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Bruny Island

Bruny Island (Nuenonne: Lunawanna-alonnah[2]) is a 362-square-kilometre (140 sq mi) island located off the south-eastern coast of Tasmania, Australia. The island is separated from the Tasmanian mainland by the D'Entrecasteaux Channel, and its east coast lies within the Tasman Sea. Storm Bay is located to the island's northeast. Both the island and the channel are named after French explorer, Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux. Its traditional Aboriginal name is lunawanna-allonah, which survives as the name of two island settlements, Alonnah and Lunawanna.

Bruny
Native name:
Lunawanna Allonah
Location of the Bruny Island in Tasmania
EtymologyBruni d'Entrecasteaux
Geography
LocationTasman Sea
Coordinates43°22′S 147°17′E / 43.367°S 147.283°E / -43.367; 147.283Coordinates: 43°22′S 147°17′E / 43.367°S 147.283°E / -43.367; 147.283
Total islands2
Area362 km2 (140 sq mi)[1]
Highest elevation571 m (1873 ft)
Highest pointMount Mangana
Administration
StateTasmania
LGAKingborough Council
Demographics
Population600
Pop. density1.6/km2 (4.1/sq mi)
Additional information
Official websitewww.brunyisland.org.au

Geography

Geologically, Bruny Island is actually two land masses—North Bruny and South Bruny—that are joined by a long, narrow, sandy isthmus, often referred to as "The Neck". The island has a total length of approximately 50 kilometres (30 miles). The holiday village of Dennes Point is located in North Bruny, while South Bruny is the site of the towns of Alonnah, Adventure Bay and Lunawanna.

 
Aerial perspective of the isthmus of Bruny Island, looking north

Outside of its settlements, the island is covered with grazing fields and large tracts of dry eucalyptus forest. Inland forests have been logged, but other large sections—mostly along the southeastern coast—are preserved as the South Bruny National Park. While the seaward side of the island features two long beaches—Adventure Bay and Cloudy Bay—it is for the most part extremely rugged, with cliffs of dolerite that are over 200 metres (660 ft) AHD  in altitude. Bruny's channel side is far more sheltered and a favourite fishing and recreational boating area for local and interstate visitors. Adventure Bay is located on the eastern side of the isthmus, while Isthmus Bay is located on the western side.[3]

Access to the island is by vehicular ferry, funded by the State Government. Since 1954, four vessels have operated the Bruny Island Ferry service between the island and Kettering on the mainland. The service currently uses the vessel, Mirambeena, which is plied by a Voith-Schneider propulsion system rather than a conventional propeller.

The d'Entrecastaux Channel region, sheltered by Bruny Island, is increasingly subject to foreshore erosion, some areas have begun sandbagging to reduce the effects.[4]

History

Bruny Island was originally inhabited by Aboriginal Tasmanians and there is still a large community of people who live on the Island and identify as Aboriginal. Abel Tasman tried to land in the vicinity of Adventure Bay in November 1642.

In 1773, Tobias Furneaux was the first recorded European to land on the island at Adventure Bay (named after his ship); four years later on 26 January 1777 James Cook's two ships, the Resolution and Discovery stayed in the bay area for two days. Cook carved his initials in a tree that was destroyed in a 1905 bushfire and is now commemorated by a plaque. In 1788 and again in 1792 (with Matthew Flinders), William Bligh stayed in the Adventure Bay area.

The island itself, however, is named after the French explorer Bruni d'Entrecasteaux who explored the Channel region and discovered it to be an island in 1792.[5] It was known as Bruni Island until 1918, when the spelling was changed to Bruny.

