Phantom island
A phantom island is a purported island that appeared on maps for a period of time (sometimes centuries) during recorded history, but was later removed after it was proven not to exist.
Possible origins
Phantom islands usually stem from the reports of early sailors exploring new realms. Some may have been purely mythical, such as the Isle of Demons. Others arose through the mislocation of actual islands, or other errors in geography. For instance, Pepys Island was actually a misidentification of the Falkland Islands. The Baja California Peninsula appears on some early maps as an island but was later discovered to be attached to the mainland of North America; likewise Banks Peninsula off the South Island of New Zealand which was originally called "Banks Island" by Captain James Cook. Thule was perhaps actually discovered in the 4th century BC by the Greek explorer Pytheas but was lost, and then later reidentified by ancient explorers and geographers as either the Shetland Islands, Iceland, Scandinavia, or even as nonexistent.
Other phantom islands are probably due to navigational errors, occasional breakers, misidentification of icebergs, fog banks, or to optical illusions; New South Greenland, observed in the Weddell Sea in 1823 but never again seen, may have been the result of a superior mirage. Even fabrication has been suggested.[1][2]
Some "errors" were later thought to be intentional. Lake Superior's Isles Phelipeaux and Pontchartrain, which appeared on explorers' maps for many years, were named for Louis Phélypeaux, marquis de La Vrilliere, comte de Pontchartrain, perhaps to curry his favor. Phélypeaux was a government minister influential in allocating funds for additional voyages of exploration.
While many phantom islands appear never to have existed, a few (such as, perhaps, Thompson Island or Bermeja) may have been actual islands subsequently destroyed by volcanic explosions, earthquakes or submarine landslides, or low-lying lands such as sand banks that are no longer above water. Pactolus Bank, visited by Sir Francis Drake, may fit into this category.
List of phantom islands
Name | 'Discovery' date |
Notes |
---|---|---|
Antillia | 714/15th century | The island, like the more popular Atlantis, is a fictional island in the Atlantic, originating from an Iberian legend. |
Atlantis | Ancient Greek legend described by Plato, later hypothesized to be real, and depicted on a 1664 map by Athanasius Kircher. | |
Aurora Islands | 1762 | Discovered by Spanish merchant ship Aurora, currently thought to be just Shag Rocks. |
Bacalao | 1472 | Gaspar Frutuoso noted its discovery by João Vaz Corte-Real in 1472 in Saudades da Terra. |
Bermeja | 1539 | Discovered in the early 16th century by Spain, but mysteriously vanished sometime during the 17th century. While no dominant theory holds, it's possible that the island submerged due to tectonic movements, supported by the existence of a seamount at 22°38.76′N 90°51.3′W / 22.64600°N 90.8550°W. |
Brasil | Historic | A mythical island cloaked in mist according to Irish myths. |
Saint Brendan's Island | 512 | Claimed to have been first visited in 512 by the monk St. Brendan and 14 others, along with later reports up to 1772. |
Buss Island | 1578 | Found in the waters near Greenland, in which Martin Frobisher, the leader of the island-finding expedition, probably made a mistake in dead reckoning and mistook optical effects near Greenland for a new island. |
Crockerland | 1906 | A hoax invented by the famous Arctic explorer, Robert E. Peary, to gain more financial aid from one of his financial bankers, George Crocker. |
Isle of Demons | 1508 | Probably a relocated version of the island of Satanazes (see island below). |
Dougherty Island | 1841 | Because it is near Antarctica, it's likely the discoverer, Captain Dougherty, and future explorers who confirmed it, saw fog banks and icebergs conveniently situated in the right place and time. |
Emerald Island | 1821 | Probably fog banks and icebergs (see Dougherty Island above) the abyssal plain below it was named Emerald Plain, however, in recognition of the non-existent island. |
Ernest Legouve Reef | 1902 | A reef supposedly found by the captain of the French ship, Ernest Legouvé, which is near the exact location of the fictional Lincoln Island, the main setting for Jules Verne's book The Mysterious Island, appearing also in In Search of the Castaways. |
Estotiland | 1558 | An island appearing on the Zeno map at the current location of Labrador. |
Fata Morgana Land | 1907 | J.P. Koch, together with Aage Bertelsen, was reported to have first seen Fata Morgana Land (Danish: Fata Morgana Landet) lying in the Arctic Ocean around 80°00´N 10°00´W between NE Greenland and Svalbard. This elusive land was allegedly seen as well by Lauge Koch from the air in 1933.[3] |
Filippo Reef | 1886 | This reef, part of the Line Islands, was first seen by the ship Filippo, and seen again in 1926, where both ships saw breakers in the same area, suggesting a depth of 0.6 to 0.9 metres (2.0 to 3.0 feet). Current observations show the reported location to have a depth of 3.3 miles (5.3 kilometres), and the nearest shallow seamount is about 2.9 miles (4.7 kilometres) deep, disproving the existence of the island. |
