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Lake Flannigan is a natural freshwater
lake A lake is an area filled with water, localized in a basin, surrounded by land, and distinct from any river or other outlet that serves to feed or drain the lake. Lakes lie on land and are not part of the ocean, although, like the much large ...
on King Island,
Tasmania ) , nickname = , image_map = Tasmania in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of Tasmania in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdi ...
, Australia, situated south of the
Cape Wickham Lighthouse The Cape Wickham Lighthouse is a lighthouse situated at Cape Wickham on King Island, Tasmania. At tall, it is Australia's tallest lighthouse. The lighthouse is listed on the Commonwealth Heritage Register. There are eleven timber flights o ...
, in the northern locality of Wickham. At approximately , it is the largest
body of water A body of water or waterbody (often spelled water body) is any significant accumulation of water on the surface of Earth or another planet. The term most often refers to oceans, seas, and lakes, but it includes smaller pools of water such a ...
on King Island. The size of the lake fluctuates significantly. In times of sustained high rainfall the length can reach almost , and its width in some parts can be up to . The floor of the lake lies . Reports of the depth of the water vary widely from in 1887 to in 2007 after a period of severe drought coupled with the previous mis-direction of drainage into the lake. The lake is visible from Springs Road to the south, and Cape Wickham Road to the east.


Classification

The lake is surrounded by private farmland but is itself Crown land; part of its south eastern shore is classified as "Public Reserve". Jennings explains that geologically the lake is classed as "a complex dune barrage lake" (Jennings, 1957, p. 62). The water in the lake drains underground to The Springs, 1.3 kilometres (0.8 miles) to the west on the coast. Water levels in the lake are affected by its complex geology, including calcareous and quartz sands, granite hills and dune formations. Natural processes, such as waves on the lake and storm winds contribute to erosion, which in turn impacts water levels. Since
Michael John Flannigan Michael John Flannigan (13 August 1862 – 21 April 1901) was the first District Surveyor of King Island (Tasmania), Australia. His work was singled out for praise by the Surveyor-General, Albert Edward Counsel, at a time when professional stand ...
wrote his first survey report about the island in 1896, the lake has been acknowledged as being in need of some degree of government protection. Flannigan foresaw that "if the frontages of these lakes ob and Egg Lagoons and Big Lakeare blocked by settlers it will be detrimental to the balance of the country" (Flannigan, 1896, page 4). The lake shores were first gazetted as a reserve in 1913, when the ''Tasmanian Government Gazette'' officially announced the creation of a sanctuary for wild fowl fringing the lake. But in July 1921 the ''King Island News'' published a letter from the government surveyor, KM Harrisson, expressing his concern that the Tasmanian ''Animals' and Birds' Protection Act 1919'' would remove the previously gazetted sanctuary. However, he may have been misinformed, since the shores of the lake were protected under the Lands Act of 1911, and not under the Game Protection Act, 1907 or its successor the Animals' and Birds' Protection Act, 1919, which dealt with species not places. In 2005 a Crown Land Assessment and Classification (CLAC) Project report advised that although there was scope for re-classification as a Nature Reserve under the Nature Conservation Act 2002:
It is recommended that the reserve not be proclaimed until, where there is no practical alternative, any necessary and suitable access points or arrangements, and impact protection measures to allow for stock watering have been identified. (CLAC Project Consultation Report and Recommendations, p. 9)
The ''King Island Biodiversity Management Plan 2012–2022'' identified Lake Flannigan as habitat for the
Orange-bellied Parrot The orange-bellied parrot (''Neophema chrysogaster'') is a small parrot endemic to southern Australia, and one of only three species of parrot that migrate. It was described by John Latham in 1790. A small parrot around long, it exhibits sex ...
(''Neophema chrysogaster''), which uses the area each year as a stop-over en route to Victoria, from mid-March to June and again briefly in September when returning.


Nomenclature

''The Companion to Tasmanian History'' summarises the evolution of the official naming of places in Tasmania. It reveals that: "Until 1956 place names were applied by walking clubs and government bodies such as Mines Department, Hydro-Electric Commission and the Surveys Office. These names were loosely controlled by the Surveys Office with municipal councils responsible for street, road and park names within township boundaries." The lake has had several names, including Big Lake, Lake Dobson and Lake Flannigan.


Big Lake

The present Lake Flannigan was originally called Big Lake by the islanders. A scientific group, the
Field Naturalists Club of Victoria The Field Naturalists Club of Victoria (FNCV) is an Australian natural history and conservation organisation. It was founded in May 1880 by a group of nature enthusiasts that included Thomas Pennington Lucas. Sophie C. Ducker,Lucas, Arthur Henr ...
, conducted an extensive field trip to the island in 1887, and published many reports about it for the next 2 years. During the trip they recorded that:
To the south of Wickham lies a large lagoon, hitherto known only by the name of the big lagoon. This we renamed Lake Dobson, in honour of Dr. Dobson, to whom the exploration party was much indebted for valuable assistance in various ways.
The reference to Dr. Dobson is the Victorian politician,
Frank Dobson Frank Gordon Dobson (15 March 1940 – 11 November 2019) was a British Labour Party politician. As Member of Parliament (MP) for Holborn and St. Pancras from 1979 to 2015, he served in the Cabinet as Secretary of State for Health from 1997 t ...
who, in 1884, was president of the Field Naturalists Club of Victoria. The Field Naturalists must have failed to notify or convince the islanders or the Lands Department in Hobart of their new name for the lake, because the name Big Lake continued in use until 1911, as can be seen on the official Lands Department map of King Island drawn in that year. On the 1911 map, the name Lake Flannigan is written over the original name of the lake, which has been erased. This was customary professional practice at the time – lithographs of maps had to do many years of service and were overwritten many times with updates, until it was deemed necessary to start afresh with a new map. Thus it appears that the lake was still known as Big Lake in 1911.