Whaling was conducted off the coast of Bruny Island in the first half of the 19th century. The British whaler Alexander was reported to be whaling in Adventure Bay in 1804.[6] In 1805, the British whalers Richard and Mary, Ocean and the Sydney whaler King George were reported there in the winter months. The American whaler Topaz was there in 1807. Colonial entrepreneurs also operated shore-based whaling stations there. Bethune and Kelly had a station operating in Adventure Bay by August 1826.[7] Kelly and Lucas had another at Bull Bay. Young and Walford had one at Trumpeter Bay. Alexander Imlay applied for a site as a whaling station at Cloudy Bay in 1837, and Brown and Rogers did the same in 1842.[8] These stations had all ceased operating by 1850, although whaling vessels sometimes anchored offshore in the second half of the century.[9]

Even though "Cooktown"[citation needed] was marked on maps as early as the 1840s, the island was not officially opened up to European settlement until the late 1800s when the timber industry took off. South Bruny was opened up by numerous tramways and haulages, some horse-drawn and some using modified locomotives. The longest and best preserved tramway runs from Adventure Bay to the far southeast corner of the island. Almost all settlements on South Bruny were originally opened as timber ports, owned by the different timber companies operating on the island. Lunawanna (former Daniels Bay), Alonnah (formerly Mills Reef) and Adventure Bay were some of the largest ports operating on the island. At Daniels Bay, the settlement was separated from the timber jetty as the tramway was forced to trace along the south side of the bay in order to reach deep water, as most of Daniels Bay was too shallow to bring boats in. Most settlements of South Bruny now serve as shack towns or holiday locations.

Since the 1920s, the island has become known as a holiday location with surfing beaches, National Parks and historical sites. In more recent history the Bruny Island was the site of a land transfer by the state government to local Aboriginal people.[10]

Environment

Bruny Island is classified by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area because it supports the world's largest population of the endangered forty-spotted pardalote, up to a third of the world population of the swift parrot, all 12 of Tasmania's endemic bird species, and up to 240,000 breeding pairs of the short-tailed shearwater (or Tasmanian muttonbird).[11] In March 2021, awareness was raised about the feral cat population. This has been steadily growing over the last decade. The local residents have opened an inquiry into the sudden large number of feral cats. With concerns of this spike in numbers having adverse affects on the environment and wildlife. This inquiry, Taskforce Tom, has discovered some of the feral population are the size of large dogs. Initial findings strongly suggest the feral cats migrated from the Eastern Shore of Tasmania. Namely the Howrah/Tranmere region. On the issue of feral cats, an alternative view taken by some wildlife ecologists[12] is that cats are a naturalized alien species in much of Australia, and that the best current approach to conservation of their prey species is, in general, ensuring adequate intact habitats. An exception can be small islands where eradication techniques allow, especially because such islands are often important refuges but this is, unfortunately, impractical at present on islands the size of Bruny. Control methodologies are under active investigation and can be expected to improve.

Tourism

A key contributor to Bruny Island's economy is its growing tourism industry. Being home to the South Bruny National Park, tourism on the island centres on the showcase of its natural assets.[13][14]

The Cape Bruny Lighthouse, first lit in 1838, is an iconic Australian lighthouse. It was the third lighthouse built in Tasmania, and the fourth in all of Australia,[15] and was the longest continuously manned lighthouse in the country until it was automated in 1993.[16] It was removed from service in 1996, and became part of the South Bruny National Park in 2000. Guided tours of the structure are available.[15]

In 2010/11, overall visitors to Bruny Island increased 4% to 74,600.[17] The island is primarily a day-trip destination with only 21,800 visitors staying on the island overnight.[18] There are a growing number of tourism businesses on the island including a cheese factory, oyster farm, vineyard, smokehouse, lighthouse, museum, art gallery, two eco-cruises along with various accommodation properties and cafes.[19]

Accommodation

Bruny Island offers a variety of accommodations, including camping, bed-and-breakfast, holiday homes and retreats, and a caravan park.

Localities

Bruny Island is divided into eleven bounded localities. The two largest by area are North Bruny and South Bruny which consist of national park, state forest and some grazing areas and do not have postcodes.