Frisland | 1558 | Another island on the Zeno map, possibly a renamed Iceland. |
Ganges Island | 20th century | A nonexistent island off the coast of Japan to the southwest of the Shatsky Rise. |
Groclant | 1569 | An island to the west of Greenland, perhaps a misreading of the island's name, or Baffin Island. |
Hy-Brasil | 1325 | Said to lie in the Atlantic Ocean west of Ireland. Irish myths described it as cloaked in mist except for one day every seven years, when it became visible but still could not be reached. |
Ilha de Vera Cruz | 1500 | A supposed 'island' found by Portuguese explorers, which turned out not to be an island, but rather what is currently known as Brazil. |
Island of California | 1510 | A misconception about the Baja California Peninsula being an island due to an assumption that the Gulf of California was instead a Strait separating California from the rest of the Americas. |
Los Jardines | 1528 | A pair of phantom islands to the east of the Marshall Islands. |
Jacquet Island | Middle Ages | An island just to the east of the Flemish Cap, and was believed to exist into the 19th century, during which cartographers discussed it as a possible midway point for the Transatlantic telegraph cable. |
Juan de Lisboa | 17th century | Reported on maps as being southeast of Madagascar. |
Jupiter Reef | 1878 | Non-existent reef in the Line Islands (in fact Line Islands are more than 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometres) away), to the south of the also-non-existent Ernest Legouve Reef (see above). |
Kantia | 1884 | found in 1884 by Johan Otto Polter, who, in four later expeditions through 1909, disproved the island's existence. |
Isle of Mam | 1367 | A crescent-shaped island in the North Atlantic that doesn't appear to exist, however there is a crescent-shaped group of seamounts 120 feet deep near its described location. |
María de Lajara or Maria Laxar | 17th Century | Usually located North-east from Hawaii, but perhaps originally one of the Bonin Islands. |
Maria Theresa Reef | 1843 | Another non-existent reef in the Line Islands (in fact Line Islands are more than 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometres) away), slightly to the south-west-west of the phantom island, Jupiter Reef. It is a setting for Jules Verne's book, In Search of the Castaways. |
St. Matthew Island | 1516 | An island near the coast of Africa, roughly 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) East-Northeast of Ascension Island, and possibly confused with the same latitude Annobón Island. |
New South Greenland | 1823 | Unknown odd island near Antarctica, which captain Benjamin Morrell of the ship Wasp saw while traveling North from Antarctica. He thought it to be the Antarctic Peninsula (Then called New South Greenland) but his reported location during the voyage, while perfectly copying the expected path for traveling up the peninsula, was over 310 miles (500 kilometres) to the east and 60 miles (97 kilometres) to the north of actual position of the Antarctic Peninsula, suggesting either a huge miscalculation in location, or sightings of icebergs and fog, typical of phantom islands in the Antarctic Circle. |
Nimrod Islands | 1828 | A group of islands between Emerald Island and Dougherty Island, both of which are non-existent. Probably a group of icebergs together. |
Pactolus Bank | 1885 | An oceanic bank 400 feet (120 metres) deep off the west coast of Cape Horn, possibly the remains of Elizabeth Island, but a 1956 search of the area turned up no shallow areas in the reported location. |
Pepys Island | 1683 | In 1683, Ambrose Cowley reported an unknown island where he thought the Falklands were, but his location was 4 degrees to the north of the Falkland Islands. While it's possible that he made a mistake in seeing a non-existent island, it's more likely he saw one of the Falkland Islands and made a 4-degree error in his location. |
Petermannland | Between 1860 and 1874 | North of Zemlya Frantsa-Iosifa, named after August Heinrich Petermann. |
Isles Phelipeaux and Pontchartrain | 1744 | A non-existent group of islands in Lake Superior, which was likely invented to get further funding from French financial backers for more voyages. |
Podesta | 1879 | An island 1,390 kilometres (860 miles) to the west of El Quisco, Chile, that was discovered to be fake in 1935 and promptly removed. Other phantom islands were also found in the vicinity in 1912 and 1858 (see Sarah Ann Island). |
Rivadeneyra Shoal | 1842 | A shoal in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. |
Royal Company's Islands | Before 1840 | A fictional island widely believed during the 19th century to be to the south-west of Tasmania. While not found by numerous expeditions in 1840, 1889, 1902, 1909, and 1912, the island wasn't officially removed from nautical charts until 1904. |
Royllo | 1424 | A small island to the west of the mythical Antillia (see Antillia above). |
