Diego Ramírez Islands

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The Diego Ramírez Islands (Template:Langx) are a small group of Chilean subantarctic islands located at the southernmost extreme of South America.

History

The islands were sighted on 12 February 1619 by the Spanish Garcia de Nodal expedition, and named after the cosmographer of the expedition, Diego Ramírez de Arellano.[1] They were cited as the southernmost land mass plotted as of that time, and retained the distinction for 156 years, until the discovery of the South Sandwich Islands in 1775.

In 1892, the Chilean government rented the islands to Pedro Pablo Benavides for fishing and on condition that a lighthouse, a port, and a school would be built.[2] LaterTemplate:When? the rent was transferred to Koenigswerther and Pasinowich.Template:Who?

The Chilean Navy established a meteorological station above Caleta Condell, a small cove on the northeastern side of Isla Gonzalo (Gonzalo Island), in 1957, and resupplies it several times each year.[3] This is the southernmost inhabited outpost outside Antarctica. The next most southerly inhabited outpost is the lighthouse of Cape Horn. Cruise ships occasionally pass by on their way to and from Antarctica.

Geography

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The islands lie about Template:Convert west-southwest of Cape Horn and Template:Convert south-southeast of Ildefonso Islands, stretching Template:Convert north-south. They are divided into a smaller northern group with six islets, and a larger southern group, separated by a passage Template:Convert wide. The two largest islands, Isla Bartolomé and Isla Gonzalo, both lie in the southern group. Águila Islet (Islote Águila), the southernmost land of the group, is at latitude and longitude coordinates 56°32'9"S. They lie about 350 km north of Sars Bank, a seamount that once may have been an island.[4]

Islands

Area data are from the USGS unless otherwise specified.[5]

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Climate

The islands have a tundra climate (ET) with abundant precipitation. Temperatures remain chilly to cool throughout the entire year.

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Environment

Important Bird Area

The islands have been designated as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International for their significant seabird breeding populations. These include colonies of macaroni and southern rockhopper penguins, grey-headed and black-browed albatrosses, and blue petrels.[6]

In 2022, Ricardo Rozzi et al. identified the subantarctic rayadito (Aphrastura subantarctica) as a new bird species endemic to the Diego Ramírez Islands. Subantarctic rayadito individuals had been formerly identified as belonging to the species Aphrastura spinicauda (thorn-tailed rayadito).[7]

References

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External links

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  1. Dingwall, P.R., ed. (1995). Progress in Conservation of the Subantarctic Islands, p. 107. The World Conservation Union. Template:ISBN.
  2. Octavio Errázuriz Guilisasti and Germán Carrasco Domínguez, Historia de las Relaciones Exteriores de Chile, Arbritaje británico de 1899-1903, Editorial Andrés Bello, 1968, Santiago de Chile, page 93
  3. Dingwall (1995), p. 109.
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