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St. Brandon

Saint Brandon, also known as the Cargados Carajos Shoals, is an Indian Ocean archipelago about 430 km (270 mi) northeast of Mauritius consisting of sand banks, shoals and islets. It consists of five island groups, with about 28-40 islands and islets in total, depending on seasonal storms and related sand movements.[1]

Saint Brandon
Native name:
Cargados Carajos
Geography
LocationIndian Ocean
Coordinates16°35′S 59°37′E / 16.583°S 59.617°E / -16.583; 59.617Coordinates: 16°35′S 59°37′E / 16.583°S 59.617°E / -16.583; 59.617
ArchipelagoCargados Carajos
Total islands22
Major islandsAlbatross Island, Raphaël, Avocaré Island, L'Île Coco and L'île du Sud
Area1.3 km2 (0.50 sq mi)
Administration
Mauritius
Largest settlementÎle Raphaël (pop. 30)
Demographics
Population40 (2022)
Pop. density48/km2 (124/sq mi)

The archipelago is low-lying and is prone to substantial submersion in severe weather by tropical cyclones in the Mascarene Islands. It has an aggregate land area estimated variously at 1.3 km2 (0.50 sq mi) and 200 ha (500 acres).[1] The islands have a small population of mostly fishermen, numbering 63 people in 2001.[2] The bulk of this population, approximately 40 people, live on Île Raphael, with smaller settlements existing on Avocaré Island, L'Île Coco, and L'île du Sud.

In the early 19th century, most of the islands were used as fishing stations. Today, only one company operates on the archipelago with three fishing stations and accommodation for sport fishermen on L'île du Sud and Île Raphael. A settlement on Albatross Island was abandoned in 1988.[3]

The islands are currently the subject of a legal dispute over territorial sovereignty between the government of Mauritius and Raphael Fishing Company, the current leaseholders of the islands.[4][5]

Etymology

The name Saint Brandon most likely came from the anglicized name of the French town of Saint-Brandan, possibly given by French sailors and corsairs that sailed to and from Brittany.[6]

Geography

 
 
Cargados Carajos
class=notpageimage|
Location of Cargados Carajos in the Indian Ocean

Geographically, the archipelago is part of the Mascarene Islands and is situated on the Mascarene Plateau formed by the separation of the Mauritia microcontinent during the separation of India and Madagascar around 60 million years ago from what is today the African continent.

The reef measures more than 50 km (31 mi) from north to south and is 5 km (3.1 mi) wide, cut by three passes. The reef area is 190 km2 (73 sq mi). The total number of islands on the reef varies but usually number around 40. Siren Island, L'île du Sud, Pearl Island, and Frigate Island are west of the reef, while North Island is about 4 km (2.5 mi) northeast of the northern tip of the reef. Albatross Island, about 18 km (11 mi) north, is geographically a separate single coral island.

Albatross Island is the highest point at 6 m (20 ft) above sea level and the largest of the islands in the group, with an area of 1.01 km2 (0.39 sq mi), followed by Raphaël, Tortue, Avocaré Island, L'Île Coco and L'île du Sud.

Temperatures range from 23–26 °C (73–79 °F), with rainfall of 1,050 mm (41 in) a year, most falling in January to April. The climate is dominated by the south-east trades. Cyclones can cause considerable damage. In 1948, Il aux Fous disappeared and Avoquer was submerged by two meters of water. Petit ile Longue was swept away in a later cyclone, but is now reappearing. The South Equatorial Current is dominant.[7]

List of named islands

 
Cargados Carajos Shoals in Mauritius
Name(s) Area Coordinates
Albatross Island 1.01 km2 (0.39 sq mi) 16°14′27″S 59°35′31″E / 16.24083°S 59.59194°E / -16.24083; 59.59194 (Albatross Island)
Îlot du Nord
(Île du Nord, North Island)
16°23′16″S 59°38′32″E / 16.38778°S 59.64222°E / -16.38778; 59.64222 (Îlot du Nord)
Île Raphael
(Raphaël Island)
16°26′00″S 59°36′18″E / 16.43333°S 59.60500°E / -16.43333; 59.60500 (Île Raphaël)
Îlot Siren 16°28′05″S 59°34′49″E / 16.46806°S 59.58028°E / -16.46806; 59.58028 (Îlot Siren)
Île Tortue 0.13 km2 (0.050 sq mi) 16°29′00″S 59°41′014″E / 16.48333°S 59.68722°E / -16.48333; 59.68722 (Île Tortue)
Pearl Islet
(Île Perle)
16°32′46″S 59°30′20″E / 16.54611°S 59.50556°E / -16.54611; 59.50556 (Pearl Islet)
L'île du Sud
(South Island, l'île Boisées)
16°48′55″S 59°30′09″E / 16.81528°S 59.50250°E / -16.81528; 59.50250 (L'île du Sud (South Island, l'île Boisées))
Avocaré Island
(Avoquer, L'Avocaire)
0.02 km2 (0.0077 sq mi) 16°36′10″S 59°38′26″E / 16.60278°S 59.64056°E / -16.60278; 59.64056 (Avocaré Island)
L'île du Gouvernement
(Government Island)
16°23′39″S 59°38′59″E / 16.39417°S 59.64972°E / -16.39417; 59.64972 (l'île du Gouvernement)
Petite Capitaine 16°36′0.0″S 59°34′0.0″E / 16.600000°S 59.566667°E / -16.600000; 59.566667 (Petite Capitaine)
Grande Capitaine 16°40′0.0″S 59°50′0.0″E / 16.666667°S 59.833333°E / -16.666667; 59.833333 (Grande Capitaine)
Mapare Islet 0.4 km2 (0.15 sq mi) 16°34′22″S 59°42′08″E / 16.57278°S 59.70222°E / -16.57278; 59.70222 (Mapare Islet)
Frigate Islet
(Île Frégate)
16°35′55″S 59°30′49″E / 16.59861°S 59.51361°E / -16.59861; 59.51361 (Frigate Islet)
Îlote du Paul
(Île Paul)
16°37′0.0″S 59°33′0.0″E / 16.616667°S 59.550000°E / -16.616667; 59.550000 (Îlote du Paul)
Puits A Eau 16°39′0.0″S 59°34′0.0″E / 16.650000°S 59.566667°E / -16.650000; 59.566667 (Puits A Eau)
Baleine Rocks
(La Baleine)
16°40′0.0″S 59°31′0.0″E / 16.666667°S 59.516667°E / -16.666667; 59.516667 (Baleine Rocks)
Île Verronge
(Verronge)
16°40′43″S 59°36′23″E / 16.67861°S 59.60639°E / -16.67861; 59.60639 (Île Veronge)
Veronge Ilot 16°42′0.0″S 59°38′0.0″E / 16.700000°S 59.633333°E / -16.700000; 59.633333 (Veronge Ilot)
Île Poulailler 16°44′0.0″S 59°46′0.0″E / 16.733333°S 59.766667°E / -16.733333; 59.766667 (Île Poulailer)
Palm Islet 16°45′0.0″S 59°35′0.0″E / 16.750000°S 59.583333°E / -16.750000; 59.583333 (Palm Islet)
Chaloupe 16°45′08″S 59°34′21″E / 16.75222°S 59.57250°E / -16.75222; 59.57250 (Chaloupe)
Courson 16°48′0.0″S 59°30′0.0″E / 16.800000°S 59.500000°E / -16.800000; 59.500000 (Courson)
L'Île Coco
(Île Cocos, Île aux Cocos)
0.5 km2 (0.19 sq mi) 16°48′56″S 59°30′09″E / 16.81556°S 59.50250°E / -16.81556; 59.50250 (L'Île Coco)

