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Silhouette Island

Island of the Seychelles


Island of the Seychelles

FieldValue
nameSilhouette Island
native_name_langfr
image_nameSilhouette Island.jpg
image_mapSilhouette_roheline.png
map_captionSilhouette Island is to the northwest of Mahé
mapSeychelles
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Seychelles
locationSeychelles
coordinates
archipelagoInner Islands, Seychelles
waterbodyIndian Ocean
total_islands1
major_islands
area_km220.1
coastline_km21
length_km5.3
width_km5.3
highest_mountMont Dauban (Plaisir)
elevation_m751
countrySeychelles
country_admin_divisions_titleGroup
country_admin_divisionsInner Islands
country_admin_divisions_title_1Sub-Group
country_admin_divisions_1Granitic Seychelles
country_admin_divisions_title_2Districts
country_admin_divisions_2La Digue and Inner Islands
country_admin_divisions_title_3Island Group
country_admin_divisions_3Silhouette Group
country_largest_cityLa Passe
country_largest_city_population~160
population25
population_as_of2014
density_km29.95
ethnic_groupsCreole, French, East Africans.
timezone1SCT
utc_offset1+4
website
iso_code_typeISO code
iso_codeSC-15

Silhouette Island lies 20 km northwest of Mahé in the Seychelles. It is the third largest granitic island in the Seychelles. It has an area of 20.1 km2 and has a population of 200, mostly workers on the island. The main settlement is La Passe, where Hilton Hotel is located. The name Silhouette was given after Étienne de Silhouette (1709-1767), the French minister of finances under Louis XV.

Geography

The island is mountainous with five peaks over 500 m in elevation; Mont Dauban 751 m, Mont-Pot-a-Eau 621 m, Gratte Fesse 515 m, Mont Corgat 502 m and Mont Cocos Marrons 500 m. As such, it has some of the most dramatic scenery of the islands.

Though superficially similar to neighbouring islands, much of Silhouette is made up of younger syenite dated from 63 million years ago. Between Point Ramasse Tout and Point Zeng Zeng lies the only surface volcanic ash in Seychelles.

Demographics

The population of 200 lives in 3 villages, Grand Barbe (no longer inhabited), which is on the west coast, Anse Mondon (no longer inhabited) and La Passe on the east coast.

History

The crew of an English East India Company vessel, the Ascension, were the first humans known to step ashore on Silhouette, in 1609. The island was visited by Charles Oger, who took possession of it in the name of the King of France on 28 January 1771. Graves discovered at Anse Lascars were thought to be evidence of earlier visitors, possibly of Arabic origin (hence the name "Lascars", which is the local term for an Arab). However, when bones from the graves were taken for investigation, they were dated to around 1800, around the time of the first settlement. Also, there is a legend in the Seychelles that the corsair Jean-François Hodoul buried his treasure on Silhouette Island.

From the mid-19th century until 1960, the island was owned by the Dauban family, who were originally from France but had settled in Mauritius in 1830. The Dauban family were responsible for developing extensive plantations on Silhouette. There is a mausoleum built in the style of La Madeleine in Paris, Église de la Madeleine, where a number of the family members are buried, including Auguste Dauban, whose business ventures were so extensive he earned the nickname "the Rothschild of the Indian Ocean". The Dauban era came to an end when Henri Dauban sold the island to a French group. Following the purchase of the island by the Seychelles government in 1983, a small hotel was constructed. This was later replaced by the larger Labriz Resort which was then bought by the Hilton hotel group. The Dauban plantation house has recently been restored, and now is a museum which contains many original photos of the Dauban family.

Flora and fauna

Silhouette Island is one of the richest biodiversity points in the western Indian Ocean with many endemic and threatened plant and animal species. Among the most important is the Critically Endangered Seychelles sheath-tailed bat. Two roosting caves have been located, part of a single system of passages in a boulder field. Another roost complex was discovered in 2005 and 32 bats recorded. Most of the 75 or so endemic plants of the granitic islands of Seychelles are found on Silhouette, some of them unique to the island. One of the rarest of these is the Critically Endangered Impatiens gordonii, a white-flowered relative of the well-known garden plant Busy Lizzie, only ever recorded on Mahe and Silhouette. In 1987 the surrounding waters were declared a Marine National Park. In 2010, Silhouette National Park was created protecting 93 percent of the landmass. The island is also an Important Bird Area and is considered by the Alliance for Zero Extinction to be an important site for the survival of Critically Endangered species. Conservation of the island is managed by the Island Conservation Society.

Species of interest

  • Seychelles sheath-tailed bat
  • Seychelles giant tortoise
  • Astropanax procumbens
  • Seychelles kestrel
  • Seychelles blue pigeon
  • Lychas braueri

References

References

  1. "Historical Information on Silhouette".
  2. "Official site".
  3. "Silhouette island".
  4. "Archived copy".
  5. "Island Conservation Society".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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