紧急热带:1899年巴瑟斯特湾的马希纳气旋

R. Mcdougall
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1899年,一场5级飓风几乎摧毁了北昆士兰巴瑟斯特湾的整个采珠船队,造成55艘船只沉没,307人死亡(大约)。然而,它的历史地位是复杂的。以死亡人数来衡量,这是欧洲殖民以来澳大利亚历史上最严重的自然灾害。但大多数采珠人要么是本地人,要么是外国人,被排除在国家想象之外。因此,承认马西纳在国家气象史上的地位一直被推迟。尽管事实上,在世界气象史上,马希纳保持着风暴潮的记录,估计高达13米(43英尺)。它还为昆士兰政府气象学家克莱门特·莱格(Clement Wragge)的个人历史做出了重大贡献,他为它命名,因为它是世界历史上第一个以个人(而不是地名)命名的气旋。莱格用一个波利尼西亚女人的名字命名了这个气旋,尽管如此,他还是预测它“不会像同名的塔希提少女那样温柔”。(对于热带气旋,他更喜欢女性的名字;对于“极地前沿凛冽的旋风”,他保留了男性化的名字(大多是拒绝资助他工作的政客)。本文以飓风马希纳及其后果为重点,探讨了联邦前夕殖民地昆士兰殖民治理中气象学和土著的纠缠。在这些历史纠葛的背景下,本文阅读了伊恩·汤森(Ian Townsend)的“热带哥特式”小说《魔鬼之眼》(the Devil’s Eye),将其视为对这个国家过去和可能的样子的回忆和想象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emergent Tropicality: Cyclone Mahina, Bathurst Bay 1899
In 1899 a Category 5 cyclone destroyed almost the entire pearling fleet of Bathurst Bay in North Queensland, sinking 55 ships and killing 307 people (approximately). Its historical status, however, is complicated. Measured by the numbers of lives lost, it is the most severe natural disaster in Australian history since European settlement. But most of the pearlers were either indigenous or foreign, excluded from the national imaginary. Hence the acknowledgement of Mahina’s status in national weather history had continually to be postponed. This is despite the fact that, in world weather history, Mahina holds the record for a storm surge, estimated at 13 metres (43 feet). It also contributed in a major way to making the personal history of the Queensland Government Meteorologist, Clement Wragge, who named it, for it was the first cyclone in world history to be given a personal (rather than a place) name. Wragge gave the cyclone the name of a Polynesian woman, predicting nonetheless that it would “not prove so soft and gentle as the Tahitian maiden of that name.”  (For tropical cyclones he preferred female names; for the “cold, blustery cyclones on the polar front” he reserved masculine names (mostly of politicians who refused to subsidise his work). Focusing on Cyclone Mahina and its aftermath, this essay explores the entanglements of meterology and indigeneity in colonial governance in colonial Qyeensland on the eve of Federation. In the context of these historical entanglements, the paper reads Ian Townsend's "tropical gothic" novel, The Devil's Eye, as a remembering and imagining of the nation as it was and might have been.
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