Everything about Bouvet Island totally explained
Bouvet Island (also historically known as
Liverpool Island or
Lindsay Island) is an uninhabited
sub-antarctic volcanic
island in the South
Atlantic Ocean, south-southwest of the
Cape of Good Hope (
South Africa). It is a
dependent area of
Norway and isn't subject to the
Antarctic Treaty.
Geography
Bouvet Island is located at . It is 49
km² in area, 93% of which is covered by
glaciers which block the south and east coasts.
Bouvet Island is
the most remote island in the world. The nearest land is
Queen Maud Land,
Antarctica, over 1,600 km (1,000 miles) away to the south, which is itself uninhabited.
It has no ports or harbours, only offshore anchorages, and is therefore difficult to approach. The waves have created a very steep coast. The easiest way to access the island is with a helicopter from a ship. The glaciers form a thick ice layer falling in high cliffs into the sea or onto the black beaches of
volcanic sand. The 29.6
km (18.4
miles) of coastline are often surrounded by an ice pack. The highest point on the island is called
Olavtoppen, whose peak is 780
m (2,559
ft) above sea level. A
lava shelf on the island's west coast, which appeared between
1955 and
1958, provides a nesting site for birds.
Because of the harsh climate and ice-bound terrain, vegetation is limited to lichens and mosses. Seals, seabirds and penguins are the only fauna.
Despite being uninhabited, Bouvet Island has the
Internet country code top-level domain (
ccTLD)
.bv, though it isn't used. A handful of
amateur radio expeditions have gone to this remote location (
call signs used here begin with
3Y). There is no telephone country code or
area code, and no telephone connection (except by satellite, but there's nothing installed). There is no
postal code and no postal distribution. Ships approaching the Bouvet Island fall within the UTC Z
time zone. There is a Norwegian law saying that the time zone of Norwegian territory is UTC+1, except for a part of year (daylight saving time)
. This means that the legal time zone is UTC+1 for the Bouvet Island, like
Jan Mayen which is located in the UTC-1 nautical time zone, but also has UTC+1.
History
Bouvet Island was discovered on
January 1,
1739, by
Jean-Baptiste Charles Bouvet de Lozier, who commanded the
French ships
Aigle and
Marie. However, the island's position wasn't accurately fixed having been placed eight degrees to the east, and Bouvet didn't circumnavigate his discovery, so it remained unclear whether it was an island or part of a continent.
In 1772, Captain
James Cook left South Africa on a mission to find the island. However, when arriving at 54°S, 11°E where Bouvet had said he sighted the island, nothing was to be seen. Captain Cook assumed that Bouvet had taken an iceberg for an island, and he abandoned the search.
The island wasn't sighted again until
1808, when it was spotted by James Lindsay, the captain of the
Enderby Company whaler Snow Swan. Though he didn't land, he was the first to correctly fix the island's position. During this time the island was sometimes referred to as Lindsay Island, though it wasn't then completely certain that it was the same island as Bouvet had sighted.
The first successful landfall dates to December
1822, when Captain
Benjamin Morrell of the sealer
Wasp landed, hunting for
seals. He took several seal skins.
On
December 10,
1825, Captain Norris, master of the Enderby Company whalers
Sprightly and
Lively, landed on the island, named it
Liverpool Island, and claimed it for the
British Crown. Again, it wasn't known with certainty at the time that this was the same island found previously. He also reported sighting a second island nearby, which he named
Thompson Island. No trace of this island now remains.
In
1898, the
German Valdivia expedition of
Carl Chun visited the island but didn't land.
The first extended stay on the island was in
1927, when the
Norwegian "Norvegia" crew stayed for about a month; this is the basis for the claim by "Norvegia" expedition leader
Lars Christensen on behalf of
Norway, who have named the island Bouvet Island (Bouvetøya in Norwegian).
The island was
annexed on
December 1 1927, by a Royal Norwegian Decree of
January 23 1928, Bouvetøya became a Norwegian Territory. The
United Kingdom waived its claim in favor of Norway the following year. In
1930 a Norwegian act was passed that made the island a dependent area subject to the
sovereignty of the Kingdom (but not a part of the Kingdom).
In
1964, an abandoned
lifeboat was discovered on the island, along with various supplies; however, the lifeboat's passengers were never found.
In
1971, Bouvet Island and the adjacent territorial waters were designated a nature reserve. In the 1950s and 1960s, there was some interest from
South Africa to establish a weather station, but conditions were deemed to be too hostile. The island remains uninhabited, although an automated
weather station was set up there in
1977 by the Norwegians.
On
September 22,
1979, a
satellite recorded a flash of light (which was later interpreted as having been caused by a
nuclear bomb explosion or natural event such as a
meteor) in a stretch of the southern
Indian Ocean between Bouvet Island and
Prince Edward Islands. This flash, since dubbed the
Vela Incident, is still not completely resolved.
On
October 19,
2007, the
Norwegian Institute of Polar Research announced that satellite photos no longer show the research station built on the island in
1994. It is believed that the uninhabited station has been blown out to sea by the wind. An earthquake in the area in
2006 supposedly weakened the building's base, and is believed to have made it more exposed to the powerful winter storms in the area. An unmanned weather station on the island is reportedly still intact.
Bouvet Island in fiction
- Bouvet is the setting of the 2004 movie Alien vs. Predator, in which it's referred to using its Norwegian name "Bouvetøya" even though in the unrated edition of the film, a satellite focuses in on the island which is geographically situated in the approximate location of Peter I Island.
- The island figures prominently in the book A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins. It also features in "Warhead" by Andy Remic
Further Information
Get more info on 'Bouvet Island'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://bouvet_island.totallyexplained.com">Bouvet Island Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |