Shark Bay

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This was published 15 years ago

Shark Bay

Shark Bay (including Monkey Mia, Shell Beach, Hamelin Pool and Eagle Bluff)
This should be read in conjunction with the entry on Denham and Monkey Mia.
Located over 800 km north and encompassing the most westerly part of the Australian continental landmass, Shark Bay is one of the country¹s most important historic sites and most fascinating tourist destinations. Here, in this breathtakingly beautiful region, the visitor comes in contact with the drama of the early Dutch exploration of the Australian coastline, the romance of pearl fishing, the harshness of trying to eke out a living on a land where rainfall was small and unreliable. Equally this is an area of beautiful beaches, excellent fishing (both deep sea and shoreline), of bushwalking and of Western Australia¹s most famous natural tourist attraction - the friendly dolphins of Monkey Mia.

Shark Bay was first named by William Dampier on his second voyage to Australia in 1699. Dampier wrote in A Voyage to New Holland: ŒThe Sea­fish that we saw here (for here was no River, Land or Pond of fresh Water to be seen) are chiefly Sharks. There are Abundance of them in this particular Sound, and I therefore give it the Name of Shark¹s Bay...¹Twas the 7th of August when we came into Shark¹s Bay; in which we Anchor¹d at three several Places, and stay¹d at the first of them (on the W. side of the Bay) till the 11th. During which time we searched about, as I said, for fresh Water, digging Wells, but to no purpose.¹

In spite of Dampier¹s rather jaundiced assessment of the area Shark Bay is truly magnificent. A jewel in the West Australian coast - white sand beaches edged by aquamarine waters and dark Prussian blue waters stretching to the horizon.

The WA Department of Conservation and Land Management (CALM) has published Shark Bay: Discover Monkey Mia & Other Natural Wonders which, apart from having some truly wonderful photographs of the region (although who knows why the Tropic of Capricorn shot was included - it is nearly 300 km north of Denham), does have an excellent and interesting coverage of the region. Its detailed coverage of the fauna and flora of the area is particularly good. In Australian Geographic (Issue 14 - April/June, 1989) there is a lengthy article titled simply Shark Bay.


Things to see:

Attractions in the Area
No one should visit Shark Bay without seeing the stromatolites at Hamelin Pool, the dugongs at Eagle Bluff, walking along the remarkable Shell Beach, and seeing the dolphins at Monkey Mia. To do all of this it requires, at the very minimum, one day and preferably two or three days.

Monkey Mia - pronounced Monkey My-a not Mee-a.
There is no doubt that the dolphins of Monkey Mia are one of the true wonders of Australia. The area was first settled by Europeans in the late nineteenth century and for a few brief years became a pearling station. However there was no regular water supply (the water at the caravan park now comes from the desalination plant at Denham) and the settlement disappeared.

In the early 1960s a woman named Mrs Watts started feeding the wild dolphins which followed her husband¹s fishing boat to a campsite on the shoreline. Today this feeding still occurs and Monkey Mia is a unique opportunity for humans to make contact with these mysterious and wonderful sea creatures.

Details about the dolphins:

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(i) it is totally arbitrary as to when the dolphins come in to visit the visitors. It is more likely for them to visit during the morning but they have been known not to come in at all (two days in a period of two years) and to only pay one afternoon visit. The Rangers advise that people wanting to see the dolphins should be prepared to spend 24 hours at Monkey Mia. Bring a good book.

(ii) The Rangers do feed the dolphins a small amount of fish but they do not feed the dolphins at the same time each day. Therefore there is no pattern to the feeding. The dolphins will come in and not be fed. At other times they will be fed.

(iii) in November there is the mating season and the dolphins become more erratic in their visits to the shore during this time. There tend to be fewer dolphins at mating season than at other times.

