Ball's Pyramid Explained

Ball's Pyramid should not be confused with Bass Pyramid.

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Image Map Caption:Ball's Pyramid is to the southeast of Lord Howe Island
Pushpin Map:Oceania
Location:Pacific Ocean
Area M2:or
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Length M:1100
Width M:300
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Elevation M:572
Elevation Footnotes:[1]
Country Admin Divisions Title:State
Country Admin Divisions:New South Wales

Ball's Pyramid is an uninhabited islet in the Pacific Ocean located southeast of Lord Howe Island. The steep rocky basalt outcrop is the eroded plug of a shield volcano and caldera that formed 6.4million years ago.[2] It is high, while measuring in length and only across, making it the tallest volcanic stack in the world.[3]

Ball's Pyramid, which is part of Australia's Lord Howe Island Marine Park, is positioned in the centre of a submarine shelf surrounded by rough seas, which makes any approach difficult.[4]

History

Discovery

The pyramid is named after Royal Navy Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball, who reported discovering it in 1788. On the same voyage, Ball also discovered Lord Howe Island, Ball's Pyramid's nearest landmass.

In The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay with an Account of the Establishment of the Colonies of Port Jackson and Norfolk Island (1789), Arthur Phillip gives this description of the area around Ball's Pyramid before describing Lord Howe Island:

There lies about four miles from the south-west part of the pyramid, a dangerous rock, which shows itself a little above the surface of the water, and appears not to be larger than a boat. Lieutenant Ball had no opportunity of examining whether there is a safe passage between them or not.[5]

Survey and exploration

In May 1853, Henry Mangles Denham with and surveyed the area around Lord Howe Island including Ball's Pyramid, producing the first chart of the pyramid.[6]

The first recorded person to go ashore is believed to have been Henry Wilkinson, a geologist at the New South Wales Department of Mines, in 1882.

In 1964, a team from Sydney attempted to climb to the summit of the pyramid. However, the climbers were forced to turn back on the fifth day as they ran short of food and water. The expedition was the idea of Australian adventurer Dick Smith, who was a member of Rover Scouts at the time. The expedition also involved other members of the Scouting movement and other people. Smith went on the expedition, but did not attempt the climb due to an unexpected medical operation two weeks before the expedition.

Ball's Pyramid was first climbed on 14 February 1965 by Bryden Allen, John Davis, Jack Pettigrew and David Witham of the Sydney Rock Climbing Club. Jack Hill of New Zealand then climbed to the summit with Pettigrew on the following day. Don Willcox and Ben Sandilands were part of the support team.[7]

In 1979, Smith returned to the pyramid, together with climbers John Worrall and Hugh Ward. They successfully reached the summit and unfurled a flag of New South Wales provided to them by Premier Neville Wran.

Climbing was banned in 1982 under amendments to the Lord Howe Island Act, and in 1986, all access to the island was banned by the Lord Howe Island Board. In 1990, the policy was relaxed to allow some climbing under strict conditions, which in recent years has required an application to the relevant state minister.[8]

Geography

Like Lord Howe Island and the Lord Howe Seamount Chain, Ball's Pyramid is based on the Lord Howe Rise, part of the submerged continent of Zealandia. Ball's Pyramid has a few satellite islets. Observatory Rock and Wheatsheaf Islet lie about west-northwest and west-southwest respectively, of the western extremity of Ball's Pyramid. Southeast Rock is a pinnacle located about southeast of Ball's Pyramid.

The shelf is in length and averages in width and lies under an average depth of of water.[4] It is separated by a 500-deepNaN-deep submarine canyon from another shelf on which Lord Howe Island is located. The cliffs of the stack continue under the water surface to the level of the shelf.

Flora and fauna

Melaleuca howeana

A Melaleuca howeana shrub was found growing on Ball's Pyramid. The bush was growing in a small crevice where water was seeping through cracks in the underlying rocks. This moisture supported relatively lush plant growth which had, over time, resulted in a buildup of plant debris several metres deep.[9]

Dryococelus australis

Ball's Pyramid supports the last known wild population of Lord Howe Island stick insect (Dryococelus australis).[10]

Following the last sighting of the Lord Howe Island stick insect on Lord Howe Island in 1920, the species was presumed extinct. Evidence of continued survival on Ball's Pyramid was discovered during the 1964 climb when a dead specimen was found and photographed. Throughout the following years, several more dead specimens were discovered, but attempts to find live specimens were unsuccessful.[11]

In 2001, a team of entomologists and conservationists landed on Ball's Pyramid to chart its flora and fauna. As they had hoped, they discovered a population of the Lord Howe Island stick insect living in an area of 6mby30mm (20feetby100feetm), at a height of above the shoreline, under a single M. howeana shrub. The population was extremely small, with only 24 individuals. Two pairs were brought to mainland Australia, and new populations have been successfully bred[12] with the ultimate goal of reintroduction to Lord Howe Island.

In 2014 an unauthorised climbing team sighted live stick insects in an exposed position below the summit of Ball's Pyramid in a thicket of sedge plants, suggesting that the insect's range on Ball's Pyramid is more widespread than previously held and its food preferences are not limited to Melaleuca howeana.[11] [13]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ball's Pyramid . Peakbagger . 17 March 2023.
  2. Web site: Woodroffe . Colin . Balls Pyramid and the efficacy of marine abrasion . 2023-06-28 . Vignettes: Key Concepts in Geomorphology . Carleton College . en.
  3. Web site: Geography and Geology. https://web.archive.org/web/20140912073751/http://www.lordhoweisland.info/conservation/geo.htm. 12 September 2014. Lord Howe Island Tourism Association. 2009-04-20.
  4. Web site: Woodroffe . Colin . 29 May 2012 . Balls Pyramid and the efficacy of marine abrasion . Vignettes . . 9 July 2013.
  5. Book: Philip, Arthur . 1789 . The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay with an Account of the Establishment of the Colonies of Port Jackson and Norfolk Island . . Piccadilly, London . 9 April 2014.
  6. Book: David . Andrew . The Voyage of HMS Herald . 1995 . Melbourne University Press . 0-522-84390--5 . 29–30.
  7. Web site: Archived version of Bryden Allen's climbing page. Wayback Machine.
  8. Web site: Mr Andrew Fraser (Coffs Harbour). https://web.archive.org/web/20070929095404/http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/parlment/hansart.nsf/V3Key/LA19960501045. 2007-09-29. New South Wales Legislative Assembly. 1 May 1996.
  9. Web site: Lord Howe Island: Return of the tree lobster. GeoCurrents. 9 September 2022.
  10. Web site: Krulwich . Robert . Robert Krulwich . 29 February 2012 . Six Legged Giant Finds Secret Hideaway for 80 years . . 18 January 2016.
  11. Book: Smith, Jim. 2016. South Pacific Pinnacle, The exploration of Ball's Pyramid. Den Fenella press. 978-0-9943872-0-2.
  12. Web site: Thomas . Abbie . 14 February 2001 . Giant stick insect rediscovered . Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  13. Book: Smith, Jim. 2015. Balls Pyramid, Climbing the world's tallest sea stack. Dick Smith Adventure Pty Ltd.. 978-0-646-94603-0.