Ecology

Cargados comprises about 190 km2 (73 sq mi) of reefs. It has one of the largest algal ridges in the Indian Ocean. Coconut trees can be found on a few islands as well as a variety of bushes and grass. The islands are covered with white granular sand from eroded coral, and a thick layer of guano can be found in most places.

 
Satellite image of Cargados Carajos

The western part of the bay has a coral bank and a fringing reef, dominated by staghorn Acropora, with an irregular front which merges with the coral banks; the reef flat has appreciable coral cover. North of this, or deeper into the bay, are several isolated patches of coral growing in deeper water.

The eastern border has reefs with a greater diversity of corals, in particular, enormous hillocks of Pavona spp. with Mycedium tenuicostatum which is unusual in Mauritius. On the sandy substrate, Goniopora and Pontes provide hard substrate for several other species, notably Acropora and Pavona. Large tabular Acropora corals are also conspicuous, and when dead or overturned, provide substrate for other colonizers. These patches have expanded and fused to provide the numerous, large coral banks found in the Bay. Only twenty-eight coral species have been recorded which is probably due to the uniform habitat. Further offshore lies a peripheral fringing reef.

This complex of low islands, coral reefs and sand banks arises from a vast shallow submarine platform. The main structure is a large, 100 km (62 mi) long crescent-shaped reef whose convex side faces towards the south-east trades and the South Equatorial Current. The reef front of the main reef recurves inwards at both ends and is cut by two or three passes.

The main reef has a very broad reef flat, extending up to several hundred metres across in parts. Together with much of the broad reef flat it is emergent at low tides. Apart from calcareous red algae it supports a few pocilloporoid corals. Down to at least 20 m (66 ft) depth the substrate is swept clear of attached biota, although on the sides of spurs or buttresses a few corals exist. Underwater photographs of some of the numerous knolls and banks behind the reef show that the density of corals and soft corals is typical of many very sedimented areas and shallow lagoons in the Indian Ocean.

The islands are home to a total of 26 species of seabirds such as blue-faced boobies, sooty terns, and white terns. Green turtles and hawksbill turtles are also found on the islands.

History

The atoll was probably discovered in 975 A.D. by Arabian sailors along with Dina Arobi ("Abandoned Island"), now known as the island of Mauritius. It can also be found listed as Baixos on the 1502 Cantino Planisphere map.

It was named in 1506 by Portuguese sailors who went ashore for provisioning on their way to India. Pirates and French corsairs have also used the islands as a refuge.

In 1598, the Dutch occupied the islands.

On 12 February 1662, the East India Ship Arnhem ran aground on the Saint Brandon Rocks.[8] Volkert Evertsz, the captain, and other survivors of the wreck survived by piloting a small boat to Mauritius, and are thought to have been the last humans to see living dodos.[9][10] They survived the three months until their rescue by hunting "goats, birds, tortoises and pigs".[11] Evertsz was rescued by the English ship Truroe in May 1662.[11][12] Seven of the survivors chose not to return with the first rescue ship.[13]

Mauritius and its associated islands were colonised by the French some time around 1715, granted by the King of France to the Compagnie des Indes in 1726 but retroceded to the French Crown in 1765. Saint Brandon was referred to as Cargados in Samuel Dunn's world map of 1794.

On 9 June 1806, the French general Charles Decaen ordered the corsair Charles Nicolas Mariette to send a spying mission to Saint Brandon and to leave six men on the most prominent island and, on his return trip to Mauritius, to ascertain once and for all that Cargados Carajos and St. Brandon were the same shoal. The frigate Piemontaise under the command of Louis Jacques Eperon le Jeune departed on 11 June 1806.[14]

In 1810, the islands were taken by force by Britain, becoming a British crown colony.

