Map: | Australia Jervis Bay Territory |
Coordinates: | -35.1724°N 150.6116°W |
Map Width: | 220 |
Bherwherre Beach | |
Alt Name: | Five Mile Beach |
Length: | 7km (04miles) |
Type: | Beach |
Location: | Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay Territory |
Bherwerre Beach (sometimes known as Five Mile Beach[1]) is a long beach located in Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay Territory, Australia. It is approximately 7abbr=NaNabbr= long[2] and is bordered by Cave Beach to the east and Sussex Inlet to the west.
See also: Hive shipwreck. On the night of 10 December 1835, the convict transportation ship Hive, carrying convicts from Dublin, Ireland, ran aground on the beach and was subsequently shipwrecked after being removed from the beach. The shipwreck was eventually found by New South Wales' Heritage Office in 1994, approximately 40m (130feet) from shore under approximately NaNm (-2,147,483,648feet) of sand at a depth of approximately 2m (07feet). It was subsequently added to the NSW State Heritage Register in April 2010.[3]
The beach and the surrounding dunes are a known habitat for many species of birds, including the pied oystercatcher,[4] the hooded plover,[5] the wandering albatross, the white-headed petrel, the providence petrel, the Salvin's prion, the Antarctic prion, the wedge-tailed shearwater, the brown booby, the white-necked heron, the whistling kite, the brown falcon, the red-capped plover, the ruddy turnstone, the bar-tailed godwit, the curlew sandpiper, the caspian tern, the white-throated needletail, the golden-headed cisticola, the chestnut-rumped heathwren, the buff-rumped thornbill and the white-fronted chat.[6]