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Furneaux Group: Badger Island



Found in the Bass Strait off the north-eastern tip of Tasmania, Badger Island is located opposite the western entrance of the Franklin Sound, a body of water separating Flinders Island from Cape Barren Island. It is a low lying granite and limestone island, aboriginal owned and extensively grazed. The island was named after the vessel Badget which was wrecked here. The rock formations along the shores are remarkable, and the limestone pavements and granite intrusions make this a significant site in Tasmania from a geological point of view.

Badger Island and Mount Chappell Island form part of the Furneaux Group of islands. Badger Island (1,244 hectares) was once well-wooded. Only small areas of the original species now remain, including stands of She-oak, Coastal Teatree, and Swamp Paperbark.



Mount Chappell Island and Badger Island have long been regarded by Aboriginal people as an important part of the seasonal food-gathering cycle. Both islands were handed back to the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre as part of the land settlement in 1996. The Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre declared Badger Island, along with Chappell Island as Indigenous Protected Areas in September 2000.

Of significant cultural heritage value, the islands once had a sustainable harvest of button birds and seals. However, the prior exploitation of the island natural resources by Europeans, as well as the degradation of the land by grazing, has seen the island suffer. Mutton birds numbers were further reduced as a result of weed incursion, predation by cats, competition with Cape Barren Geese, and burning by graziers to promote grass growth for their sheep.

The intense exploitation of the islands for their natural resources started in the 1790s, following the exploration voyage of George Bass and Matthew Flinders through the Bass Strait on behalf of the colonial authorities. Sealers following in their wake had destroyed the seal colonies by 1838, and soon started to harvest mutton birds.









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