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Suwarrow

Suwarrow (also called Suvorov, Suvarou, or Suvarov) is an island in the northern group of the Cook Islands in the south Pacific Ocean. It is about 1,300 kilometres (810 mi) south of the equator and 930 kilometres (580 mi) north-northwest of the capital island of Rarotonga.

Suwarrow
Satellite image of Suwarrow. Anchorage Island is immediately west of the lagoon's entrance
Geography
LocationCentral-Southern Pacific Ocean
Coordinates13°16′9″S 163°6′41″W / 13.26917°S 163.11139°W / -13.26917; -163.11139
ArchipelagoCook Islands
Area9.8 km2 (3.8 sq mi)
Administration
Demographics
Population2 (seasonal)
Ethnic groupsPolynesian
Suwarrow
class=notpageimage|
Location of Suwarrow Atoll in the Pacific Ocean
Map of Cook Islands with Suwarrow near the middle

Geography edit

 
Anchorage Island

Suwarrow is a roughly quadrilateral-shaped coral atoll, 80 kilometres (50 mi) in circumference, with over 20 small islets (motu) surrounding a central lagoon 19 by 8 kilometres (11.8 by 5.0 mi). Cyclones often create storm surges which sweep over the atoll since its small component of land is extremely low-lying.

Table of Islets edit

Island Area
km2
Population
Anchorage Island 0.139 1
East Island 0.278 0
Entrance Island 0.014 0
Manu Island 0.121 0
Motu tou Island 0.31 0
One Tree Island 0.134 0
Other (Brushwood Island, Whale Island, Gull Island) 0.39 0
Turtle Island 0.214 0
Suwarrow total 1.6 1

History edit

Although Suwarrow was inhabited by Polynesians during prehistory[1] it was uninhabited when discovered by the Russian-American Company ship Suvorov, which reportedly followed clouds of birds to the atoll on 17 September 1814. (The ship was named after Russian general Alexander Suvorov, who appears as "Suwarrow" in Lord Byron's epic poem Don Juan and also in Alaric Alexander Watts' alliterative poem "The Siege of Belgrade".) It has been only intermittently inhabited since. The atoll's name has also been spelled variously as Souvorow, Souwaroff, and Souworoff. "Suwarrow" is the official spelling adopted by New Zealand.

In the mid-19th century (records dispute whether it was in 1848 or 1855), a ship from Tahiti was carrying out salvage work when a box containing NZ$15,000 worth of coins was dug up.[2] Some years later, New Zealander Henry Mair found pieces of eight in a turtle nest. Mair became involved in a dispute, the find was covered up, and it has never been rediscovered.[3]

John Lavington Evans was the first leasee of Suwarrow, who passes his lease to the Pacific Islands Trading Company Limited. Evans remained as the superintendent of the company’s operations in the Pacific.[4] In 1867, Captain Handley B. Sterndale was engaged by the company and sailed with Evans from Melbourne, Australia to the Cook Islands (then known as the Harvey Group). While one ship was lost off the reef of Rarotonga,[4] on 16 October 1867, Sterndale, Evans and 18 men, 2 women and 3 children (who had been engaged in Rarotonga), arrived at Suwarrow where they intended to stay and gather pearl shell, beche-de-mer and copra. Sterndale and the islanders were landed along with approximately 4 months supply of food and a water condensing apparatus to produce fresh water. Evans departed on the ship, with the expectation of returning within 4 months with food supplies. By the middle of March 1868, the provisions were exhausted and Evans had not returned.[4] On 17 April Captain Bully Hayes (the notorious blackbirder) arrived on the brig Rona, with 109 islanders from Niue (then known as Savage Island) who were being transported to Tahiti.[4] Hayes agreed to rescue Sterndale and the islanders, notwithstanding the Rona was already crowded, with Sterndale and the Islanders being delivered to Rakahanga (Reirson island), from where they eventually were able to travel to Tahiti. Sterndale sold the pearl shell, beche-de-mer, copra and equipment to Hayes. Sterndale later discovered that Evans had travelled to Samoa and sold the ship and departed to Sydney, and concealed that Sterndale and the islanders were on Suwarrow with a limited supply of provisions and no boats capable of leaving the island.[4]

In 1876 the atoll was leased to Henderson and Macfarlane of Auckland, which built a wharf, installed a light on a wooden pyramid, and commenced to gather mother of pearl. The firm's agent, Handley B. Sterndale, in 1877 enacted a dubious transfer to his colleague William J. Hunt, who in turn offered in 1886 to sell the island to Russia.[5] British sovereignty was proclaimed 22 April 1889. In 1903 the atoll was leased to Lever Brothers, "for the purpose of removing guano or other fertilising substances therefrom, and of planting the land with coconuts, and for collecting pearl-shells, and for other purposes of a like nature." They maintained about thirty persons on the island until a cyclone in 1914 so severely damaged operations that the island was abandoned.

In April 1890 Robert Louis Stevenson, his wife Fanny Vandegrift Stevenson, and her son Lloyd Osbourne were passengers on the trading steamer Janet Nicoll, which called at Suwarrow during a trading cruise around the central Pacific.[6] The journal of Fanny Vandegrift Stevenson was published under the title The Cruise of the Janet Nichol.[7] Jack Buckland was also a passenger on Janet Nicoll; he later returned to Suwarrow to be the island trader.

During World War II, Robert Dean Frisbie and several Coastwatchers lived on the largest islet, Anchorage. Frisbie wrote about his experiences in The Island of Desire. In 1942, a cyclone washed away 16 of the 22 islets in the atoll. The coastwatchers left a hut with water tanks behind, and left wild pigs and chickens on the islet. Later, cats were allowed to run wild on Anchorage Island, to control Polynesian rats which were documented to occur there since the island was discovered by Europeans (Jones 2001) but conceivably were introduced by Polynesian seafarers a longer time ago.

New Zealander Tom Neale lived alone on Suwarrow for a total of 16 years in three periods between 1952 and 1977. He described his experience in the first two of those periods in An Island to Oneself (1966 ISBN 0-918024-76-5). In 1964, while Neale was in Rarotonga, June von Donop, a former accountant from Honolulu, Hawaii, lived alone in his house on Suwarrow for a week, while her crewmates on the schooner Europe stayed on board their vessel. Michael Swift lived alone on Suwarrow in 1965–66, but he was not familiar with survival techniques and had a hard time finding sufficient food.[8]

In 1978, the island was declared a National Park of the Cook Islands due to the plentiful marine and bird wild life it supports.[9] The island and surrounding water is Crown land. A proposal to establish an aquaculture operation to farm Tahitian pearls was successfully opposed by Cook Islands environmental NGO, the Taporoporo'anga Ipukarea Society.

In October 2011, Russian politician Anton Bakov claimed to have purchased the atoll and declared it the capital of a new Russian Empire.[10] The claim was denied by Prime Minister Henry Puna.[11]

Flora and fauna edit

 
Vegetation on the island seen from the sea

Most of the small islets have only herbs and shrubs, with Pemphis acidula and beach heliotrope (Tournefortia argentea) growing in abundance. The larger islands have a dense interior vegetation of Cordia subcordata (tou); indeed, the westernmost island, Motu Tou is named after this woodland (Jones 2001).

At the end of the 20th century, 3% of all red-tailed tropicbirds in the world (some 400) bred there, as well as 9% of the global population of the lesser frigatebird (about 8500, though only a part of these seem to be present at any one time) (Jones 2001). The atoll has been designated an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because it supports, as well as the tropicbirds and frigatebirds, a large breeding colony of sooty terns, with over 40,000 chicks counted in 2008. It is also a non-breeding site for bristle-thighed curlews.[12]

Suwarrow has a rich marine biodiversity, which supports megafauna such as sea turtles, sharks, mantas,[13] and cetaceans including humpback,[14][15] sperm,[16] and false killer whales.[17][18]