From October to November 1917, the St. Brandon Islands and, in particular, the lagoon of L'Île Coco, were used as a base by the German raiding vessel Wolf, commanded by Karl August Nerger.[15] On the island, Wolf transferred stoking coal and stores from the captured Japanese ship Hitachi Maru which took three weeks. The coal was necessary for the raider's return to Germany. To do so, Wolf had to run a gauntlet of Allied warships from near the Cape of the Good Hope to the North Atlantic. On 7 November 1917, the Germans scuttled Hitachi Maru 26 km (16 mi) off shore and Wolf departed.[16]

The most common employment on St. Brandon in 1922 was agriculture, with a manager, assistant manager and eleven labourers. Only two young men were recorded as working as fishermen. Three men worked as carpenters, one as a mason, one as a shoemaker and another as a domestic servant. There was no indication that the guano mines were operating.[17] The islands were later mined for phosphates derived from guano until mining activities ceased in the mid-20th century.

Shipwrecks

Shipwrecks on the low-lying, rocky reefs of St. Brandon have been recorded since as early as 1662.

  • On 12 February 1662, the Dutch East Indiaman sailing ship Arnhem wrecked itself on the rocks at St. Brandon.[18][19][20]
  • 1780s - The English ship, the Hawk, foundered on Saint Brandon on her return to Europe from Surat.[21]
 
1820 oil painting of the survivors of the Cabalva wreck in St. Brandon.
  • On 25 October 1795, a vessel called l'Euphrasie arrived in Port Louis with five survivors from a shipwreck in St. Brandon related to a corsair ship called La Revanche. A certain crewman called Landier is described as leading this group of survivors. The other eight crew members perished.[22]
  • On 7 July 1818, the sailing vessel Cabalva, built by Wells, Wigram & Green in 1811 and owned by the East India Company, struck the reef at St. Brandon on its way to China and was destroyed. Captain James Dalrymple and several other lost their life.[23]
  • On 15 September 1845, the sailing ship Letitia ran aground on the Frigate islet.[24]
  • On 3 October 1969, the Russian tugboat Argus wrecked itself on the reef at St. Brandon. A total of 38 men were rescued.[25][26]
  • In 2012, a tuna longliner ran aground on the reef crest of St. Brandon's atoll. It broke into three pieces which was moved by currents and storms into the lagoon.[27]
  • On 29 November 2014, during the second leg of the 2014–15 Volvo Ocean Race, the sailing boat Team Vestas Wind ran aground on St. Brandon.[28]
  • On 1 February 2015, the fishing vessel Kha Yang, with 250,000 liters of fuel in its tanks, ran aground on the reef of St. Brandon.[29] Its crew of 20 were rescued shortly after its grounding, and a salvage operation pumped the fuel from its tanks a few weeks later.[30][31]
  • On 2 February 2017, the long bulk carrier Alam Manis ran aground on its way to Pipavav from Richards Bay.[32]
  • On 5 June 2021, the FV Sea Master belonging to the Mauritian company Hassen Taher was shipwrecked on Albatross Island.[33]
  • On 5 December 2022, the Taiwanese fishing vessel FV Yu Feng 67 ran aground off L'île du Sud.[34]

Demographics

The main settlement and the administrative centre of St. Brandon is Île Raphaël and can have up to 35 resident employees, a coast guard outpost and meteorological station (with eight residents in 1996). Smaller settlements exist on Avocaré Island, L'Île Coco, and L'île du Sud. The settlement on Albatross was abandoned in 1988.

Historical population

The St. Brandon archipelago was surveyed by British colonial authorities on 31 March 1911 as part of the Census of Mauritius. They found a total population of 110, made up of 97 men (86 non-Indian and 11 Indian) and 13 women (10 non-Indian and 3 Indian).[35] While the archipelago likely had a resident population at this point, as indicated by the 8 children under the age of 15 and the 5 people over the age of 60, there was also likely a seasonal component, with the largest population segment being men between 20 and 35.[36] 73 men worked in fishing, 11 at the guano mines and 4 were ship's carpenters.[37] Only one (male) person was recorded as having been born on St. Brandon.[38]

In the 1921 census, the population had plummeted to just 22. There were 21 men (ages 19–48) and just one woman, a married Catholic, aged 31. A further 14 people were identified as part of the "general population", with 11 of them born on Mauritius, one on Rodrigues and two in the Seychelles. In addition, there were 3 Indo-Mauritians and 5 "other Indians" from Madras, Calcutta and Colombo.[39]

