Cape Raoul

Town in Tasmania, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cape Raoul is a rural locality and a natural feature in the local government area of Tasman in the South-east region of Tasmania. It is located about 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) south of the town of Nubeena. The 2016 census determined a population of nil for the state suburb of Cape Raoul.[1]

Quick Facts Cape Raoul Tasmania, Coordinates ...
Cape Raoul
Tasmania
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Cape Raoul
Coordinates43°12′04″S 147°45′48″E
Populationnil (2016 census)[1]
Postcode(s)7184
Location13 km (8 mi) S of Nubeena
LGA(s)Tasman
RegionSouth-east
State electorate(s)Lyons
Federal division(s)Lyons
Localities around Cape Raoul:
White Beach White Beach, Stormlea Port Arthur
Tasman Sea Cape Raoul Tasman Sea
Tasman Sea Tasman Sea Tasman Sea
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Cape Raoul is a confirmed suburb/locality.[2]

Boundaries and location

The shore of the Tasman Sea is the locality's western, southern, and eastern boundaries. The cape is contained within the locality, which is contained within the western section of Tasman National Park.[3]

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Tip of the cape from the sea

Cape Raoul (the natural feature) is situated at the southernmost part of the Tasman Peninsula, in south eastern Tasmania.[4] It forms the coastline of Raoul Bay, and is part of the dolerite landscape of the Tasman National Park.[5]

Geography

The cape features rock platforms, towering cliffs, columns and off-shore islands,[4] including the Hippolyte Rocks. There is a 300-metre-high (980 ft) cliff with scenic views of the coastline.[4] A 7-kilometre (4.3 mi) walking track there then descends steadily onto the Cape Raoul plateau, with the spectacular cape of dolerite columns at the end of the plateau.[4]

The cape is accessed via Port Arthur at the end of Stormlea Road.[4]

Columns

The columns at the cape appear to be a colonnade formed from columnar jointing. This happens when a pool of magma cools at just the right rate so that as its surface contracts, it cracks into polygonal plates. The cracks accelerate the cooling, extending the cracks vertically, thereby forming columns.[6][7][8]

History

A note from 1911 made a description of the cape:[9]

So named from D'Entrecasteaux's pilot. Flinders called it Basaltic Cape, but only prior to the publication of the maps of the French expedition. "In 1814 Flinders very honestly (writes Comte deFleurieu) replaces on his map the name of Raoull, stating that he gave up the name of Basaltic. This notwithstanding, Scott, Cross, and Arrowsmith chart it as Raoull or Basaltic.

References

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