Demographics edit

Every five years, the Cook Islands government advertises for the Suwarrow island nature reserve caretaker position. The position is staffed between April and October by two persons.[19] The caretakers monitor the atoll's birdlife. As of 2023, the rangers are no longer customs officials, and check in must occur on one of the main Cook islands.[20] Previous caretakers have brought their families with them, so the population was significantly higher, but that is not the case today. The barge that brings them also brings six months of supplies such as canned food, and several more rangers that clean the island on the first day and leave the caretakers behind.[21]

The only way to visit the island is with a private yacht or by chartered expedition from Rarotonga, and visitors require permits from the park authorities before being permitted to land.[22]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Best, Elsdon (1923). "Intrepid Polynesian Voyagers". Polynesian Voyagers. The Maori as a Deep-sea Navigator, Explorer, and Colonizer. p. 9.
  2. ^ Helm and Percival
  3. ^ Cowan, James (1936). Suwarrow Gold and other stories of the Great South Sea.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Rescued by "Bully" Hayes". VI(1) Pacific Islands Monthly. 22 August 1935. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  5. ^ Barratt, Glynn. "William Hunt's Attempt to Sell Suwarrow Island." New Zealand Slavonic Journal, 1996, pp. 81–94. JSTOR. Accessed 17 September 2020
  6. ^ Janet Nicoll is the correct spelling of the name of the trading steamer owned by Henderson and Macfarlane of Auckland, New Zealand, which operated between Sydney, Auckland, and the central Pacific. Fanny Vandegrift Stevenson misnames the ship Janet Nicol in her account of the 1890 voyage,The Cruise of the Janet Nichol.
  7. ^ The Cruise of the Janet Nichol among the South Sea Islands A Diary by Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson (first published 1914), republished 2004, editor, Roslyn Jolly (U. of Washington Press/U. of New South Wales Press)
  8. ^ Helm and Percival, pp 63, 100, 105
  9. ^ National Environment Service of Cook Islands 20 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Russians claiming Suwarrow". Cook Islands News. 1 October 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
  11. ^ "Russian mission foiled by seasickness". Cook Islands News. 5 October 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
  12. ^ "Suwarrow Atoll National Park". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2021. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  13. ^ AN OCEAN OF SURPRISES – Suwarrow: A real treasure island. Retrieved on 5 April 2017
  14. ^ Webb B.. 2014. Shipwrecked in shelter. Boating NZ. Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved on 5 April 2017
  15. ^ Webb B.. Morgan D.. 2014. An Island almost to Oneself. Retrieved on 5 April 2017
  16. ^ The Cook Islands Biodiversity& Natural Heritage. Physeter macrocephalus To‘ōra Sperm Whale. The Cook Islands Natural Heritage Trust
  17. ^ Elaine and Bob. 2011. In Suwarrow. Retrieved on 5 April 2017
  18. ^ Gleinig M.. Photos by Marcus Gleinig. The Panoramio. Retrieved on 5 April 2017
  19. ^ "Suwarrow Atoll National Park". National Environmental Service. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  20. ^ "Suwarrow caretakers on their way north". Cook Islands News. 29 April 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  21. ^ "Harry lives the Suwarrow life". Cook Islands News. 12 May 2018. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  22. ^ "Mariner information". Cook Islands Port Authority. Retrieved 3 August 2020. To visit Suwarrow Atoll National Park, one should obtain permission from the resident Park Administrator(National Environment Services)

References edit

  • Frisbie, Robert Dean (1944): The Island of Desire. (full text).
  • Helm, A.H; Percival, W.H (1973): Sisters In The Sun: The Story of Suwarrow and Palmerston Atolls. ISBN 0-7091-3971-3.
  • Jones, Rhys J. (2001): The status of seabird colonies on the Cook Islands atoll of Suwarrow. Bird Conservation International 11(4): 309–318. doi:10.1017/S0959270901000351 (HTML abstract)
  • Neale, Tom (1966): An Island to Oneself. ISBN 0-918024-76-5.
  • Waterworth. J. Y. (1954): Siege of Suwarrow. Walkabout 1 March: 34–35.