Resident Transient Total Notes
1861 35 All were men.[40][41]
1871 9 All were men.[40][42][41]
1881 6 All were men.[40][41]
1891 0 [43][44]
1901 87 85 men and 2 women. 54 men and one woman were from the "general population"; 29 men were Indo-Mauritians, and two men and one woman were "other Indians"[44]
1911 110 [45]
1921 22 14 people were identified as part of the "general population", with 3 Indo-Mauritians and 5 "other Indians". 21 were men and just one was a woman.[46]
1931 61 All were men, of whom nine were married and one was an ethnic Indian. Fishing was the occupation of 59 of the men, while two were domestic servants. Most were Catholics, but one Muslim lived on the island.[47]
1944 93 All were men, two of them ethnic Indians, and the remainder of the "general population".[48]
1952 136 124 men (one of whom was ethnically Chinese) and 12 women.[49]
1962 90 [50]
1972 128 [51]
1983 137 [52]
2000 0 63 63 No permanent residents. Only transient population.[53]
2011 0 No permanent residents. Transient population not reported.[54]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b PRB: OIDC.
  2. ^ . Central Statistics Office, Mauritius. 2001. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 11 April 2014.
  3. ^ "St Brandon Island - Cargados Carajos - Mauritius Attractions". mauritiusattractions.com. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  4. ^ "GM Goes To War With Raphael Fishing Over St Brandon". Le Matinal. 20 January 2023. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  5. ^ "St. Brandon sovereignty controversy: Raphael Fishing Company Ltd hits back at GM – Mauritius News". Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  6. ^ Jean-Marie Chelin (2010). "Annee 1796". Histoire Maritime de L'Ile Maurice 1791 -1815 (in French). Tamarin. pp. 74–76. ISBN 9789994932719.
  7. ^ Coral Reefs of the World Volume 2 IUCN and UNEP. UNEP. 1988. p. 212. ISBN 2-88032-944-2.
  8. ^ "Arnhem (+1662)". Wrecksite. Retrieved 1 July 2011.
  9. ^ Roberts DL, Solow AR (November 2003). "Flightless birds: when did the dodo become extinct?". Nature. 426 (6964): 245. Bibcode:2003Natur.426..245R. doi:10.1038/426245a. PMID 14628039. S2CID 4347830.
  10. ^ Anthony Cheke; Julian P. Hume (30 June 2010). Lost Land of the Dodo: The Ecological History of Mauritius, Réunion and Rodrigues. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 78–. ISBN 978-1-4081-3305-7.
  11. ^ a b Jolyon C. Parish (2013). The Dodo and the Solitaire: A Natural History. Indiana University Press. pp. 45–. ISBN 978-0-253-00099-6.
  12. ^ Rijks geschiedkundige publicatiën: Grote serie. Martinus Nijhoff. 1979. ISBN 978-90-247-2282-2.
  13. ^ Megan Vaughan (1 February 2005). Creating the Creole Island: Slavery in Eighteenth-Century Mauritius. Duke University Press. pp. 11–. ISBN 0-8223-3399-6.
  14. ^ Jean Marie, Chelin (2010). Histoire Maritime de L'Ile Maurice 1791 -1815 (vol. 2 ed.). Tamarin, Mauritius. pp. 188, 189, 190. ISBN 978-99949-32-71-9.
  15. ^ "'The German Cruiser "The Wolf" Uses Saint Brandon as a transhipment point for the cargo of captured allied ships in 1917". Retrieved 28 August 2017.
  16. ^ Raider Wolf: the voyage of Captain Nerger, 1916-1918 by Edwin P Hoyt P150-P157. 1974. ISBN 9780839770671. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
  17. ^ 1921 Census, pp. cciii–ccvii.
  18. ^ J. R. Bruijn; F. S. Gaastra; Ivo Schöffer (1979). Dutch-Asiatic Shipping in the 17th and 18th Centuries: Outward-bound voyages from the Netherlands to Asia and the Cape (1595-1794). Nijhoff. ISBN 9789024722709.
  19. ^ Perry J. Moree (January 1998). A Concise History of Dutch Mauritius, 1598-1710: A Fruitful and Healthy Land. Kegan Paul International. ISBN 978-0-7103-0609-8.
  20. ^ Anthony S. Cheke; Julian Pender Hume (2008). Lost Land of the Dodo: An Ecological History of Mauritius, Réunion & Rodrigues. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-14186-3.
  21. ^ "The history of Mauritius, or the Isle of France, and the neighbouring islands; from their first discovery to the present time; Page 320 by Charles Grant". Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  22. ^ Jean-Marie Chelin (2010). "Année 1795". Histoire Maritime de L'Ile Maurice 1791 -1815 (in French). Jean-Marie Chelin. p. 69. ISBN 9789994932719.
  23. ^ "Cabalva (+1818)".
  24. ^ Various (28 February 2013). The Nautical Magazine and Naval Chronicle for 1846. Cambridge University Press. pp. 180–. ISBN 978-1-108-05434-8.
  25. ^ "MV Argus 1969". wrecksite. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  26. ^ Norman Hooke (1989). Modern shipping disasters, 1963-1987. Lloyd's of London Press. ISBN 9781850442110.
  27. ^ "longliner ran aground on the reef crest of St Brandon's Atoll". 20 February 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  28. ^ "Grounded". Volvo Ocean Race official website. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  29. ^ "Échouage d'un bateau de pêche: une catastrophe écologique menace Saint Brandon". 6 February 2015. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  30. ^ "AU LARGE DE SAINT-BRANDON : Naufrage d'un bateau de pêche - Le Mauricien". www.lemauricien.com. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  31. ^ "f/v Kha Yang aground, salvage under way". FleetMon.com. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  32. ^ "Alam Manis Runs aground in St Brandon". Shipwreck Log.
  33. ^ "Hassen Taher Seafoods". defimedia. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  34. ^ "LEE TSANG FISHERY CO LTD, Kaohsiung City, Chinese Taipei (Taiwan) | World Shipping Register". world-ships.com. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  35. ^ 1911 Census, p. iv, Abstracts iv.
  36. ^ 1911 Census, p. Abstracts xcvi, xcviii.
  37. ^ 1911 Census, p. Abstracts cxii.
  38. ^ 1911 Census, p. Abstracts cxvii.
  39. ^ 1921 Census, pp. 13, 15, 16, cciii–ccvii.
  40. ^ a b c 1901 Census, p. 168.
  41. ^ a b c 1881 Census, pp. 481–482.
  42. ^ 1871 Census, Part 2, p.2.
  43. ^ Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 1 April 1892, pp. 38, 41
  44. ^ a b Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 21 March 1902, p. 168
  45. ^ Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 1912, p. iv
  46. ^ Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 1921, p. 13,15,16
  47. ^ Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 1931, p. lxii–lxiii
  48. ^ Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 1944, p. 3
  49. ^ Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 1 June 1953, p. 6
  50. ^ Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 1962, pp. 42–43
  51. ^ Preliminary Results of the 1983 Population Census (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Central Statistical Office, January 1984, p. 1
  52. ^ 1983 Housing and Population Census of Mauritius (PDF), vol. 1, Port Louis, Mauritius: Central Statistical Office, October 1984, p. 1
  53. ^ Population Tables: 2000 Housing and Population Census, Port Louis, Mauritius: Central Statistical Office, November 2001
  54. ^ Census 2011 Atlas (PDF), Port Louis, Mauritius: Central Statistical Office, 2011, p. 1

Further reading

  • Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 27 December 1871
  • Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies (PDF), Mauritius: Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies, 6 December 1881
  • "Pay Research Bureau: Outer Islands Development Corporation". Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  • "Ministry of Local Government and Outer Islands - St Brandon". Retrieved 8 June 2017.

