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Macclesfield Bank

Underwater atoll in the South China Sea

Macclesfield Bank

Summary

Underwater atoll in the South China Sea

FieldValue
disputedyes
nameMacclesfield Bank
typereefs and shoal
pluralyes
other_namesMiddle Sand Islands
image_nameMacclesfield.png
image_size250px
image_captionMacclesfield Bank
locationSouth China Sea
coordinates
total_islands0
major_islandsNone
area_km26448
area_footnotestotal, 0 km2 land surface/islets
length_km130
width_km70
elevation_m-9.2
highest_mountUnnamed point below sea level
countryPeople's Republic of China
country_admin_divisions_titlePrefecture-level city
Province
country_admin_divisionsSansha
Hainan
country1Republic of China (Taiwan)
country1_admin_divisions_titleMunicipality
country1_admin_divisionsKaohsiung
populationNone

Province

Hainan

A 1920 American nautical chart, based on British surveys - depths in fathoms

Macclesfield Bank is an elongated sunken atoll of underwater reefs and shoals in the South China Sea. It lies east of the Paracel Islands, southwest of Pratas Island and north of the Spratly Islands. It is about 130 km long from southwest to northeast, and about 70 km wide at its broadest part. With an ocean area of 6448 km² it is one of the largest atolls in the world. The Macclesfield Bank is part of what China calls the Zhongsha Islands, which includes a number of geographically separate submarine features, and also refers to a county-level administrative division.

History

Macclesfield banks reportedly were named after British ship named Macclesfield, though there is some ambiguity which vessel this was. By one account, the vessel was the British East India Company East Indiaman , which mapped and recorded the shoals in early 1701 on her way back to England from China. An alternative origin story attributes the name to an HMS Macclesfield that reportedly ran aground in the vicinity of these shoals in 1804.

In April 1888 , under the command of William Usborne Moore, with Percy Bassett-Smith as Surgeon-Naturalist, mapped the banks. They found a depth of 40 to inside the bank, with the rim rising to within 9 fathom of the surface. Dredging found live corals, showing that although entirely submerged, the bank was an actively growing reef.

Geography

The broken coral reef rim of Macclesfield Bank, with a width of up to 8 km, has depths of 11.8 m at Pygmy Shoal on the northeast end of the bank and depths of 11.6 to 18 m elsewhere. Within the lagoon, Walker Shoal marks the least known depth of 9.2 m. In general, the central lagoon is very deep, with depths up to 100 m. While the bank is everywhere submerged, with no drying shoals, it is usually visible due to the turbulence it causes, the seas becoming "high and confused" in heavy weather.

The elongated atoll consists of the following shoals, clockwise starting in the northeast, and at the end the six named shoals in the lagoon:

English
NameRomanized
NameChinese
NameCoordinatesleast
depth
(fathoms)
Pigmy (Pygmy) Shoal
Engeria (Egeria) Bank
Howard Shoal
Learmonth Shoal
Plover Shoal
Addington Patch
Smith Shoal
Bassett Shoal
Balfour Shoal
Parry Shoal
Cawston Shoal
Penguin Bank
Tancred Shoal
Combe Shoal
Cathy (Cathay) Shoal
Siamese Shoal
Bankok Shoal
Magpie Shoal
Carpenter Shoal
Oliver Shoal
Hardy Patches1
Hand Shoal1
Margesson Shoal1
Walker Shoal1
Phillip's Shoal1
Payne Shoal1

1 inside lagoon

Territorial claims

[[South China Sea

Macclesfield Bank is claimed, in whole or in part, by China and Taiwan (Republic of China).

Jose Zaide, a Filipino diplomat of ambassadorial rank, has written that the Philippines does not claim the Macclesfield Bank. Moreover, Macclesfield Bank is not within UNCLOS 200 or Philippines EEZ.

As the bank is entirely underwater, some scholars have raised questions regarding the legality of territorial claims upon it with regards to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). However, the Philippines filed claim for another underwater feature, the Benham Rise, in 2008 in compliance with the requirements of UNCLOS and UN officially approved the claim in April 2012.

Notes

References

References

  1. Jones, Gareth Wyn. (2002). "The Territories of the People's Republic of China". Europa Publications.
  2. link. (21 June 2012). Ministry of Civil Affairs of the People's Republic of China
  3. {{cite enroute. 161. 2020. 6
  4. Tordesillas, Ellen. (2014-09-08). "Justice Carpio: China's 9-dashed line- grand theft of Global Commons".
  5. Chemillier-Gendreau, Monique. (2000). "Sovereignty Over the Paracel and Spratly Islands". Kluwer Law International.
  6. (2010). "China Sea pilot, Volume 1". UKHO - United Kingdom Hydrographic Office.
  7. Horsburgh, James. (1852). "India Directory, Or Directions for Sailing to and from the East Indies, China, Australia, and the Interjacent Ports of Africa and South America". William H. Allen & Company.
  8. "Timeline". www.spratlys.org.
  9. "HMS Macclesfield (+1804)".
  10. {{Cite Colledge2006
  11. (2008). "British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates". Seaforth Publishing.
  12. (2001). "Ships of the East India Company". World Ship Society.
  13. Bulley, Anne. (2000). "The Bombay Country Ships, 1790–1833". Routledge.
  14. (1840). "A Collection of Papers Relative to Ship Building in India ...: Also a Register Comprehending All the Ships ... Built in India to the Present Time ...". Scott.
  15. (1890). "Report on the corals from the Tizard and Macclesfield Banks, China Sea". Annals and Magazine of Natural History.
  16. (June 21, 2012). "Vietnam Law on Contested Islands Draws China's Ire". The New York Times.
  17. (May 5, 2012). "Taiwan renews sovereignty claim over South China Sea islands". Focus Taiwan.
  18. (November 15, 2005). "Limits in the Seas - No. 127 Taiwan's Maritime Claims". United States Department of State.
  19. Zaide, Jose. (July 10, 2012). "Saan Siya?". Manila Bulletin.
  20. "Allocation of South China Sea features". southchinasea.org.
  21. Poling, Gregory. (2012-07-05). "Time to End Strategic Ambiguity in the South China Sea". Center for Strategic and International Studies.
  22. (2009). "Maritime Boundary Disputes, Settlement Processes, and the Law of the Sea (Publications on Ocean Development)". Brill.
  23. Chi-kin Lo. (1989). "China's Policy Towards Territorial Disputes: The Case of the South China Sea Islands". Routledge.
  24. Clive Ralph Symmons. (1995). "Some Problems Relating to the Definition of "insular Formations" in International Law: Islands and Low-tide Elevations". [[International Boundaries Research Unit]].
  25. (28 April 2012). "UN approves PH territorial claim to Benham Rise".
  26. [http://www.philstar.com/headlines/716909/un-decide-phl-claim-13-m-hectare-benham-rise UN to decide on Phl claim on 13-M hectare Benham Rise] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-08-16 , August 16, 2011, Philippine Star.)
  27. [http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/183779/un-approves-ph-territorial-claim-to-benham-rise UN approves PH territorial claim to Benham Rise] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-04-22 , April 28, 2012, Philippine Daily Inquirer.)
  28. (June 9, 2014). "DOE to assess resource potential of Benham Rise". The Philippine Star.
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