Coulman Island | |
Map: | Antarctica |
Location: | Antarctica |
Coordinates: | -73.4833°N 214°W |
Area Km2: | 319 |
Length Km: | 33.3 |
Width Km: | 14.8 |
Highest Mount: | Hawkes Heights |
Elevation Ft: | 6,562 |
Population: | Uninhabited |
Country: | None |
Treaty System: | Antarctic Treaty System |
Coulman Island (-73.4667°N 214°W) is an island long and wide, lying southeast of Cape Jones, Victoria Land, Antarctica, in the western Ross Sea. It was discovered in 1841 by Sir James Clark Ross who named it for his father-in-law, Thomas Coulman.
The island is composed of several overlapping shield volcanoes that form part of the Hallett Volcanic Province of the McMurdo Volcanic Group.[1] A 5km (03miles) wide and 700m (2,300feet) deep caldera called the Hawkes Heights can be found on the south end of the island.
The island is currently recognized as an important bird area because it holds a huge super-colony of emperor penguins and is the largest colony of this species in the world. However, scientists speculate that this colony could hold more birds than what they have estimated. More than 26,000 chicks have been counted during the 2018-2019 breeding season indicating that the number of adults ranged from 30,000 to 35,000 breeding pairs. The sheer numbers of penguins on the island had also led scientists to think that there have been potentially larger emperor penguin super-colonies that may have existed in the past before being wiped out during the last ice age.
Coulman Island is in the Ross Sea to the southeast of Daniell Peninsula, and east of the ice tongues of Borchgrevink Glacier and Mariner Glacier, which extend into Lady Newnes Bay to the southwest of the island. Glacier Strait separates the island from the mainland.Hawkes Heights dominate the south of the island.Capes on the east side are, from north to south, Cape Wadworth, Cape Main and Cape Anne.
-73.5333°N 211°W. The heights are an ice-filled crater rising to high that dominates the south part of Coulman Island and marks the island's summita. Named by NZGSAE, 1958-59, for Captain William M. Hawkes, United States Navy, who took a leading part in early air operations from Williams Field near McMurdo Station, including long range photo reconnaissance and supply flights, and the first air landing at the South Pole. He was commander of one of the two planes which made the historic first flight from Christchurch to McMurdo Sound on Dec. 17, 1955. His air photos proved of great value to two NZGSAE parties to this part of Victoria Land.
See main article: Cape Wadworth. -73.3167°N 216°W. The northern extremity of Coulman Island. Discovered Jan. 17, 1841 by Sir James Clark Ross who named it in compliment to his wife's uncle, Robert John Coulman, Esq., of Wadworth Hall, Doncaster.
See main article: Cape Main. -73.55°N 223°W. A small cape situated north of Cape Anne, along the east side of Coulman Island. Named by NZ-APC in 1966 for Brian Main, scientific technician at Hallett Station, 1962-63.
-73.6167°N 220°W. Cape which marks the southeast extremity of Coulman Island. Discovered in January 1841 by Sir James Clark Ross and named by him for his wife.
-73.4167°N 193°W. A north-south trending strait off the coast of Victoria Land in the western Ross Sea, situated between Coulman Island on the east and Cape Jones, Borchgrevink Glacier Tongue and Mariner Glacier Tongue on the west. The name honors the USS Glacier which in February 1965 was the first vessel to navigate the strait, and is also in conjunction with the significant presence of the two large glacier tongues. The name was proposed by M.R.J. Ford, New Zealand surveyor who was aboard the Glacier in February 1965.