External links

  •   Media related to Cargados Carajos Shoals at Wikimedia Commons
  • Map of Mauritius
  •   Media related to Cargados Carajos Shoals at Wikimedia Commons
  • Marine Protected Areas by Project Regeneration
  • Marine Protection Atlas - an online tool from the Marine Conservation Institute that provides information on the world's protected areas and global MPA campaigns. Information comes from a variety of sources, including the World Database on Protected Areas (WDPA), and many regional and national databases.
  • Marine protected areas - viewable via Protected Planet, an online interactive search engine hosted by the United Nations Environment Programme's World Conservation Monitoring Center (UNEP-WCMC).

brandon, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, page, contain, suggest. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions February 2023 The lead section of this article may need to be rewritten Use the lead layout guide to ensure the section follows Wikipedia s norms and is inclusive of all essential details February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Saint Brandon also known as the Cargados Carajos Shoals is an Indian Ocean archipelago about 430 km 270 mi northeast of Mauritius consisting of sand banks shoals and islets It consists of five island groups with about 28 40 islands and islets in total depending on seasonal storms and related sand movements 1 Saint BrandonNative name Cargados CarajosGeographyLocationIndian OceanCoordinates16 35 S 59 37 E 16 583 S 59 617 E 16 583 59 617 Coordinates 16 35 S 59 37 E 16 583 S 59 617 E 16 583 59 617ArchipelagoCargados CarajosTotal islands22Major islandsAlbatross Island Raphael Avocare Island L Ile Coco and L ile du SudArea1 3 km2 0 50 sq mi AdministrationMauritiusLargest settlementIle Raphael pop 30 DemographicsPopulation40 2022 Pop density48 km2 124 sq mi The archipelago is low lying and is prone to substantial submersion in severe weather by tropical cyclones in the Mascarene Islands It has an aggregate land area estimated variously at 1 3 km2 0 50 sq mi and 200 ha 500 acres 1 The islands have a small population of mostly fishermen numbering 63 people in 2001 2 The bulk of this population approximately 40 people live on Ile Raphael with smaller settlements existing on Avocare Island L Ile Coco and L ile du Sud In the early 19th century most of the islands were used as fishing stations Today only one company operates on the archipelago with three fishing stations and accommodation for sport fishermen on L ile du Sud and Ile Raphael A settlement on Albatross Island was abandoned in 1988 3 The islands are currently the subject of a legal dispute over territorial sovereignty between the government of Mauritius and Raphael Fishing Company the current leaseholders of the islands 4 5 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 List of named islands 3 Ecology 4 History 5 Shipwrecks 6 Demographics 6 1 Historical population 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymologyThe name Saint Brandon most likely came from the anglicized name of the French town of Saint Brandan possibly given by French sailors and corsairs that sailed to and from Brittany 6 Geography Cargados Carajosclass notpageimage Location of Cargados Carajos in the Indian Ocean Geographically the archipelago is part of the Mascarene Islands and is situated on the Mascarene Plateau formed by the separation of the Mauritia microcontinent during the separation of India and Madagascar around 60 million years ago from what is today the African continent The reef measures more than 50 km 31 mi from north to south and is 5 km 3 1 mi wide cut by three passes The reef area is 190 km2 73 sq mi The total number of islands on the reef varies but usually number around 40 Siren Island L ile du Sud Pearl Island and Frigate Island are west of the reef while North Island is about 4 km 2 5 mi northeast of the northern tip of the reef Albatross Island about 18 km 11 mi north is geographically a separate single coral island Albatross Island is the highest point at 6 m 20 ft above sea level and the largest of the islands in the group with an area of 1 01 km2 0 39 sq mi followed by Raphael Tortue Avocare Island L Ile Coco and L ile du Sud Temperatures range from 23 26 C 73 79 F with rainfall of 1 050 mm 41 in a year most falling in January to April The climate is dominated by the south east trades Cyclones can cause considerable damage In 1948 Il aux Fous disappeared and Avoquer was submerged by two meters of water Petit ile Longue was swept away in a later cyclone but is now reappearing The South Equatorial Current is dominant 7 List of named islands Cargados Carajos Shoals in Mauritius Name s Area CoordinatesAlbatross Island 1 01 km2 0 39 sq mi 16 14 27 S 59 35 31 E 16 24083 S 59 59194 E 16 24083 59 59194 Albatross Island Ilot du Nord Ile du Nord North Island 16 23 16 S 59 38 32 E 16 38778 S 59 64222 E 16 38778 59 64222 Ilot du Nord Ile Raphael Raphael Island 16 26 00 S 59 36 18 E 16 43333 S 59 60500 E 16 43333 59 60500 Ile Raphael Ilot Siren 16 28 05 S 59 34 49 E 16 46806 S 59 58028 E 16 46806 59 58028 Ilot Siren Ile Tortue 0 13 km2 0 050 sq mi 16 29 00 S 59 41 014 E 16 48333 S 59 68722 E 16 48333 59 68722 Ile Tortue Pearl Islet Ile Perle 16 32 46 S 59 30 20 E 16 54611 S 59 50556 E 16 54611 59 50556 Pearl Islet L ile du Sud South Island l ile Boisees 16 48 55 S 59 30 09 E 16 81528 S 59 50250 E 16 81528 59 50250 L ile du Sud South Island l ile Boisees Avocare Island Avoquer L Avocaire 0 02 km2 0 0077 sq mi 16 36 10 S 59 38 26 E 16 60278 S 59 64056 E 16 60278 59 64056 Avocare Island L ile du Gouvernement Government Island 16 23 39 S 59 38 59 E 16 39417 S 59 64972 E 16 39417 59 64972 l ile du Gouvernement Petite Capitaine 16 36 0 0 S 59 34 0 0 E 16 600000 S 59 566667 E 16 600000 59 566667 Petite Capitaine