Rupes Nigra | 14th century | A magnetic, black island at the exact Magnetic north, invented as an explanation for why all compasses point north. |
Sandy Island | 1774 | Another phantom, small island to the west of New Caledonia, which was recorded on many maps until 2012 when a surveying ship passed by and disproved its existence. The current leading explanation is that the island was a raft of buoyant Pumice from a recent, nearby seamount eruption. |
Sannikov Land | 1809 | An island near the De Long Islands, north of Russia, that probably did exist but was destroyed due to coastal erosion. |
Sarah Ann Island | 1858 | A phantom island near Easter Island, similar to Podesta island. See Operational Navigation Chart of the United States Department of Defense. |
Satanazes | 1424 | This island was originally noted on maps in 1424, originating from popular legend of devils and demons attacking ships that went into the area, but the island was subsequently removed because it obviously didn't exist. The island, often drawn to the north of the mythical Antillia, was purportedly full of evil demons, but was sometimes called Salvaga to avoid using the profanity- "devil". |
Saxemberg Island | 1670 | An odd island midway between South America and Africa, which numerous captains reported seeing in 1804, 1809, and 1816. While most had conflicting reports, all of them found the island in the same location, however none of them actually made landfall. It's possible the island was volcanic, which later erupted and destroyed itself. It's also possible that they were looking at Tristan de Cunha island. |
Schjetman Reef | 1868 | To the west of the Hawaiian Islands, Schjetman Reef was originally found in 1868, to be an island 1.5 nautical miles long and 0.5 nautical miles wide. Later searches in 1880, 1923, and 1924 couldn't find the island. |
Sefton Reef | 1808 | Approx. 83°W, 37°S (Southwest of Robinson Crusoe Island), noted as "position doubtful" in Operational Navigation Chart[4] of the United States Department of Defense. |
Terra Nova Islands | 1961 | Thought to lie off Oates Coast, East Antarctica. |
Thompson Island | 1825 | An island in the South Atlantic Ocean discovered by the ship George Norris, but hasn't been seen since 1893. |
Thule | 325 BC | A mythical island in the far north, which is mentioned many times in Roman and Medieval-period works. Current interpretations guess it to be Norway, Orkney, Shetland, Scandinavia, Iceland, Greenland, and even Saaremaa. |
Transit Reef | 18th century | A possible reef in Southern Palau. While this reef probably exists, some maps don't list it as an actual location, and, although the reef doesn't have any land, the native name of the island Pieraurou, means 'Sandy Navigation Point', implying a sandy island or sand bar. |
Tuanaki | 1842 | A vanished group of islets in the Cook Islands, which a sailor allegedly spent 6 days at, but a ship traveling in the waters two years later found no island. |
Wachusett Reef | 1899 | A non-existent reef in the Line Islands (in fact Line Islands are more than 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometres) away), along with Ernest Legouve Reef, Jupiter Reef, and Maria Theresa Reef. This reef, the largest of the three, was thought to be 30–35 feet (9.1–10.7 metres) deep. None of these reefs are currently believed to have actually existed. |
Yosemite Rock | 1903 | Approx. 83°W, 32°S (Northwest of Robinson Crusoe Island), noted as "Existence doubtful" in Operational Navigation Chart of the United States Department of Defense. |
See also
- Fictitious entry
- List of fictional islands
- Lost cities
- Mythical place
- Phantom settlement
- Terra incognita
References
- ↑ Antarctica, p. 47, Paul Simpson-Housley, 1992
- ↑ Exploring Polar Frontiers, p. 435, William James Mills, 2003
- ↑ "Catalogue of place names in northern East Greenland" (PDF). Geological Survey of Denmark. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
- ↑ "Photogrpahic image of Relief Portrayal : ONC R-22" (JPG). Lib.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2016-10-01.
Further reading
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fictional islands. |
- "Thompson Island". Archived from the original on 2009-04-19.
- Stommel, Henry (1984). Lost Islands: The Story of Islands That Have Vanished from Nautical Charts. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. ISBN 0-7748-0210-3.
- Gaddis, Vincent, Invisible Horizons, Chilton Books. New York. 1965.
- Clark Barnaby Firestone, The Coasts of Illusion: A Study of Travel Tales, Harper Books, 1924.
- Johnson, Donald S., Phantom Islands of the Atlantic, Walker Publishing, New York, 1996 (Rev. ed.)
- William Shepard Walsh, A Handy Book of Curious Information, J. B. Lippincott, 1913.
- Dirk Liesemer, Lexikon der Phantominseln. mareverlag, Hamburg 2016, ISBN ISBN 978-3-86648-236-4
- Ramsay, Raymond (1972). No Longer on the Map. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0-670-51433-0.
- Gould, Rupert T. (1928). "The Auroras, and Other Doubtful Islands". Oddities: A Book of Unexplained Facts. Kessinger Publishing. pp. 124–163.