Smooth Island (Tasmania)


Smooth Island, is a privately owned island with an area of lying close to the south-eastern coast of Tasmania, Australia. The island is part of the Sloping Island Group situated in Norfolk Bay and surrounded by the Tasman and Forestier Peninsulas. The towns Dunalley and Murdunna are nearby. Smooth Island differs from other Tasmanian islands as it has an unencumbered freehold title down to the high-water mark.

Administration

For administrative purposes, the island is within the Tasman Council, the land district of Pembroke, the legislative council of Rumney and the electorate of Lyons at state and federal levels. It lies within the Fire Management Area Committee Boundary of 'East Coast'.
Smooth Island is privately owned; it has a freehold title with no covenants. In 2014 Smooth Island was gazetted as a Private Forest Timber Reserve. The coast line from the Smooth Island waterline has been classified Zone 23 under the Tasman Interim Planning Scheme 2015.

Access

Smooth island is private property to the coastal high-water mark; unauthorised public access, including mooring of vessels, is prohibited. Subject to authorisation, Smooth Island is easily accessible by boat and helicopter. The island's terrain is suited to the construction of a small airstrip.

Services

The island receives radio coverage from ABC Local Radio, 3G mobile phone coverage from Telstra and wireless coverage from the National Broadband Network. The table below outlines the nearest services and facilities to Smooth Island.
Service typeNameAddressCoordinatesDistance by airDistance by boatDistance by road from MurdunnaReference
Public boat rampMurdunna boat ramp5.7 km5.8 km
AmbulanceDodges Ferry Ambulance Station17 km21 km28 km
Medical Dodges Ferry Medical17 km21 km28 km
Major hospitalRoyal Hobart Hospital37.5 km56 km65 km
Police Dunalley Police Station6.7 km6.7 km9 km
Mobile phone transmission towerTelstra 3G 850 MHz6 km
Wireless internet transmission towerNational Broadband Network6 km
FuelShell Dunalley6.5 km6.5 km9 km
General storeDunalley Supermarket6.7 km6.7 km9 km
Large shopping centreSorell plaza shopping centre25 km29 km40 km

Recreational fishing

"All waters 200 metres seaward from the low water mark of Smooth Island: Shark Refuge Area. No taking of shark, skates or rays, except elephantfish. Where permitted, graball nets must not be set for more than 2 hours and can only be set from sunrise until one hour before sunset. No mullet nets. No set lines."

Geography

Smooth Island lies from both Dunbabin Point and Chronicle Point on the mainland, and from King George Island, measured from the nearest coastlines.
The island has two hilly peaks separated by a saddle. The height above sea level of the North peak, South peak and saddle are, and respectively.

Climate

See here for live data from .

Geology

Smooth Island consists of diabase or dolerite rock, a subvolcanic intrusion that probably occurred from during the Eocene epoch of the Cenozoic era. A geological survey identified consolidated, brownish, fine-grained quartz sandstone occurring on the island's north-east coastline at approximately above sea level, covered by sand. It was said to be similar to the sandstone samples retrieved from South Arm that contained numerous fossils but no fossils were found in the samples taken from Smooth Island. The western aspect of the island contains dolerite with locally developed granophyre from the Jurassic period. The water table is classified as a surficial sediment aquifer.
Because the island predominantly has a sloping hard rock shore, there is little vulnerability to flooding or erosion due to a rise in sea level. A coastal acid sulfate soil analysis produced a result of "extremely low" along the north and north-east side of the island.

Ecosystem

See here for an overview of .

Marine ecology

Smooth Island is surrounded by a low-profile reef. A region of gravel or hard sand extends from the reef on the eastern coast towards King George Island and King George Sound. The reef on the western coast is surrounded by sand and a body of silt approaches the south-west coast of the island. Between Smooth Island and King George Island lies a dense bed of seagrass and eelgrass covering about. Studies have found dense populations of South Australian cobbler within this region because this fish prefers patchy beds of eelgrass. The island's east coast has the densest concentration of Little weed whiting in Norfolk Bay; an assessment in 1995–1996 revealed that 88% of the fish caught were of the species Little Rock Whiting (Neoodax balteatus) and Bridled Leatherjacket (Acanthaluteres spilomelanurus).
A species of red algae has been found close to the island. The fish species flathead, trumpeter, perch, cod and Australian salmon can be found in the waters immediately surrounding the island. Dolphins are frequently sighted and killer whales are infrequently sighted near the island. The Spotted handfish and the Live-bearing Seastar are threatened marine species that may be present in the waters surrounding Smooth Island. A killer whale was identified north-east of the current lighthouse position. Several humpback whales were spotted near Smooth Island in June 2017.

Ecological rehabilitation

The terrestrial ecosystem of Smooth Island has been damaged by overgrazing and slashing-and-burning, and through the commercial hunting of wildlife. The island's natural vegetation has been largely displaced by exotic grass, thistle, bracken, scattered eucalypts and African boxthorn bushes. Between and of shearwater rookeries are present on Smooth Island and the impact of repeated fires on these habitats has been studied. The island' current owners intend to systematically restore its native ecosystem. Since March 2014, a diverse range of native Tasmanian flora have been planted throughout the island. Remnant eucalypts are also expected to seed on the island's south-east coast since grazing has ceased.

History

Toponymy

Matthew Flinders was the first to chart the island on 15 December 1798 and named it "Smooth Island" on his contemporaneous maps but the island does not appear on his 1814 map. In 1824 Thomas Scott referred to the island as "Garden Island" on his maps. The origins of this are not entirely clear, and other sources are inconclusive about the above assertions. and state that the island was first named on a map by "Cross " and "Frankland" ", before stating several pages later that the island was first named "Smooth Island".
According to a 1911 newspaper article, the island "is not named in the map of D'Entrecasteaux, even though it was marked". During the early 21st century, Smooth Island was occasionally listed as "Lot 1 Norfolk Bay, Dunalley TAS 7177" on some real-estate classifieds.
Much confusion exists about the names of many of the islands in South East Tasmania. Garden Island has become an alternative name for both Green Island and Smooth Island. A newspaper article from 1836 refers to a Garden Island in the Pembroke Land District.

Structures

A survey of Smooth Island was completed on 14 July 1863; it reveals the presence of the original jetty, a spring and a guano excavation site on the island. A lighthouse was installed on the north peak in 1991. It was relocated by request of the landowners in 2014.

Potential uses

Smooth Island's south and west coasts have alkaline soil while the east slope has acidic soil.
The crops with the greatest yield potential are as follows:
  • Table wine grapes
  • Sparkling wine grapes
  • Industrial hemp
  • Pyrethrum
  • Blueberries
  • Phosphate mining: on 13 October 1941, the viability of mining phosphate on Smooth Island was assessed but was determined to not be viable.

Artwork

Smooth Island has been the subject of several notable paintings: X Marks the Spot, Robyn Harman's Smooth Island, Michael Weitnauer's Norfolk Bay and Dale Frank's "Dunalley, Smooth Island". It has been mentioned in poems such as "Two Kinds of Silence" by Kathryn Lomer:
I could lose or find myself
in this private Bermuda triangle-
Connelly's Bay, Lime Bay, Smooth Island;
In the dusk Smooth Island's navigation light
begins to blink its code name
to sailors bound for Dunalley