Alboran Island

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Alborán
Foto aérea Isla de Alborán.jpg
Alborán is located in Spain
Alborán
Alborán
Location of Alborán Island in Spain
Geography
LocationAlboran Sea
Coordinates35°56′22″N 03°02′07″W / 35.93944°N 3.03528°W / 35.93944; -3.03528Coordinates: 35°56′22″N 03°02′07″W / 35.93944°N 3.03528°W / 35.93944; -3.03528
Area0.07 km2 (0.027 sq mi)
Highest elevation15 m (49 ft)
Administration
ProvinceProvince of Almería
MunicipalityAlmería
Demographics
Populationmilitary staff only

Alboran Island (Spanish: Isla de Alborán) is a small islet of Spain (province of Almería) in the Alboran Sea, part of the western Mediterranean Sea, about 56 km (35 mi) north of the Moroccan coast and 85 kilometres (53 miles) from the Spanish mainland. The main buildings are an automated lighthouse built in the 19th century, a small cemetery and a harbor.

Description[]

The island is a flat platform about 15 metres (49 feet) above sea level and about 71,200 m2 (766,390.4 sq ft) in area. 100 m (328 ft) off the northeastern end of the island is the small islote de La Nube (literally, islet of the cloud).

Natural history[]

Alboran has a volcanic origin, located in an important seismic zone where the African plate collides with the Eurasian plate. In 1899 a new igneous rock was discovered on Alboran, with the name of , in honor of the island.

The islet has been recognised as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because it supports a breeding population of Audouin's gulls, as well as various species of passerines on migration.[1]

The wall-rocket species Diplotaxis siettiana, called jaramago de Alborán in Spanish, has its only known wild population on the island. It was extinct there during much of the late 20th century but successfully reintroduced from ex-situ conservation stocks in 1999.

In 2001, the United Nations declared the island and its seabed a Specially Protected Areas of Mediterranean Importance.

History[]

The island became a power base of Mustafa ben Yusuf al Mahmud ed Din (Arabic: مصطفى بن يوسف المحمود الدين‎), a Tunisian corsair in the Ottoman sultan's service whose attacks were so ferocious that he became known as Al-Borani (hence the island's name), from the Turkish for "thunderstorm". It became a Spanish possession after the 1 October 1540 Battle of Alboran.[2]

Alborán has been known in error as "Albusama".[3]

The aristocrat Archduke Ludwig Salvator of Austria visited the island and published in Prague an illustrated book in German: Alboran (1898).[4][5]

Early in World War II, the shape of the flat island with a single building prompted a British bomber crew operating at dusk to bomb the island, mistaking it for a U-boat.[citation needed]

In the mid-1960s there were several attempts by Soviet fishing boats to establish a settlement on Alboran, which forced the Spanish army to establish a permanent detachment of Spanish Navy Marines for the control and protection of the island.[2]

It is now home to a small Spanish Navy garrison and an automated lighthouse.

Administration[]

The island has belonged to the municipality of Almería since the 19th century as part of the Pescadería district.

References[]

Citations
  1. ^ "Alborán island". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2021. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Gutiérrez Castillo 2003, p. 2.
  3. ^ "Algunos cartógrafos de los últimos siglos han dado a Alboran el nombre de Albusama, confundiéndola con el pequeño islote costero cercano a la ciudad llamada tambien por ellos Albusama." (Marie Armand Pascal d'Avezac de Castera-Macaya, 1846. Historia de las islas de África p. 386); "Alhucema (Albusama): Pequeña isla del Mediterráneo , sobre la costa del reyno de Fez , en frente de la de Alhucema." (Antonio Vegas 1806. Diccionário geográfico universal, que comprende la descripción de las quatro partes del mundo, s.v. "Alhucema").
  4. ^ Austria), Ludwig Salvator (Archduke of; Woerl, Leo (1899). Erzherzog Ludwig Salvator aus dem Oesterreichischen Kaiserhause als Forscher des Mittelmeers (in German). Woerls Reisebucher-Verlag.
  5. ^ "Alboran". www.ludwigsalvator.com. Retrieved 2021-02-26.
Bibliography


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