Grande Capitaine 16 40 0 0 S 59 50 0 0 E 16 666667 S 59 833333 E 16 666667 59 833333 Grande Capitaine Mapare Islet 0 4 km2 0 15 sq mi 16 34 22 S 59 42 08 E 16 57278 S 59 70222 E 16 57278 59 70222 Mapare Islet Frigate Islet Ile Fregate 16 35 55 S 59 30 49 E 16 59861 S 59 51361 E 16 59861 59 51361 Frigate Islet Ilote du Paul Ile Paul 16 37 0 0 S 59 33 0 0 E 16 616667 S 59 550000 E 16 616667 59 550000 Ilote du Paul Puits A Eau 16 39 0 0 S 59 34 0 0 E 16 650000 S 59 566667 E 16 650000 59 566667 Puits A Eau Baleine Rocks La Baleine 16 40 0 0 S 59 31 0 0 E 16 666667 S 59 516667 E 16 666667 59 516667 Baleine Rocks Ile Verronge Verronge 16 40 43 S 59 36 23 E 16 67861 S 59 60639 E 16 67861 59 60639 Ile Veronge Veronge Ilot 16 42 0 0 S 59 38 0 0 E 16 700000 S 59 633333 E 16 700000 59 633333 Veronge Ilot Ile Poulailler 16 44 0 0 S 59 46 0 0 E 16 733333 S 59 766667 E 16 733333 59 766667 Ile Poulailer Palm Islet 16 45 0 0 S 59 35 0 0 E 16 750000 S 59 583333 E 16 750000 59 583333 Palm Islet Chaloupe 16 45 08 S 59 34 21 E 16 75222 S 59 57250 E 16 75222 59 57250 Chaloupe Courson 16 48 0 0 S 59 30 0 0 E 16 800000 S 59 500000 E 16 800000 59 500000 Courson L Ile Coco Ile Cocos Ile aux Cocos 0 5 km2 0 19 sq mi 16 48 56 S 59 30 09 E 16 81556 S 59 50250 E 16 81556 59 50250 L Ile Coco EcologyCargados comprises about 190 km2 73 sq mi of reefs It has one of the largest algal ridges in the Indian Ocean Coconut trees can be found on a few islands as well as a variety of bushes and grass The islands are covered with white granular sand from eroded coral and a thick layer of guano can be found in most places Satellite image of Cargados Carajos The western part of the bay has a coral bank and a fringing reef dominated by staghorn Acropora with an irregular front which merges with the coral banks the reef flat has appreciable coral cover North of this or deeper into the bay are several isolated patches of coral growing in deeper water The eastern border has reefs with a greater diversity of corals in particular enormous hillocks of Pavona spp with Mycedium tenuicostatum which is unusual in Mauritius On the sandy substrate Goniopora and Pontes provide hard substrate for several other species notably Acropora and Pavona Large tabular Acropora corals are also conspicuous and when dead or overturned provide substrate for other colonizers These patches have expanded and fused to provide the numerous large coral banks found in the Bay Only twenty eight coral species have been recorded which is probably due to the uniform habitat Further offshore lies a peripheral fringing reef This complex of low islands coral reefs and sand banks arises from a vast shallow submarine platform The main structure is a large 100 km 62 mi long crescent shaped reef whose convex side faces towards the south east trades and the South Equatorial Current The reef front of the main reef recurves inwards at both ends and is cut by two or three passes The main reef has a very broad reef flat extending up to several hundred metres across in parts Together with much of the broad reef flat it is emergent at low tides Apart from calcareous red algae it supports a few pocilloporoid corals Down to at least 20 m 66 ft depth the substrate is swept clear of attached biota although on the sides of spurs or buttresses a few corals exist Underwater photographs of some of the numerous knolls and banks behind the reef show that the density of corals and soft corals is typical of many very sedimented areas and shallow lagoons in the Indian Ocean The islands are home to a total of 26 species of seabirds such as blue faced boobies sooty terns and white terns Green turtles and hawksbill turtles are also found on the islands History The Cantino Planisphere 1502 in the Biblioteca Estense Modena Italy The atoll was probably discovered in 975 A D by Arabian sailors along with Dina Arobi Abandoned Island now known as the island of Mauritius It can also be found listed as Baixos on the 1502 Cantino Planisphere map It was named in 1506 by Portuguese sailors who went ashore for provisioning on their way to India Pirates and French corsairs have also used the islands as a refuge In 1598 the Dutch occupied the islands On 12 February 1662 the East India Ship Arnhem ran aground on the Saint Brandon Rocks 8 Volkert Evertsz the captain and other survivors of the wreck survived by piloting a small boat to Mauritius and are thought to have been the last humans to see living dodos 9 10 They survived the three months until their rescue by hunting goats birds tortoises and pigs 11 Evertsz was rescued by the English ship Truroe in May 1662 11 12 Seven of the survivors chose not to return with the first rescue ship 13 Mauritius and its associated islands were colonised by the French some time around 1715 granted by the King of France to the Compagnie des Indes in 1726 but retroceded to the French Crown in 1765 Saint Brandon was referred to as Cargados in Samuel Dunn s world map of 1794 On 9 June 1806 the French general Charles Decaen ordered the corsair Charles Nicolas Mariette to send a spying mission to Saint Brandon and to leave six men on the most prominent island and on his return trip to Mauritius to ascertain once and for all that Cargados Carajos and St Brandon were the same shoal The frigate Piemontaise under the command of Louis Jacques Eperon le Jeune departed on 11 June 1806 14 In 1810 the islands were taken by force by Britain becoming a British crown colony From October to November 1917 the St Brandon Islands and in particular the lagoon of L Ile Coco were used as a base by the German raiding vessel Wolf commanded by Karl August Nerger 15 On the island Wolf transferred stoking coal and stores from the captured Japanese ship Hitachi Maru which took three weeks The coal was necessary for the raider s return to Germany To do so Wolf had to run a gauntlet of