On North Bruny there are five populated coastal enclaves: Apollo Bay, Barnes Bay, Dennes Point, Great Bay and Killora. On South Bruny there are four: Adventure Bay, Alonnah, Lunawanna and Simpsons Bay.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ "Bruny Island". Britannica Online. Retrieved 17 August 2008.
  2. ^ Gibbons, Ray (2016), "Introduction", The Political and Economic Uses of Tasmanian Genocide - the targeted destruction of the Palawa, vol. 1
  3. ^ "Tasmanian Nomenclature: The Place-Names of the State: A Record of Origins and Dates". The Mercury. 16 September 1911. p. 10. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  4. ^ Flora Fox, Flora Fox, News and Information about Southern Tasmania 17 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2011
  5. ^ Giblin, R. W. (1928). The early history of Tasmania.
  6. ^ Nicholson, Ian Hawkins (1983). Shipping Arrivals and Departures, Tasmania, 1803-1833 (First ed.). Canberra: Roebuck. p. 14. ISBN 0909434220.
  7. ^ Evans, Kathryn (1993). Site Histories. Shore-based whaling in Tasmania historical research project. Vol. 2. Hobart: Tasmanian Parks and Wildlife Service. pp. 11–12. OCLC 224493764.
  8. ^ Evans 1993, p. 17
  9. ^ Evans 1993, p. 12
  10. ^ Elder, Bruce (13 February 1999). "Rock of Ages". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  11. ^ . Birdata. Birds Australia. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
  12. ^ "Inquiry into the problem of feral and domestic cats in Australia" (PDF). The Australian Mammal Society. 21 July 2020. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  13. ^ "Statistics - Tasmania,2002". Australian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 10 August 2008.
  14. ^ "Tas Country Hour Feature Stories". ABC Rural Online. Retrieved 10 August 2008.
  15. ^ a b "Cape Bruny Lighthouse". Parks & Wildlife Tasmania. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  16. ^ "Cape Bruny Lighthouse History". Cape Bruny Lighthouse Tours. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  17. ^ . Tourism Tasmania. Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  18. ^ . Tourism Tasmania. Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  19. ^ Kelly, Chris (31 October 2020). "What To Do on Bruny Island: The Day Trip". Hunter and Bligh. Retrieved 3 December 2020.

External links

  • Bruny Island at Curlie has links to Bruny Island businesses and information.
  •   Bruny Island travel guide from Wikivoyage

