Quail Island, New Zealand

Quail Island, New Zealand
Quail Island
Ōtamahua (Māori)

A view from Quail Island at low tide. The small King Billy Island is seen in front of the wooded peninsula.
Geography
Coordinates 43°38′S 172°41′E / 43.63°S 172.69°E / -43.63; 172.69
Highest elevation 86 m (282 ft)
Country
Demographics
Population nil

Quail Island (Ōtamahua in Māori, sometimes also known as Te Kawakawa) is a small uninhabited island within Lyttelton Harbour in the South Island of New Zealand, close to Christchurch. The island was given its European name by Captain Mein Smith who saw native quail here in 1842; though they were already extinct by 1875. 'Ōtamahua' has the meaning of a 'place where children collect sea eggs'.[1] 'Te Kawakawa' refers to the Pepper trees found on the island.[2]

Contents

History

Apparently uninhabited by the New Zealand native peoples, it was still often visited to collect shellfish, flax, bird's eggs as well as stone for tools (from King Billy Island, an outcrop just off Quail Island). Europeans briefly farmed it in 1851, before it was turned into a quarantine station in 1875, and later into a small leper colony from 1907–1925, while being used as a hospital during the influenza epidemic of 1907.[1]

Replicas of dog kennels (once used for training of the dogs used in Antarctic expeditions of the early 20th century) and a replica leprosy patient’s hut were built by students of Cathedral College, with the quarantine barracks also restored and moved to the beach front. The island was declared a recreation reserve in 1975, and has a number of safe swimming beaches, as well as some day facilities (toilets, day shelter). A ferry service is available to the island, and private watercraft may also access the island.[1]

Ecological restoration

The Ōtamahua/Quail Island Ecological Restoration Trust and the Department of Conservation are currently working to remove pests and re-vegetate the island, with the aim of eventually re-introducing native wildlife.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Ōtamahua/Quail Island Recreation Reserve (from the Department of Conservation website)
  2. ^ Otamahua (from the Christchurch City Libraries website)

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Quail Island — is the name of various locations:*Quail Island, New Zealand, in Canterbury *Quail Island, Victoria, Australia …   Wikipedia

  • New Zealand Quail — Conservation status Extinct (IUCN 3.1) …   Wikipedia

  • List of extinct New Zealand animals — This is a list of extinct New Zealand animals. MammalsApart from bats, and a new discovery of a mouse like creature on Banks Peninsula, New Zealand had no land mammals until humans arrived, but there have been fossil marine mammals found. New… …   Wikipedia

  • Tunnels in New Zealand — This list of Tunnels in New Zealand is a link page for railway, road and waterway tunnels, including hydroelectric intakes and tailraces and gun battery tunnels. It includes artificial chambers but excludes caves and mines. For a list of caves,… …   Wikipedia

  • Pine Bush, New Zealand — Location map New Zealand label=Pine Bush lat dir=S | lat deg=46 | lat min=28 lon dir=E | lon deg=168 | lon min=48 position=right width= 150 float=right caption=Pine Bush is a locality in the Southland Region of New Zealand s South Island. [Land… …   Wikipedia

  • List of islands of New Zealand — New Zealand consists of a large number of islands. The two main islands, which are much larger than the rest and where most of the population lives, are the North Island and the South Island. The latter is often a little ironically referred to as …   Wikipedia

  • List of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic birds — This list is based on the Handbook of Australian, New Zealand and Antarctic Birds [http://www.birdsaustralia.com.au/hanzab/HANZAB spp list.pdf list, May 2002 update] , with the doubtfuls omitted. It includes the birds of Australia, New Zealand,… …   Wikipedia

  • List of birds of New Zealand — Contents 1 Sphenisciformes 2 Procellariiformes 3 Pelecaniformes 4 …   Wikipedia

  • List of dual place names in New Zealand — The agreed dual name of Te Koko o Kupe / Cloudy Bay remembers both the Māori and British explorations of New Zealand. Many official place names in New Zealand are dual names, incorporating both the original Māori place names and the English names …   Wikipedia

  • Lyttelton, New Zealand — Infobox Settlement name = Lyttelton area total km2 = 14.4362 population as of = 2006 population total = 3072 population density km2 = auto image caption = Lyttelton on a sunny day map caption = Location of Lyttelton Lyttelton (coord|43.6000|S|172 …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”