External links edit

  • Suwarrow National Park
  • Suwarrow – A Real Treasure Island
  • Suwarrow – Island of Mystery
  • An Island to Oneself: The story of Tom Neale
  • Welcome to Suvorov
  • Suwarrow and Palmerston Photo Gallery
  • Expeditions to Suwarrow – Operator's Web Site

suwarrow, also, called, suvorov, suvarou, suvarov, island, northern, group, cook, islands, south, pacific, ocean, about, kilometres, south, equator, kilometres, north, northwest, capital, island, rarotonga, satellite, image, anchorage, island, immediately, wes. Suwarrow also called Suvorov Suvarou or Suvarov is an island in the northern group of the Cook Islands in the south Pacific Ocean It is about 1 300 kilometres 810 mi south of the equator and 930 kilometres 580 mi north northwest of the capital island of Rarotonga SuwarrowSatellite image of Suwarrow Anchorage Island is immediately west of the lagoon s entranceGeographyLocationCentral Southern Pacific OceanCoordinates13 16 9 S 163 6 41 W 13 26917 S 163 11139 W 13 26917 163 11139ArchipelagoCook IslandsArea9 8 km2 3 8 sq mi AdministrationCook IslandsDemographicsPopulation2 seasonal Ethnic groupsPolynesian Suwarrowclass notpageimage Location of Suwarrow Atoll in the Pacific Ocean Map of Cook Islands with Suwarrow near the middle Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Table of Islets 2 History 3 Flora and fauna 4 Demographics 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksGeography edit nbsp Anchorage Island Suwarrow is a roughly quadrilateral shaped coral atoll 80 kilometres 50 mi in circumference with over 20 small islets motu surrounding a central lagoon 19 by 8 kilometres 11 8 by 5 0 mi Cyclones often create storm surges which sweep over the atoll since its small component of land is extremely low lying Table of Islets edit Island Areakm2 Population Anchorage Island 0 139 1 East Island 0 278 0 Entrance Island 0 014 0 Manu Island 0 121 0 Motu tou Island 0 31 0 One Tree Island 0 134 0 Other Brushwood Island Whale Island Gull Island 0 39 0 Turtle Island 0 214 0 Suwarrow total 1 6 1History editAlthough Suwarrow was inhabited by Polynesians during prehistory 1 it was uninhabited when discovered by the Russian American Company ship Suvorov which reportedly followed clouds of birds to the atoll on 17 September 1814 The ship was named after Russian general Alexander Suvorov who appears as Suwarrow in Lord Byron s epic poem Don Juan and also in Alaric Alexander Watts alliterative poem The Siege of Belgrade It has been only intermittently inhabited since The atoll s name has also been spelled variously as Souvorow Souwaroff and Souworoff Suwarrow is the official spelling adopted by New Zealand In the mid 19th century records dispute whether it was in 1848 or 1855 a ship from Tahiti was carrying out salvage work when a box containing NZ 15 000 worth of coins was dug up 2 Some years later New Zealander Henry Mair found pieces of eight in a turtle nest Mair became involved in a dispute the find was covered up and it has never been rediscovered 3 John Lavington Evans was the first leasee of Suwarrow who passes his lease to the Pacific Islands Trading Company Limited Evans remained as the superintendent of the company s operations in the Pacific 4 In 1867 Captain Handley B Sterndale was engaged by the company and sailed with Evans from Melbourne Australia to the Cook Islands then known as the Harvey Group While one ship was lost off the reef of Rarotonga 4 on 16 October 1867 Sterndale Evans and 18 men 2 women and 3 children who had been engaged in Rarotonga arrived at Suwarrow where they intended to stay and gather pearl shell beche de mer and copra Sterndale and the islanders were landed along with approximately 4 months supply of food and a water condensing apparatus to produce fresh water Evans departed on the ship with the expectation of returning within 4 months with food supplies By the middle of March 1868 the provisions were exhausted and Evans had not returned 4 On 17 April Captain Bully Hayes the notorious blackbirder arrived on the brig Rona with 109 islanders from Niue then known as Savage Island who were being transported to Tahiti 4 Hayes agreed to rescue Sterndale and the islanders notwithstanding the Rona was already crowded with Sterndale and the Islanders being