bruny, island, bruny, redirects, here, polish, village, bruny, poland, 2019, novel, bruny, novel, nuenonne, lunawanna, alonnah, square, kilometre, island, located, south, eastern, coast, tasmania, australia, island, separated, from, tasmanian, mainland, entrec. Bruny redirects here For the Polish village see Bruny Poland For the 2019 novel see Bruny novel Bruny Island Nuenonne Lunawanna alonnah 2 is a 362 square kilometre 140 sq mi island located off the south eastern coast of Tasmania Australia The island is separated from the Tasmanian mainland by the D Entrecasteaux Channel and its east coast lies within the Tasman Sea Storm Bay is located to the island s northeast Both the island and the channel are named after French explorer Antoine Bruni d Entrecasteaux Its traditional Aboriginal name is lunawanna allonah which survives as the name of two island settlements Alonnah and Lunawanna BrunyNative name Lunawanna AllonahLocation of the Bruny Island in TasmaniaEtymologyBruni d EntrecasteauxGeographyLocationTasman SeaCoordinates43 22 S 147 17 E 43 367 S 147 283 E 43 367 147 283 Coordinates 43 22 S 147 17 E 43 367 S 147 283 E 43 367 147 283Total islands2Area362 km2 140 sq mi 1 Highest elevation571 m 1873 ft Highest pointMount ManganaAdministrationAustraliaStateTasmaniaLGAKingborough CouncilDemographicsPopulation600Pop density1 6 km2 4 1 sq mi Additional informationOfficial websitewww wbr brunyisland wbr org wbr au Contents 1 Geography 2 History 3 Environment 4 Tourism 5 Accommodation 6 Localities 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGeography EditGeologically Bruny Island is actually two land masses North Bruny and South Bruny that are joined by a long narrow sandy isthmus often referred to as The Neck The island has a total length of approximately 50 kilometres 30 miles The holiday village of Dennes Point is located in North Bruny while South Bruny is the site of the towns of Alonnah Adventure Bay and Lunawanna Aerial perspective of the isthmus of Bruny Island looking north Outside of its settlements the island is covered with grazing fields and large tracts of dry eucalyptus forest Inland forests have been logged but other large sections mostly along the southeastern coast are preserved as the South Bruny National Park While the seaward side of the island features two long beaches Adventure Bay and Cloudy Bay it is for the most part extremely rugged with cliffs of dolerite that are over 200 metres 660 ft AHD in altitude Bruny s channel side is far more sheltered and a favourite fishing and recreational boating area for local and interstate visitors Adventure Bay is located on the eastern side of the isthmus while Isthmus Bay is located on the western side 3 Access to the island is by vehicular ferry funded by the State Government Since 1954 four vessels have operated the Bruny Island Ferry service between the island and Kettering on the mainland The service currently uses the vessel Mirambeena which is plied by a Voith Schneider propulsion system rather than a conventional propeller The d Entrecastaux Channel region sheltered by Bruny Island is increasingly subject to foreshore erosion some areas have begun sandbagging to reduce the effects 4 History EditBruny Island was originally inhabited by Aboriginal Tasmanians and there is still a large community of people who live on the Island and identify as Aboriginal Abel Tasman tried to land in the vicinity of Adventure Bay in November 1642 In 1773 Tobias Furneaux was the first recorded European to land on the island at Adventure Bay named after his ship four years later on 26 January 1777 James Cook s two ships the Resolution and Discovery stayed in the bay area for two days Cook carved his initials in a tree that was destroyed in a 1905 bushfire and is now commemorated by a plaque In 1788 and again in 1792 with Matthew Flinders William Bligh stayed in the Adventure Bay area The island itself however is named after the French explorer Bruni d Entrecasteaux who explored the Channel region and discovered it to be an island in 1792 5 It was known as Bruni Island until 1918 when the spelling was changed to Bruny Whaling was conducted off the coast of Bruny Island in the first half of the 19th century The British whaler Alexander was reported to be whaling in Adventure Bay in 1804 6 In 1805 the British whalers Richard and Mary Ocean and the Sydney whaler King George were reported there in the winter months The American whaler Topaz was there in 1807 Colonial entrepreneurs also operated shore based whaling stations there Bethune and Kelly had a station operating in Adventure Bay by August 1826 7 Kelly and Lucas had another at Bull Bay Young and Walford had one at Trumpeter Bay Alexander Imlay applied for a site as a whaling station at Cloudy Bay in 1837 and Brown and Rogers did the same in 1842 8 These stations had all ceased operating by 1850 although whaling vessels sometimes anchored offshore in the second half of the century 9 Even though Cooktown citation needed was marked on maps as early as the 1840s the island was not officially opened up to European settlement until the late 1800s when the timber industry took off South Bruny was opened up by numerous tramways and haulages some horse drawn and some using modified locomotives The longest and best preserved tramway runs from Adventure Bay to the far southeast corner of the island Almost all settlements on South Bruny were originally opened as timber ports owned by the different timber companies operating on the island Lunawanna former Daniels Bay Alonnah formerly Mills Reef and Adventure Bay were some of the largest ports operating on the island At Daniels Bay the settlement was separated from the timber jetty as the tramway was forced to trace along the south side of the bay in order to reach deep water as most of Daniels Bay was too shallow to bring boats in Most settlements of South Bruny now serve as shack