all but exterminated 12 Shipwrecks edit nbsp Spirit of the Dawn s survivors landed at South Bay A much later attempt to establish cattle on the islands was short lived as were the cattle When the ship Spirit of the Dawn with a crew of 16 foundered off the main island s coast in 1893 the eleven surviving crew spent nearly three months living as castaways on the island living on raw muttonbirds mussels and roots for 87 days before gaining the attention of the government steamer NZGSS Hinemoa by a flag made from their sail citation needed nbsp Castaway hut at Antipodes northern end A well supplied castaway depot 13 was available on the other end of the island but the survivors weak condition and the island s mountainous terrain prevented them from searching for depots The depot was found and used by the crew of the French barque President Felix Faure wrecked in Anchorage bay in 1908 who were stranded for sixty days until rescued by HMS Pegasus 14 The last wreck at the Antipodes was the yacht Totorore with the loss of two lives Gerry Clark and Roger Sale in June 1999 15 Nuclear testing proposals edit In 1955 the British Government required a large site remote from population centres to test the new thermonuclear devices it was developing Various islands in the South Pacific and Southern Oceans were considered along with Antarctica The Admiralty suggested the Antipodes Islands 16 Flora and fauna edit nbsp Penguin colony in Anchorage Bay The flora of the islands has been recorded in detail and includes megaherbs The islands are also home to numerous bird species including the endemic Antipodes snipe Antipodes parakeet Reischek s parakeet as well as several albatrosses petrels and penguins including half of the world population of the erect crested penguin The original population of fur seals seems to be regionally extinct or in serious peril where Upland Seals once found on Antipodes and Macquarie Island have been claimed as a distinct subspecies with thicker furs by scientists although it is unclear whether these seals were genetically distinct 17 Important Bird Area edit The Antipodes group has been identified as an Important Bird Area IBA by BirdLife International because of its significance as a breeding site for several species of seabirds The seabirds are southern rockhopper and erect crested penguins Antipodean black browed light mantled and white capped albatrosses and northern giant grey and white chinned petrels 18 Conservation editAs with many other islands introduced rodents have caused problems by preying on the indigenous wildlife A Million Dollar Mouse campaign was launched in 2012 to raise funds for an eradication programme as part of the New Zealand government s Predator Free 2050 project 19 In the winter of 2016 the Department of Conservation carried out bait drops totalling 65 tonnes from three helicopters and searched with trained dogs for any remaining rodents which eliminated the estimated 200 000 mice on Antipodes Island 20 21 The island group is surrounded by the 2 173 km2 839 sq mi Moutere Mahue Antipodes Island Marine Reserve 22 See also edit nbsp Islands portal Composite Antarctic Gazetteer Territorial claims in Antarctica New Zealand Subantarctic Islands List of Antarctic and subantarctic islands List of islands of New Zealand List of islands Desert islandReferences edit a b Antipodes Islands doc govt nz Retrieved 7 February 2024 Final counts census night and census usually resident populations and occupied dwellings Area outside territorial authority Archived 25 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Census Statistics New Zealand Retrieved 26 August 2010 Antipodes Liddell and Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus antipodes Online Etymology Dictionary Antipodes Island Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 6 March 2018 NZ Primary Parcels linz govt nz Retrieved 7 February 2024 NGA IWI O AOTEA Te Ao Hou 1967 Retrieved 9 July 2012 Captain Fairchild to the Secretary Marine Department Wellington Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives 1886 Session I H 24 Wellington Marine Department p 6 Retrieved 9 July 2012 Rowley Taylor Straight through from London the Antipodes and Bounty Islands New Zealand Christchurch Heritage Expeditions New Zealand 2006 p 34 Isle Penantipode discovered by HMS Reliance H Waterhouse commander March 25 1800 Keith Macrae Bowden George Bass 1771 1803 his discoveries romantic life and tragic disappearance Melbourne Oxford University Press 1952 pp 118 119 The Sydney Gazette 5 May 1805 16 March 1806 Peter Entwisle Taka a Vignette life of William Tucker 1784 1817 Convict Sealer Trader in Human Heads Otago Settler New Zealand s First Art Dealer Dunedin Port Daniel Press 2005 p 40 41 Items from the 1880s depot recovered in 1947 and now in the collection of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa Castaways rescued Evening Post New Zealand 16 May 1908 p 6 Imber Michael J Scofield R Paul Goodwin Anthea Tennyson Alan J D 2000 Obituary Gerald Stanley Gerry Clark 1927 1999 PDF Notornis 49 1 55 58 Archived from the original PDF on 18 October 2008 Arnold amp Pyne 2001 p 96 Richards Rhys 1994 The upland seal of the Antipodes and Macquarie Islands A historian s perspective Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 24 3 289 295 Bibcode 1994JRSNZ 24 289R doi 10 1080 03014223 1994 9517473 BirdLife International 2012 Important Bird Areas factsheet Antipodes Islands Downloaded from BirdLife International conserving the world s birds Archived from the original on 10 July 2007 Retrieved 7 May 2013 on 27 January 2012 Department of Conservation selling access to rare species Stuff co nz 10 June 2012 Retrieved 14 June 2012 Million Dollar Mouse successfully eradicates mice from Antipodes Island The Beehive Retrieved 20 March 2018 Shuklin George 21 March 2018 NZ hails Million Dollar Mouse success BBC News Retrieved 23 March 2018 Data Table Protected Areas LINZ Data Service recorded area 217286 6633 ha Land Information New Zealand Retrieved 27 August 2019 Further reading editWise s New Zealand Guide 4th ed 1969 Dunedin H Wise amp Co N Z Ltd NGA IWI O AOTEA No 59 June 1967 Te Ao Hou The Maori Magazine pp 43 Godley E J The Botany of Antipodes Island New Zealand Journal of Botany 1989 Vol 27 531 563 Entwisle Peter 2005 Taka A Vignette Life of William Tucker 1784 1817 Dunedin Port Daniel Press ISBN 0 473 10098 3 Taylor Rowley 2006 Straight Through from London the Antipodes and Bounty Islands New Zealand Christchurch Heritage Expeditions New Zealand ISBN 0 473 10650 7 Marris J W M 2000 The beetle Coleoptera fauna of the Antipodes Islands with comments on the impact of mice and an annotated checklist of the insect and arachnid fauna Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 30 169 195 ISSN 0303 6758 doi 10 1080 03014223 2000 9517616 PDF Warham J Johns P M 1975 The University of Canterbury Antipodes Island Expedition 1969 Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 5 2 103 131 ISSN 0303 6758 Google booksExternal links editAntipodes Islands at the Department of Conservation Island Conservation Antipodes Islands Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antipodes Islands amp oldid 1218695519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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