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KERGUELEN ISLAND

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 755 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KERGUELEN

ISLAND  , KERGUELEN'S
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LAND, Or DESOLATION ISLAND, an island in the
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Southern Ocean, to the S.E. of the Cape of Good Hope, and S.W. of
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Australia, and nearly
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half-way between them . Kerguelen lies between 48° 39' and 49 44' S. and 68° 42' and 7o° 35' E . Its extreme length is about 85 m., but the
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area is only about 1400 sq. m . The island is throughout mountainous, presenting from the sea in some directions the appearance of a series of jagged peaks . The various ridges and mountain masses are separated by steep-sided valleys, which run down to the sea, forming deep fjords, so that no
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part of the interior is more than 12 M. from the sea . The chief summits are Mounts Ross (6120 ft.), Richards (4000), Crozier (3251), Wyville Thomson (316o), Hooker (2600), Moseley (2400) . The coast-
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line is extremely irregular, and the fjords, at least on the north, east and south, form a series of well-sheltered harbours . As the prevailing winds are
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westerly, the safest anchorage is on the north-east . Christmas Harbour on the north and Royal Sound on the south are noble harbours, the latter with a labyrinth of islets interspersed over upwards of 20 M. of land-locked waters . The scenery is generally magnificent . A
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district of considerable extent in the centre of the island is occupied by snowfields, whence glaciers descend east and west to the sea . The whole island, exclusive of the snowfields, abounds in fresh-
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water lakes and pools in the hills and
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lower ground .

Hidden deep mudholes are frequent . Kerguelen Island is of undoubted volcanic origin, the prevailing

rock being basaltic lavas, intersected occasionally by dikes, and an active
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volcano and hot springs are said to exist in the south-west of the island . Judging from the abundant fossil remains of trees, the island must have been thickly clothed with woods and other vegetation of which it has no doubt been denuded by volcanic
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action and submergence, and possibly by changes of
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climate . It presents evidences of having been subjected to powerful glaciation, and to subsequent immersion and immense denudation . The soundings made by the " Challenger " and " Gazelle " and the
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affinities which in certain respects exist between the islands, seem to point to the existence at one time of an extensive land area in this quarter, of which Kerguelen, Prince
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Edward's Islands, the Crozets, St Paul and Amsterdam are the remains . The Kerguelen plateau rises in many parts to within 1500 fathoms of the
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surface of the sea . Beds of
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coal and of red earth are found in some places . The summits of the flat-topped hills about Betsy
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Cove, in the south-east of the island, are formed of caps of
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basalt . According to
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Sir J . D . Hooker the vegetation of Kerguelen Island is of
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great antiquity; and may have originally reached it from the
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American continent; it has no affinities with Africa . The
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present climate is not favourable to permanent vegetation; the island lies within the belt of rain at all seasons of the
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year, and is reached by no drying winds; its temperature is kept down by the surrounding vast expanse of sea, and it lies within the line of the cold Antarctic drift .

The temperature, however, is equable . The mean

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annual temperature is about 39° F., while the summer temperature has been observed to approach 70° . Tempests and squalls are frequent, and the weather is rarely
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calm . On the lower slopes of the mountains a rank vegetation exists, which, from the conditions mentioned, is constantly saturated with moisture . A rank grass, Festuca Cookii, grows thickly in places up to 300 ft., with Azorella, Cotula plumosa, &c . Sir J . D . Hooker enumerated twenty-one
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species of flowering
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plants, and seven of ferns, lycopods, and Characeae; at least seventy-four species of mosses, twenty-five of Hepaticae, and sixty-one of
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lichens are known, and there are probably many more . Several of the marine and many species of
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freshwater
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algae are
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peculiar to the island . The characteristic feature of the vegetation, the Kerguelen's Land
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cabbage, was formerly abundant, but has been greatly reduced by rabbits introduced on to the island . Fur-
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seals are still found in Kerguelen, though their numbers have been reduced by reckless slaughter . The sea-
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elephant and sea-
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leopard are characteristic .

Penguins of various kinds are abundant; a

teal .(Querquedula Eatoni) peculiar to Kerguelen and the Crozets is also found in consider-able numbers, and petrels, especially the giant
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petrel (Ossifraga gigantea), skuas, gulls, sheath-bills (Chionis minor), albatross, terns, cormorants and Cape pigeons frequent the island . There is a considerable variety of
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insects, many of them with remarkable peculiarities of structure, and with a predominance of forms incapable of flying . The island was discovered by the French navigator, Yves Joseph de Kerguelen-Tremarec, a Breton noble (1745-1797), on the 13th of
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February 1772, and partly surveyed by him in the following year . He was one of those explorers who had been attracted by the belief in a rich southern land, and this island, the South France of his first
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discovery, was afterwards called by him Desolation Land in his disappointment . Captain Cook visited the island in 1776, and, among other expeditions, the " Challenger " spent some time here, and its staff visited and surveyed various parts of it in
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January 1874 . It was occupied from
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October 1874 to February 1875 by the expeditions sent from England, Germany, and the
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United States to observe the transit of
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Venus . The German South Polar expedition in 1901–19o2 established a meteorological and magnetic station at Royal Sound, under Dr Enzensperger, who died there . In January 1893 Kerguelen was annexed by France, and its commercial exploitation was assigned to a private
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company . See Y . J. de Kerguelen-Tr6marec, Relation de deux voyages clans
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les mers australes (Paris, 1782) ; Narratives of the Voyages of Captain Cook and the " Challenger " Expedition; Phil . Trans., vol . 168, containing account of the collections made in Kerguelen by the
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British transit of Venus expedition in 1874–1875; Lieutard,"
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Mission aux Iles Kerguelen," &c., Annales hydrographiques (Paris, 1893) .

KERGUELEN'S LAND CABBAGE, in

botany, Pringlea antiscorbutica (natural order
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Cruciferae), a plant resembling in habit, and belonging to the same
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family as, the
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common cabbage (Brassica oleracea) . The cabbage-like heads of leaves abound ina pale yellow highly pungent essential oil, which gives the plant a peculiar flavour but renders it extremely wholesome . It was discovered by Captain Cook during his first voyage, but the first account of it was published by (Sir) Joseph Hooker in The Botany of the Antarctic Voyage of the "
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Erebus" and " Terror " in 1839-1843 . During the stay of the latter expedition on the island, daily use was made of this
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vegetable either cooked by itself or boiled with the
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ship's beef, pork or
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pea-soup .

End of Article: KERGUELEN ISLAND
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Additional information and Comments

The name of Delolation island seems to be well desrved as far as human habitation is concerned.I would be interested to know if France has a permanent presence of the Island or not ? A
My research shows the Island has a population of around 70 scientists during the winter and up to 200 during the summer, the French have established a radar and telemetary base their along with a few other scientific interests.
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