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JUAN See also: group in the See also: South Pacific Ocean, between 330 and 34° S., 80° W., belonging to Chile and included in the province of See also: Valparaiso
.
The See also: main See also: island is called Mas-a-Tierra (Span
.
"more to See also: land") to distinguish it from a smaller island, Mas-a-Fuera (" more to See also: sea "), See also: loo m. farther west
.
Off the S.W. of Mas-a-Tierra lies the islet of See also: Santa See also: Clara
.
The aspect of Mas-a-Tierra is beautiful; only 13 M. in length by 4 in width, it consists of a series of precipitous rocks rudely piled into irregular blocks and pinnacles, and strongly contrasting with a See also: rich vegetation
.
The highest of these, 3225 ft., is called, from its massive See also: form, El Yunque (the anvil)
.
The rocks are volcanic
.
See also: Cumberland See also: Bay on the See also: north See also: side is the only See also: fair anchorage, and even there, from the See also: great See also: depth of See also: water, there is some See also: risk
.
A wide valley See also: collecting streams from several of the ravines on the north side of the island opens into Cumberland Bay, and is partially enclosed and cultivated
.
The inhabitants number only some twenty
.
The See also: flora and See also: fauna of Juan See also: Fernandez are in most respects Chilean
.
There are few trees on the island, for most of the valuable indigenous trees have been practically exterminated, such as the sandalwood, which the earlier navigators found one of the most valuable products of the island
.
Ferns are prominent among the flora, about one-third of which consists of endemic See also: species
.
There are no indigenous land mammals
.
Pigs and goats, however, with cattle, horses, asses and See also: dogs, have been introduced, have multiplied, and in considerable numbers run See also: wild
.
Sea-elephants and fur-sealswere formerly plentiful
.
Of birds, a See also: tyrant and a humming-See also: bird (Eustephanus fernandensis) are See also: peculiar to the group, while another humming bird (E. galerites), a thrush, and some birds of prey also occur in Chile
.
E. fernandensis has the peculiarity that the male is of a bright See also: cinnamon colour, while the See also: female is See also: green
.
Both sexes are green in E. galerites
.
Juan Fernandez was discovered by a See also: Spanish See also: pilot of that name in 1563
.
Fernandez obtained from the Spanish See also: government a See also: grant of the islands, where he resided for some
See also: time, stocking them with goats and pigs
.
He soon, however, appears to have abandoned his possessions, which were afterwards for many years only visited occasionally by fishermen from the coasts of Chile and See also: Peru
.
In 1616 See also: Jacob le Maire and Willem Cornelis Schouten called at Juan Fernandez for water and fresh provisions
.
Pigs and goats were then abundant on.the islands
.
In See also: February 1700 See also: Dampier called at Juan Fernandez and while there Captain Straddling of the " Cinque See also: Porte " galley quarrelled with his men, See also: forty-two of whom deserted but were afterwards taken on See also: board by Dampier; five See also: seamen, however, remained on See also: shore
.
Other parties had previously colonized the islands but none had remained permanently
.
In See also: October 1704 the " Cinque Porte " returned and found two of these men, the others having been apparently captured by the French
.
On this occasion Straddling quarrelled with See also: Alexander
See also: Selkirk (q.v.), who, at his own See also: request, became the island's most famous colonist, for his adventures are commonly believed to have inspired Daniel See also: Defoe's See also: Robinson Crusoe
.
Among later visits, that of Commodore Anson, in the " See also: Centurion " (See also: June 1741) led, on his return home, to a proposal to form an See also: English See also: settlement on Juan Fernandez; but the Spaniards, hearing that the See also: matter had been mooted in See also: England, gave orders to occupy the island, and it was garrisoned accordingly in 1750
.
See also: Philip
See also: Carteret first observed this settlement in May 1767, and on ac-count of the hostility of the Spaniards preferred to put in at Masa-Fuera
.
After the establishment of the independence of Chile at the beginning of the 19th century, Juan Fernandez passed into the possession of that country
.
On more than one occasion before 184o Mas-a-Tierra was used as a See also: state prison by the Chilean government
.
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