delivered to Rakahanga Reirson island from where they eventually were able to travel to Tahiti Sterndale sold the pearl shell beche de mer copra and equipment to Hayes Sterndale later discovered that Evans had travelled to Samoa and sold the ship and departed to Sydney and concealed that Sterndale and the islanders were on Suwarrow with a limited supply of provisions and no boats capable of leaving the island 4 In 1876 the atoll was leased to Henderson and Macfarlane of Auckland which built a wharf installed a light on a wooden pyramid and commenced to gather mother of pearl The firm s agent Handley B Sterndale in 1877 enacted a dubious transfer to his colleague William J Hunt who in turn offered in 1886 to sell the island to Russia 5 British sovereignty was proclaimed 22 April 1889 In 1903 the atoll was leased to Lever Brothers for the purpose of removing guano or other fertilising substances therefrom and of planting the land with coconuts and for collecting pearl shells and for other purposes of a like nature They maintained about thirty persons on the island until a cyclone in 1914 so severely damaged operations that the island was abandoned In April 1890 Robert Louis Stevenson his wife Fanny Vandegrift Stevenson and her son Lloyd Osbourne were passengers on the trading steamer Janet Nicoll which called at Suwarrow during a trading cruise around the central Pacific 6 The journal of Fanny Vandegrift Stevenson was published under the title The Cruise of the Janet Nichol 7 Jack Buckland was also a passenger on Janet Nicoll he later returned to Suwarrow to be the island trader During World War II Robert Dean Frisbie and several Coastwatchers lived on the largest islet Anchorage Frisbie wrote about his experiences in The Island of Desire In 1942 a cyclone washed away 16 of the 22 islets in the atoll The coastwatchers left a hut with water tanks behind and left wild pigs and chickens on the islet Later cats were allowed to run wild on Anchorage Island to control Polynesian rats which were documented to occur there since the island was discovered by Europeans Jones 2001 but conceivably were introduced by Polynesian seafarers a longer time ago New Zealander Tom Neale lived alone on Suwarrow for a total of 16 years in three periods between 1952 and 1977 He described his experience in the first two of those periods in An Island to Oneself 1966 ISBN 0 918024 76 5 In 1964 while Neale was in Rarotonga June von Donop a former accountant from Honolulu Hawaii lived alone in his house on Suwarrow for a week while her crewmates on the schooner Europe stayed on board their vessel Michael Swift lived alone on Suwarrow in 1965 66 but he was not familiar with survival techniques and had a hard time finding sufficient food 8 In 1978 the island was declared a National Park of the Cook Islands due to the plentiful marine and bird wild life it supports 9 The island and surrounding water is Crown land A proposal to establish an aquaculture operation to farm Tahitian pearls was successfully opposed by Cook Islands environmental NGO the Taporoporo anga Ipukarea Society In October 2011 Russian politician Anton Bakov claimed to have purchased the atoll and declared it the capital of a new Russian Empire 10 The claim was denied by Prime Minister Henry Puna 11 Flora and fauna edit nbsp Vegetation on the island seen from the sea Most of the small islets have only herbs and shrubs with Pemphis acidula and beach heliotrope Tournefortia argentea growing in abundance The larger islands have a dense interior vegetation of Cordia subcordata tou indeed the westernmost island Motu Tou is named after this woodland Jones 2001 At the end of the 20th century 3 of all red tailed tropicbirds in the world some 400 bred there as well as 9 of the global population of the lesser frigatebird about 8500 though only a part of these seem to be present at any one time Jones 2001 The atoll has been designated an Important Bird Area IBA by BirdLife International because it supports as well as the tropicbirds and frigatebirds a large breeding colony of sooty terns with over 40 000 chicks counted in 2008 It is also a non breeding site for bristle thighed curlews 12 Suwarrow has a rich marine biodiversity which supports megafauna such as sea turtles sharks mantas 13 and