Allied warships from near the Cape of the Good Hope to the North Atlantic On 7 November 1917 the Germans scuttled Hitachi Maru 26 km 16 mi off shore and Wolf departed 16 The most common employment on St Brandon in 1922 was agriculture with a manager assistant manager and eleven labourers Only two young men were recorded as working as fishermen Three men worked as carpenters one as a mason one as a shoemaker and another as a domestic servant There was no indication that the guano mines were operating 17 The islands were later mined for phosphates derived from guano until mining activities ceased in the mid 20th century ShipwrecksShipwrecks on the low lying rocky reefs of St Brandon have been recorded since as early as 1662 On 12 February 1662 the Dutch East Indiaman sailing ship Arnhem wrecked itself on the rocks at St Brandon 18 19 20 1780s The English ship the Hawk foundered on Saint Brandon on her return to Europe from Surat 21 1820 oil painting of the survivors of the Cabalva wreck in St Brandon On 25 October 1795 a vessel called l Euphrasie arrived in Port Louis with five survivors from a shipwreck in St Brandon related to a corsair ship called La Revanche A certain crewman called Landier is described as leading this group of survivors The other eight crew members perished 22 On 7 July 1818 the sailing vessel Cabalva built by Wells Wigram amp Green in 1811 and owned by the East India Company struck the reef at St Brandon on its way to China and was destroyed Captain James Dalrymple and several other lost their life 23 On 15 September 1845 the sailing ship Letitia ran aground on the Frigate islet 24 On 3 October 1969 the Russian tugboat Argus wrecked itself on the reef at St Brandon A total of 38 men were rescued 25 26 In 2012 a tuna longliner ran aground on the reef crest of St Brandon s atoll It broke into three pieces which was moved by currents and storms into the lagoon 27 On 29 November 2014 during the second leg of the 2014 15 Volvo Ocean Race the sailing boat Team Vestas Wind ran aground on St Brandon 28 On 1 February 2015 the fishing vessel Kha Yang with 250 000 liters of fuel in its tanks ran aground on the reef of St Brandon 29 Its crew of 20 were rescued shortly after its grounding and a salvage operation pumped the fuel from its tanks a few weeks later 30 31 On 2 February 2017 the long bulk carrier Alam Manis ran aground on its way to Pipavav from Richards Bay 32 On 5 June 2021 the FV Sea Master belonging to the Mauritian company Hassen Taher was shipwrecked on Albatross Island 33 On 5 December 2022 the Taiwanese fishing vessel FV Yu Feng 67 ran aground off L ile du Sud 34 DemographicsThe main settlement and the administrative centre of St Brandon is Ile Raphael and can have up to 35 resident employees a coast guard outpost and meteorological station with eight residents in 1996 Smaller settlements exist on Avocare Island L Ile Coco and L ile du Sud The settlement on Albatross was abandoned in 1988 Historical population The St Brandon archipelago was surveyed by British colonial authorities on 31 March 1911 as part of the Census of Mauritius They found a total population of 110 made up of 97 men 86 non Indian and 11 Indian and 13 women 10 non Indian and 3 Indian 35 While the archipelago likely had a resident population at this point as indicated by the 8 children under the age of 15 and the 5 people over the age of 60 there was also likely a seasonal component with the largest population segment being men between 20 and 35 36 73 men worked in fishing 11 at the guano mines and 4 were ship s carpenters 37 Only one male person was recorded as having been born on St Brandon 38 In the 1921 census the population had plummeted to just 22 There were 21 men ages 19 48 and just one woman a married Catholic aged 31 A further 14 people were identified as part of the general population with 11 of them born on Mauritius one on Rodrigues and two in the Seychelles In addition there were 3 Indo Mauritians and 5 other Indians from Madras Calcutta and Colombo 39 Resident Transient Total Notes1861 35 All were men 40 41 1871 9 All were men 40 42 41 1881 6 All were men 40 41 1891 0 43 44 1901 87 85 men and 2 women 54 men and one woman were from the general population 29 men were Indo Mauritians and two men and one woman were other Indians 44 1911 110 45 1921 22 14 people were identified as part of the general population with 3 Indo Mauritians and 5 other Indians 21 were men and just one was a woman 46 1931 61 All were men of whom nine were married and one was an ethnic Indian Fishing was the occupation of 59 of the men while two were domestic servants Most were Catholics but one Muslim lived on the island 47 1944 93 All were men two of them ethnic Indians and the remainder of the general population 48 1952 136 124 men one of whom was ethnically Chinese and 12 women 49 1962 90 50 1972 128 51 1983 137 52 2000 0 63 63 No permanent residents Only transient population 53 2011 0 No permanent residents Transient population not reported 54 See alsoMascarene Islands Ile Raphael Avocare Island L ile du Sud L ile du Gouvernement L Ile CocoReferences a b PRB OIDC Introduction Central Statistics Office Mauritius 2001 Archived from the original on 13 April 2014 Retrieved 11 April 2014 St Brandon Island Cargados Carajos Mauritius Attractions mauritiusattractions com Retrieved 7 January 2016 GM Goes To War With Raphael Fishing Over St Brandon Le Matinal 20 January 2023 Retrieved 17 February 2023 St Brandon sovereignty controversy Raphael Fishing Company Ltd hits back at GM Mauritius News Retrieved 17 February 2023 Jean Marie Chelin 2010 Annee 1796 Histoire Maritime de L Ile Maurice 1791 1815 in French Tamarin pp 74 76 ISBN 9789994932719 Coral Reefs of the World Volume 2 IUCN and UNEP UNEP 1988 p 212 ISBN 2 88032 944 2 Arnhem 1662 Wrecksite Retrieved 1 July 2011 Roberts DL Solow AR November 