Disputed islands Other names: Middle Sand Islands |
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Macclesfield Bank
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Geography | |
Location | South China Sea |
Coordinates | 16°00′N 114°30′E / 16.000°N 114.500°ECoordinates: 16°00′N 114°30′E / 16.000°N 114.500°E |
Total islands | 0 |
Major islands | None |
Area | 6,448 square kilometres (2,490 sq mi) total, 0 km² land surface/islets |
Length | About 130 kilometres (81 mi) |
Width | About 70 kilometres (43 mi) |
Highest point |
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Administered by | |
People's Republic of China | |
Prefecture-level city Province |
Sansha Hainan |
Claimed by | |
Republic of China (Taiwan) | |
Municipality | Kaohsiung |
Demographics | |
Population | None |
Macclesfield Bank is an elongated sunken atoll of underwater reefs and shoals in the South China Sea. It lies east of the Paracel Islands, southwest of the Pratas Islands and north of the Spratly Islands. Its length exceeds 130 km (81 mi) southwest-northeast, with a maximal width of more than 70 km (43 mi). With an ocean area of 6,448 km2 (2,490 sq mi) within the outer rim of the reef, although completely submerged without any emergent cays or islets, it is one of the largest atolls of the world. The Macclesfield Bank is part of what China calls the Zhongsha Islands, which includes a number of geographically separate submarine features, and also refers to a county-level administrative division.
Macclesfield banks were named after the British naval ship, HMS Macclesfield, which ran aground in the vicinity of these shoals in 1804.
The broken coral reef rim of Macclesfield Bank, with a width of up to 8 km (5 mi), has depths of 11.8 m (39 ft) at Pygmy Shoal on the northeast end of the bank and depths of 11.6 to 18 m (59 ft) elsewhere. Within the lagoon, Walker Shoal marks the least known depth of 9.2 metres (30 ft). In general, the central lagoon is very deep, with depths up to 100 metres (330 ft).
The elongated atoll consists of:
Macclesfield Bank is claimed, in whole or in part, by China and Taiwan (Republic of China).
Some sources state that the Philippines claims this underwater feature. However, Jose Zaide, a Philippine diplomat of ambassadorial rank, has written that the Philippines does not claim the Macclesfield Bank. Moreover, Macclesfield Bank is not within UNCLOS 200 or Philippines EEZ.
As the bank is entirely underwater, some scholars have raised questions regarding the legality of territorial claims upon it with regards to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). However, the Philippines filed claim for another underwater feature, the Benham Plateau, in 2008 in compliance with the requirements of UNCLOS and UN officially approved the claim in April 2012.