Secondly, Australian authorities consider the bay’s extent consists of all of the sea north of a line running east from the southern tip of Rosetta Head to the Younghusband Peninsula.[3] Encounter Bay is one of four bays on the South Australian coast considered by the Australian government to be a "historic bay" under the Seas and Submerged Lands Act 1973, and was proclaimed as such in 1987 and again in both 2006 and 2016, with the result that the mouth of the bay is on the territorial seas baseline and the waters within the bay are internal waters as per the definition used in United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.[4][5]
History
Aboriginal occupation
Although traditional ownership has long been ascribed to the Ramindjeri clan of the Ngarrindjeri people,[6] linguist Rob Amery of the University of Adelaide suggested in a 1998 paper that Kaurna traditional lands "may have extended as far eastward as Encounter Bay and that the occupation of Encounter Bay by the Ramindjeri in the late 1830s may have been a response to the activities of whalers in the area". He also notes that the "Encounter Bay people" mentioned in 1836 by Colonel Light and his party at Rapid Bay in 1836 spoke the Kaurna language.[7]
The Ramindjeri language name for Encounter Bay was Ramong,[8][9] although some sources ascribe this name to The Bluff only.[10]
European arrival
Encounter Bay was named by Matthew Flinders on 8 April 1802 after his encounter with Nicolas Baudin, both of whom were charting the Australian coastline for their respective countries (Britain and France). The encounter between the scientists was peaceful, even though they believed their countries were at war at the time. (Both parties were unaware that the Treaty of Amiens, ceasing hostilities, had been signed on 25 March 1802.)[11]
After British colonisation of South Australia, shore-based bay whaling stations operated on the coast of Encounter Bay from June 1837 at Police Point, Granite Island and Rosetta Head.[12] The last of these closed down in 1855. They were the most successful and longest lasting whaling stations in South Australia.[13] An attempt was made to re-establish the fishery in 1871–72.[14]
^"South Australian Company". South Australian Gazette And Colonial Register. Vol. I, no. 2. South Australia. 3 June 1837. p. 4. Retrieved 9 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
^Kostoglou, Parry; McCarthy, Justin; Paay, Jeni; South Australia. State Heritage Branch; Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology (1991), Whaling and sealing sites in South Australia, State Heritage Branch, Dept. of Environment and Planning, pp. 41–44, ISBN978-0-646-06723-0
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Encounter Bay.
Hodge, Charles Reynolds (1932). Encounter Bay, the miniature Naples of Australia : a short history of the romantic south coast of South Australia (Reprinted 1979 ed.). Hampstead Gardens, Adelaide, S.A.: Austaprint. ISBN0-85872-320-4.