2003 Flightless birds when did the dodo become extinct Nature 426 6964 245 Bibcode 2003Natur 426 245R doi 10 1038 426245a PMID 14628039 S2CID 4347830 Anthony Cheke Julian P Hume 30 June 2010 Lost Land of the Dodo The Ecological History of Mauritius Reunion and Rodrigues Bloomsbury Publishing pp 78 ISBN 978 1 4081 3305 7 a b Jolyon C Parish 2013 The Dodo and the Solitaire A Natural History Indiana University Press pp 45 ISBN 978 0 253 00099 6 Rijks geschiedkundige publicatien Grote serie Martinus Nijhoff 1979 ISBN 978 90 247 2282 2 Megan Vaughan 1 February 2005 Creating the Creole Island Slavery in Eighteenth Century Mauritius Duke University Press pp 11 ISBN 0 8223 3399 6 Jean Marie Chelin 2010 Histoire Maritime de L Ile Maurice 1791 1815 vol 2 ed Tamarin Mauritius pp 188 189 190 ISBN 978 99949 32 71 9 The German Cruiser The Wolf Uses Saint Brandon as a transhipment point for the cargo of captured allied ships in 1917 Retrieved 28 August 2017 Raider Wolf the voyage of Captain Nerger 1916 1918 by Edwin P Hoyt P150 P157 1974 ISBN 9780839770671 Retrieved 28 August 2017 1921 Census pp cciii ccvii J R Bruijn F S Gaastra Ivo Schoffer 1979 Dutch Asiatic Shipping in the 17th and 18th Centuries Outward bound voyages from the Netherlands to Asia and the Cape 1595 1794 Nijhoff ISBN 9789024722709 Perry J Moree January 1998 A Concise History of Dutch Mauritius 1598 1710 A Fruitful and Healthy Land Kegan Paul International ISBN 978 0 7103 0609 8 Anthony S Cheke Julian Pender Hume 2008 Lost Land of the Dodo An Ecological History of Mauritius Reunion amp Rodrigues Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14186 3 The history of Mauritius or the Isle of France and the neighbouring islands from their first discovery to the present time Page 320 by Charles Grant Retrieved 27 August 2017 Jean Marie Chelin 2010 Annee 1795 Histoire Maritime de L Ile Maurice 1791 1815 in French Jean Marie Chelin p 69 ISBN 9789994932719 Cabalva 1818 Various 28 February 2013 The Nautical Magazine and Naval Chronicle for 1846 Cambridge University Press pp 180 ISBN 978 1 108 05434 8 MV Argus 1969 wrecksite Retrieved 4 January 2023 Norman Hooke 1989 Modern shipping disasters 1963 1987 Lloyd s of London Press ISBN 9781850442110 longliner ran aground on the reef crest of St Brandon s Atoll 20 February 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Grounded Volvo Ocean Race official website Retrieved 30 November 2014 Echouage d un bateau de peche une catastrophe ecologique menace Saint Brandon 6 February 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2017 AU LARGE DE SAINT BRANDON Naufrage d un bateau de peche Le Mauricien www lemauricien com Retrieved 24 November 2017 f v Kha Yang aground salvage under way FleetMon com Retrieved 24 November 2017 Alam Manis Runs aground in St Brandon Shipwreck Log Hassen Taher Seafoods defimedia Retrieved 3 January 2023 LEE TSANG FISHERY CO LTD Kaohsiung City Chinese Taipei Taiwan World Shipping Register world ships com Retrieved 14 February 2023 1911 Census p iv Abstracts iv 1911 Census p Abstracts xcvi xcviii 1911 Census p Abstracts cxii 1911 Census p Abstracts cxvii 1921 Census pp 13 15 16 cciii ccvii a b c 1901 Census p 168 a b c 1881 Census pp 481 482 1871 Census Part 2 p 2 Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 1 April 1892 pp 38 41 a b Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 21 March 1902 p 168 Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Port Louis Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 1912 p iv Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Port Louis Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 1921 p 13 15 16 Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Port Louis Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 1931 p lxii lxiii Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Port Louis Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 1944 p 3 Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Port Louis Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 1 June 1953 p 6 Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Port Louis Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 1962 pp 42 43 Preliminary Results of the 1983 Population Census PDF Port Louis Mauritius Central Statistical Office January 1984 p 1 1983 Housing and Population Census of Mauritius PDF vol 1 Port Louis Mauritius Central Statistical Office October 1984 p 1 Population Tables 2000 Housing and Population Census Port Louis Mauritius Central Statistical Office November 2001 Census 2011 Atlas PDF Port Louis Mauritius Central Statistical Office 2011 p 1Further readingCensus of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 27 December 1871 Census of Mauritius and its Dependencies PDF Mauritius Census Commission for Mauritius and its Dependencies 6 December 1881 Pay Research Bureau Outer Islands Development Corporation Retrieved 8 June 2017 Ministry of Local Government and Outer Islands St Brandon Retrieved 8 June 2017 External links Media related to Cargados Carajos Shoals at Wikimedia Commons Map of Mauritius Media related to Cargados Carajos Shoals at Wikimedia Commons Marine Protected Areas by Project Regeneration Marine Protection Atlas an online tool from the Marine Conservation Institute that provides information on the world s protected areas and global MPA campaigns Information comes from a variety of sources including the World Database on Protected Areas WDPA and many regional and national databases Marine protected areas viewable via Protected Planet an online interactive search engine hosted by the United Nations Environment Programme s World Conservation Monitoring Center UNEP WCMC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Brandon amp oldid 1148909629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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