Lake Dobson

The intention of the Victorian Field Naturalists to rename King Island's Big Lake to Lake Dobson in 1887 was never implemented. However, in 1953 the ''Tasmanian Tramp'' reported that the name Lake Dobson had been officially assigned to a body of water in the
Mount Field National Park Mount Field National Park is a national park in Tasmania, Australia, 64 km northwest of Hobart. The landscape ranges from eucalyptus temperate rainforest to alpine moorland, rising to 1,434 metres (4,705 ft) at the summit of Mount Fi ...
on mainland Tasmania, as is shown in the Parks & Wildlife Service's ''Map of Mount Field National Park''

It is the namesake of
Henry Dobson Henry Dobson (24 December 1841 – 10 October 1918) was an Australian politician, who served as a member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly and later of the Australian Senate. He was the 17th Premier of Tasmania from 17 August 1892 to 14 A ...
MHA (1841–1918), a prominent Tasmanian lawyer and politician, who founded the Tourist Association.


Lake Flannigan

Although the Lands Department had no formal responsibility for naming places in Tasmania prior to 1956, several of the staff were keenly interested in nomenclature. The surveyors' field books of period are catalogued in the archives, but are not available, and the correspondence of the department does not reveal who was responsible for naming Lake Flannigan, but it may have been any or all of the following of Flannigan's colleagues: * Hall: In 2006 Smith wrote of Hall's interest in place names: “in 1885 Leventhorpe ichaelHall, Chief Draftsman of the Surveys Office, drew up a list of Aboriginal words to be applied to any new towns, parishes etc.". So, even in 1911, in retirement, he may have had a part in the naming of the lake after his late colleague. * Harrisson: the obituary of the District Surveyor Kenneth Montague Harrisson records that, like MJ Flannigan, he worked on King Island and it tells of his enthusiasm for naming places as he surveyed them. * Hurst: Harrisson's colleague William Nevin Tatlow Hurst spoke and wrote in detail about the naming of Tasmania's places, especially in 1911. Hurst was Acting Surveyor-General from May to September 1911, whilst Counsel was overseas on government business. He was not only a colleague of Flannigan's but also a personal friend. Flannigan witnessed Hurst's mother's will, in 1897 and he named Hurst as an executor on his own will in 1901, referring to him as “my friend”. Flannigan conducted surveys on King Island several times from 1895 onwards, and bought two parcels of land there, above the Ettrick River. He was appointed as permanent District Surveyor for the island in 1899. But severe ill-health forced him to leave the island in 1901. He returned to his family (his Irish mother, Margaret O'Halloran and her son from her second marriage, William Higgs) in Bendigo Victoria, and died there of tuberculosis in April 1901, aged 38. By 1913, he had become permanently commemorated by the naming of Lake Flannigan in his honour. The name Big Lake was transferred to a previously nameless lagoon on the edge of Colliers Swamp Conservation Area, in the southernmost locality of Surprise Bay, King Island.


Climate

Lake Flannigan has an oceanic climate (''Cfb'') bordering on a warm
Mediterranean The Mediterranean Sea is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean Basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Western Europe, Western and Southern Europe and Anatolia, on the south by North Africa ...
climate (''Csb'').


Water bodies on King Island

The island is very well-endowed with sources of fresh water, although some are ephemeral. There are forty-five lakes and lagoons distributed across the island.


Historical photos from King Island

StateLibQld 1 67703 Netherby (ship).jpg, The Netherby was wrecked on King Island in July 1866, State Library Qld. Cape Wickham Lighthouse and quarters, King Island, Bass Strait.jpg, Wickham Lighthouse and quarters, King Island. Only the lighthouse remains. King Island Emu skeleton.jpg, King Island Emu skeleton: Specimen of the extinct ''Dromaeus ater'' discovered in the Royal Zoological Museum, Florence. The Ibis, Quarterly Journal of Ornithology. Vol. I. Eighth Series 1901 King Island wombats.jpg, Illustration of the now extinct wombat of King Island, by Charles-Alexandre Lesueur Elephant seals on King Island.jpg, Elephant seals, ‘’Dromaius novaehollandiae minor’’, on King Island in former times


See also

* List of reservoirs and dams in Tasmania * List of lakes in Tasmania


References


External links

*
Limnology Limnology ( ; from Greek λίμνη, ''limne'', "lake" and λόγος, ''logos'', "knowledge") is the study of inland aquatic ecosystems. The study of limnology includes aspects of the biological, chemical, physical, and geological characteris ...

World Lake DatabaseGlobal Lake Database
{{Lakes of Tasmania, state=autocollapse Flannigan Important Bird Areas of Tasmania Tourist attractions in Tasmania King Island (Tasmania)