At the southern edge of the reef is a shipwreck of the Ann Millicent, an iron-hulled barge of 944 tons wrecked in 1888. The remains of an RAAF Beaufighter can also be seen at low tide. Formerly used as a bombing range, access to the island is prohibited because of the risk of unexploded ordnance. The area is still a gazetted Defence Practice Area, but is no longer in active use.
Cartier Island is completely unvegetated except for the seagrassThalassia hemprichii, which grows in pockets of sand within the reef, and may be exposed at low tide.[2]
History
The island was charted in 1800 and named after the ship Cartier. Its charted position was somewhat inaccurate until corrected in 1878 during a hydrographic survey by Lieutenant William Tooker in the Airlie. On 5 January 1888 the Ann Millicent was wrecked on the island during a voyage from the Gulf of Carpentaria to Adelaide, South Australia. In 1909 it was annexed by the United Kingdom, but on 23 July 1931 both Ashmore Reef and Cartier Island were transferred to Australia.
During World War II the area was used as a bombing range. Cartier Island and the surrounding marine area within a 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) radius was a gazetted Defence Practice Area up to 20 July 2011 and has been used in the past as an air weapons range. Although the site is no longer an active weapons range there is a substantial risk that unexploded ordnance remains in the area.[3]
Cartier Island is within an area subject to a Memorandum of Understanding (known as the MOU Box) signed by Australia and Indonesia in 1974 and reviewed in 1989, which provided for continued Indonesian traditional fishing within limits.[4]
Environment and protection
The Cartier Island Marine Park covers an area within 4 nautical miles (7 km) of the centre of the reef which is protected as a Sanctuary Zone (IUCN Ia).[5]
In 2003, environmental authorities closed maritime access to the island and its surrounding reef to build up depleted fish stocks and for safety reasons.[5] Announced as a seven-year closure, Environment Australia planned to monitor levels of marine wildlife, and determine the presence of unexploded ordnance.[5] Before then, the area was frequented by yachts, and fished by Indonesian boats.[5]
^Kenneally, Kevin F. (1993). "Ashmore Reef and Cartier Island". Flora of Australia: Volume 50: Oceanic Islands 2. Canberra: AGPS Press. pp. 43–47. ISBN0-644-14446-7.