cetaceans including humpback 14 15 sperm 16 and false killer whales 17 18 Demographics editEvery five years the Cook Islands government advertises for the Suwarrow island nature reserve caretaker position The position is staffed between April and October by two persons 19 The caretakers monitor the atoll s birdlife As of 2023 the rangers are no longer customs officials and check in must occur on one of the main Cook islands 20 Previous caretakers have brought their families with them so the population was significantly higher but that is not the case today The barge that brings them also brings six months of supplies such as canned food and several more rangers that clean the island on the first day and leave the caretakers behind 21 The only way to visit the island is with a private yacht or by chartered expedition from Rarotonga and visitors require permits from the park authorities before being permitted to land 22 Notes edit Best Elsdon 1923 Intrepid Polynesian Voyagers Polynesian Voyagers The Maori as a Deep sea Navigator Explorer and Colonizer p 9 Helm and Percival Cowan James 1936 Suwarrow Gold and other stories of the Great South Sea a b c d e Rescued by Bully Hayes VI 1 Pacific Islands Monthly 22 August 1935 Retrieved 28 September 2021 Barratt Glynn William Hunt s Attempt to Sell Suwarrow Island New Zealand Slavonic Journal 1996 pp 81 94 JSTOR Accessed 17 September 2020 Janet Nicoll is the correct spelling of the name of the trading steamer owned by Henderson and Macfarlane of Auckland New Zealand which operated between Sydney Auckland and the central Pacific Fanny Vandegrift Stevenson misnames the ship Janet Nicol in her account of the 1890 voyage The Cruise of the Janet Nichol The Cruise of the Janet Nichol among the South Sea Islands A Diary by Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson first published 1914 republished 2004 editor Roslyn Jolly U of Washington Press U of New South Wales Press Helm and Percival pp 63 100 105 National Environment Service of Cook Islands Archived 20 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine Russians claiming Suwarrow Cook Islands News 1 October 2011 Retrieved 16 October 2011 Russian mission foiled by seasickness Cook Islands News 5 October 2011 Retrieved 16 October 2011 Suwarrow Atoll National Park BirdLife Data Zone BirdLife International 2021 Retrieved 8 March 2021 AN OCEAN OF SURPRISES Suwarrow A real treasure island Retrieved on 5 April 2017 Webb B 2014 Shipwrecked in shelter Boating NZ Stuff co nz Retrieved on 5 April 2017 Webb B Morgan D 2014 An Island almost to Oneself Retrieved on 5 April 2017 The Cook Islands Biodiversity amp Natural Heritage Physeter macrocephalus To ōra Sperm Whale The Cook Islands Natural Heritage Trust Elaine and Bob 2011 In Suwarrow Retrieved on 5 April 2017 Gleinig M Photos by Marcus Gleinig The Panoramio Retrieved on 5 April 2017 Suwarrow Atoll National Park National Environmental Service Retrieved 3 August 2020 Suwarrow caretakers on their way north Cook Islands News 29 April 2015 Retrieved 3 August 2020 Harry lives the Suwarrow life Cook Islands News 12 May 2018 Retrieved 3 August 2020 Mariner information Cook Islands Port Authority Retrieved 3 August 2020 To visit Suwarrow Atoll National Park one should obtain permission from the resident Park Administrator National Environment Services References editFrisbie Robert Dean 1944 The Island of Desire full text Helm A H Percival W H 1973 Sisters In The Sun The Story of Suwarrow and Palmerston Atolls ISBN 0 7091 3971 3 Jones Rhys J 2001 The status of seabird colonies on the Cook Islands atoll of Suwarrow Bird Conservation International 11 4 309 318 doi 10 1017 S0959270901000351 HTML abstract Neale Tom 1966 An Island to Oneself ISBN 0 918024 76 5 Waterworth J Y 1954 Siege of Suwarrow Walkabout 1 March 34 35 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Suwarrow Suwarrow National Park Suwarrow A Real Treasure Island Suwarrow Island of Mystery An Island to Oneself The story of Tom Neale Welcome to Suvorov Suwarrow and Palmerston Photo Gallery Expeditions to Suwarrow Operator s Web Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Suwarrow amp oldid 1194056614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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