The work at Low Isles
Dr Maurice Yonge described the research work undertaken during the year on the Great Barrier Reef under four general headings. There was “observational and routine work”, which included taking regular hydrographic measurements, recording daily meteorological and tidal data, undertaking topographical and ecological surveys, and monitoring plankton stations. “Experimental work” involved all aspects of feeding, digestion, absorption, excretion and distribution of various corals and common animals on Low Isles and included large-scale experiments on the growth-rate of corals. “Collecting work” involved, as the name suggests, collecting specimens, particularly plankton, as well as general dredging and trawling around Low Isles reef.[1] “Economic work” looked at aspects of the reef that had commercial potential.
Scientists examining coral specimens, Undine Reef, 1928-1929. Photo: National Library of Australia |
Green Turtle, Low Isles Expedition, 1928-1929. Photo: Sir C.M. Yonge Collection, Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority |
A.P. Orr wearing the diving helmet used at Low Isles. Photo: National Library of Australia |
The expedition party arrived on Low Isles in mid-winter. They were surprised at how cold the weather was, having only packed clothing for tropical conditions, and were hammered by winds that regularly averaged 20 to 40 miles an hour, which made working from small boats unpleasant. Before long though, they began to wish for a return of the cool winds and by November, tropical thunderstorms heralded the coming summer, which brought with it unbearable heat and humidity. Yonge wrote that between December and April, he estimated they had received about 80 inches of rain.
“When the water was not falling, it was rising; the summer sun drew up the moisture from the earth and sea until the atmosphere was saturated… We lived in a perpetual Turkish bath.”[5]Yonge noted that there was always a feeling that there was not going to be sufficient time to complete all the planned work and consequently the team worked all day and often all, or part, of the night.
“Work of this intensity in such a climate was hard; one felt perpetually tired; every action demanded a tremendous initial effort.”[6]
Exposed corals at Pixie Reef, 1928-1929. Photo: National Library of Australia |
Trisha Fielding, Special Collections Library Officer
James Cook University Library
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[1] Yonge, C.M., The Great Barrier Reef Expedition, 1928-1929, Reports of the Great Barrier Reef Committee, Vol. 3, 1931, pp. 16-17.
[2] Ibid., p. 18.
[3] Yonge, C.M., A Year on the Great Barrier Reef, Putnam, London, 1930, p. 99.
[4] Ibid., p. 101
[5] Ibid., p. 35
[6] Ibid., p. 36
[7] Boalch, Gerald T., ‘Frederick Stratten Russell, FRS (1897-1984): a distinguished scientist and stimulating leader’, Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 2010, 90 (6), p. 1074.
[8] Yonge, C.M., The Great Barrier Reef Expedition, 1928-1929, Reports of the Great Barrier Reef Committee, Vol. 3, 1931, p. 12
[9] Yonge, C.M., A Year on the Great Barrier Reef, Putnam, London, 1930, p. 37
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