towns or holiday locations Since the 1920s the island has become known as a holiday location with surfing beaches National Parks and historical sites In more recent history the Bruny Island was the site of a land transfer by the state government to local Aboriginal people 10 Environment EditBruny Island is classified by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area because it supports the world s largest population of the endangered forty spotted pardalote up to a third of the world population of the swift parrot all 12 of Tasmania s endemic bird species and up to 240 000 breeding pairs of the short tailed shearwater or Tasmanian muttonbird 11 In March 2021 awareness was raised about the feral cat population This has been steadily growing over the last decade The local residents have opened an inquiry into the sudden large number of feral cats With concerns of this spike in numbers having adverse affects on the environment and wildlife This inquiry Taskforce Tom has discovered some of the feral population are the size of large dogs Initial findings strongly suggest the feral cats migrated from the Eastern Shore of Tasmania Namely the Howrah Tranmere region On the issue of feral cats an alternative view taken by some wildlife ecologists 12 is that cats are a naturalized alien species in much of Australia and that the best current approach to conservation of their prey species is in general ensuring adequate intact habitats An exception can be small islands where eradication techniques allow especially because such islands are often important refuges but this is unfortunately impractical at present on islands the size of Bruny Control methodologies are under active investigation and can be expected to improve Tourism EditA key contributor to Bruny Island s economy is its growing tourism industry Being home to the South Bruny National Park tourism on the island centres on the showcase of its natural assets 13 14 The Cape Bruny Lighthouse first lit in 1838 is an iconic Australian lighthouse It was the third lighthouse built in Tasmania and the fourth in all of Australia 15 and was the longest continuously manned lighthouse in the country until it was automated in 1993 16 It was removed from service in 1996 and became part of the South Bruny National Park in 2000 Guided tours of the structure are available 15 In 2010 11 overall visitors to Bruny Island increased 4 to 74 600 17 The island is primarily a day trip destination with only 21 800 visitors staying on the island overnight 18 There are a growing number of tourism businesses on the island including a cheese factory oyster farm vineyard smokehouse lighthouse museum art gallery two eco cruises along with various accommodation properties and cafes 19 Accommodation EditThis section contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bruny Island offers a variety of accommodations including camping bed and breakfast holiday homes and retreats and a caravan park Localities EditBruny Island is divided into eleven bounded localities The two largest by area are North Bruny and South Bruny which consist of national park state forest and some grazing areas and do not have postcodes On North Bruny there are five populated coastal enclaves Apollo Bay Barnes Bay Dennes Point Great Bay and Killora On South Bruny there are four Adventure Bay Alonnah Lunawanna and Simpsons Bay Gallery Edit The Neck connects the two halves of Bruny Island and is an important breeding site for short tailed shearwater and fairy penguins Black faced cormorants Phalacrocorax fuscescens Bruny Island Tasmania Rock formation off the coast of Bruny IslandSee also Edit Australia portal Islands portalList of islands of TasmaniaReferences Edit Bruny Island Britannica Online Retrieved 17 August 2008 Gibbons Ray 2016 Introduction The Political and Economic Uses of Tasmanian Genocide the targeted destruction of the Palawa vol 1 Tasmanian Nomenclature The Place Names of the State A Record of Origins and Dates The Mercury 16 September 1911 p 10 Retrieved 23 August 2021 Flora Fox Flora Fox News and Information about Southern Tasmania Archived 17 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2011 Giblin R W 1928 The early history of Tasmania Nicholson Ian Hawkins 1983 Shipping Arrivals and Departures Tasmania 1803 1833 First ed Canberra Roebuck p 14 ISBN 0909434220 Evans Kathryn 1993 Site Histories Shore based whaling in Tasmania historical research project Vol 2 Hobart Tasmanian Parks and Wildlife Service pp 11 12 OCLC 224493764 Evans 1993 p 17 Evans 1993 p 12 Elder Bruce 13 February 1999 Rock of Ages The Sydney Morning Herald IBA Bruny Island Birdata Birds Australia Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 6 June 2011 Inquiry into the problem of feral and domestic cats in Australia PDF The Australian Mammal Society 21 July 2020 Retrieved 23 August 2021 Statistics Tasmania 2002 Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 10 August 2008 Tas Country Hour Feature Stories ABC Rural Online Retrieved 10 August 2008 a b Cape Bruny Lighthouse Parks amp Wildlife Tasmania Retrieved 30 October 2019 Cape Bruny Lighthouse History Cape Bruny Lighthouse Tours Retrieved 30 October 2019 Places Visited Tasmanian Tourism Visitor Survey June 2011 Tourism Tasmania Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Places Stayed Overnight Tasmanian Tourism Visitor Survey June 2011 Tourism Tasmania Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Kelly Chris 31 October 2020 What To Do on Bruny Island The Day Trip Hunter and Bligh Retrieved 3 December 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bruny Island Bruny Island at Curlie has links to Bruny Island businesses and information Bruny Island travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bruny Island amp oldid 1132521175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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