- Juan de Nova Island
Infobox Country
native_name = "Île Juan de Nova"
conventional_long_name = Juan de Nova Island
symbol_type = Coat of arms
national_motto = "Liberté, égalité, fraternité "
national_anthem =La Marseillaise
map_caption = Location of theScattered islands in the Indian Ocean :
• 1 :Bassas da India • 2 :Europa Island • 3 :Glorioso Islands • 4 :Juan de Nova Island • 5 :Tromelin Island (KM :Comoros , MG :Madagascar , MU :Mauritius , MZ :Mozambique , RE :Réunion , YT :Mayotte )Juan de Nova Island (also Saint-Christophe, French: locally "Île Juan de Nova" or officially "Île Juan da Nova") is a 4.4 km² low, flat,
tropical island in the narrowest part of theMozambique Channel , about one-third of the way betweenMadagascar andMozambique at coord|17|03|16|S|42|43|30|E|region:FR-TF_type:isle|display=inline,title. Anchorage is possible off the northeast of the island which also has a 1,300-metre-longairstrip .Administratively, the island is one of the
Scattered islands in the Indian Ocean , adistrict of theFrench Southern and Antarctic Lands .Juan de Nova, about six kilometres long and 1.6km at its widest, is a
nature reserve surrounded by reefs which enclose an area (not a truelagoon like in anatoll ) of roughly 40 km². Forests, mainly ofCasuarinaceae , cover about half the island. Large numbers oftern s ("Sterna fuscata") breed there from November to March.Turtles nest in the beaches around the island.The island is named after
João da Nova , a Galician admiral in the service ofPortugal who came across the island in 1501. It has been a French possession since 1897.Guano (phosphate ) deposits were exploited from the start of the 20th century until 1970. The island was abandoned duringWorld War II and was visited by Germansubmariners . Installations, including a hangar, rail lines, houses and a jetty are in ruins.Juan de Nova, with an
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of 61,050 km², is claimed byMadagascar . The island is garrisoned by French troops fromRéunion and has ameteorological station ("Saint-Christophe" [http://www.ethnia.org/ethnia-fiche.php?ask=FR-DT-DM-RE-XL-JU] ).Juan de Nova, in the sea route between
South Africa and the northern tip of Madagascar, is affected by strong currents, and has become the site of numerous wrecks. Most visible are the remains of the SS "Tottenham" which ran onto the southern fringing reef in 1911.
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