Nickname: Barrenjoey | |
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Location of Tenth Island off the coast of Tasmania
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Geography | |
Location | Bass Strait |
Coordinates | 40°56′S 146°59′E / 40.933°S 146.983°ECoordinates: 40°56′S 146°59′E / 40.933°S 146.983°E |
Archipelago | Waterhouse Island Group |
Area | 900 m2 (9,700 sq ft) |
Administration | |
Australia
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State | Tasmania |
Demographics | |
Population | uninhabited |
The Tenth Island, sometimes called Barrenjoey, part of the Waterhouse Island Group, is a 900-square-metre (9,700 sq ft) uninhabited granite islet and nature reserve, situated in Bass Strait, lying close to the north-eastern coast of Tasmania, Australia. The islet has no vegetation and much of it is wave-washed in winter storms.
Other islands in the Waterhouse Group include Ninth, Maclean, Waterhouse, Little Waterhouse, Baynes, St Helens, Foster, Swan, Little Swan, Cygnet and Paddys islands and Bird Rock and George Rocks islets.
The island is home to a significant breeding colony of Australian fur seals, with up to 400 pups born each year, though many drown in storms. black-faced cormorants also breed on the island and little penguins roost there.
In the waters surrounding Tenth Island, Therese Cartwright, aged 35 years and a mother of five children, was killed as a result of a human shark attack fatality on 5 June 1993 when a reportedly 5-metre (16 ft) long great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) attacked Cartwright while she was scuba diving at the seal colony.