(iii) the number of people passing through topped 1000 in one day during the autumn school holidays. This doesn¹t mean that there were 1000 people on the beach. It means that there were 1000 people at Monkey Mia during the course of one day. The crowds on the beach probably did not exceed 400 at any one time.

(iv) To find out details about the movements of the dolphins it is worthwhile listening to 6LN - 666 AM - (the local Carnarvon commercial radio station) each morning between 7.45 and 8.15 when they broadcast a ŒDolphin Report¹ which reports the numbers of dolphins and humans who put in an appearance at Monkey Mia the previous day. This is often of the order of 1000 people and 3 dolphins. One wonders who is looking at whom.

(v) in recent times there has been some concern over pollution from the toilets at the Monkey Mia Caravan Park. The Australian Geographic asserted that the pollution had resulted in the death of a dolphin calf and the subsequent disappearance of a number of the regular dolphins.

(vi) The notion, which some people have, that the dolphins are just waiting for their attentions is not accurate. The beach near the caravan park where the dolphins regularly appear is controlled and patrolled by shire rangers. Brochures and signs give clear instructions on what to do. The brochure Before you meet the dolphins of Monkey Mia is given to every visitor and the rangers make sure that its instructions about where to touch the dolphins and how to behave are strictly adhered to.

Australian Geographic published a lengthy article The Remarkable Dolphins of Monkey Mia in Issue 7 - July­Sept, 1987.

Hamelin Pool and the Stromatolites
If you take the road to Hamelin you reach Hamelin Pool a place where the peculiarities of Shark Bay have created hypersalination - twice the salination of normal seawater - and where strange domed stromatolites have been formed on the water¹s edge. These unusual formations are created by single celled organisms known as cyanbacteria and they grow at a rate of less than 1 mm per year. They are known as Œliving fossils¹ because these cyanbacteria formations are probably as old as any form of life on earth.

Hamelin Pool is actually a landlocked marine basin partially separated from Shark Bay by the Faure Sill. This has helped to produce the hypersalination which in turn has ensured that the cyanbacteria has remained isolated from fish which would feed on them if the water was a little more agreeable.

Useless Loop
The one sign of industry in Shark Bay is the industrial salt township and saltpans of Useless Loop. The township has a population of about 200­250 people and has been operating since 1968. Its distance from Denham (25 km by sea and 250 km by road), and the fact that as a mining town it offers no accommodation for visitors, has ensured that only the most persistent of tourists make the journey to the small settlement. Access by road is restricted to 4WD vehicles only.

Eagle Bluff
About 20 km south of Denham is Eagle Bluff where a huge population of dugongs live. They can been seen in summer when they come close to the shore to feed on the sea grass in the area. It is claimed that Shark Bay has the world¹s largest population of Dugongs.

Shell Beach
When he first arrived in Shark Bay William Dampier noted the unique shells of the area. On 7 August 1699 he wrote: ŒThe shore was lined thick with many other sorts of very strange and beautiful Shells, for variety of Colour and Shape, most finely spotted with Red, Black, or Yellow, &c. such as I have not seen any where but at this place. I brought away a great many of them; but lost all, except a very few, and those not the best.¹

Today Shell Beach, signposted south of Denham beyond Eagle Bluff, is a source of wonder. The entire beach is made up of millions upon millions of tiny coquina shells and, at low tide, it is possible to walk a hundred metres into the bay all the time treading on a seemingly endless surface of shells.

The whole Shark Bay area has been the subject of controversy for some years now. The long term play is to develop the area as a Marine National Park and restrict the movement of visitors to the Monkey Mia Caravan Park, Denham, Nanga and a low level tourist development on Dirk Hartog Island. The idea is to concentrate all tourism on Denham and develop a series of trips from this central point.

Accommodation and Eating
See Denham and Monkey Mia


Farm & Eco Holidays

Dirk Hartog Island Station

Shark Bay WA 6537
Telephone: (08) 9948 1211
Facsimile: (08) 9316 2959
Rating: **


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