Rockall is an isolated, uninhabited, pudding shaped sea
rock situated in the middle of the North Atlantic Ocean. It is
tiny: only 19m high, 25m across and 30m wide. Rockall is
located 57° N, 13° W, which puts it about 300 miles from the
coasts of Scotland, Ireland, and Iceland. The sea area around
it (also known as Rockall) is well known to ardent listeners
of the North Atlantic shipping forecasts.
Rockall is a bare granite quartz rock, formed by volcanic
upheavals around 50 million years ago. Its chemical
composition identifies it as part of the North American
continental plate. Nothing much lives there apart from
colonies of gannets, seagulls and periwinkles1. Although it is the only piece
of land in hundreds of square miles of open sea, it has been
responsible for at least two major shipwrecks, the Helen of
Dundee in 1824, and the Norge in 1904, when over 600 people
were killed.
The United Kingdom, Ireland, Iceland, and strangely enough,
Denmark, have been bickering for years regarding territorial
rights to the place. This would seem at first glance a bit
over the top, since limpets and gannet poo are found in
abundance on all North Atlantic coasts. However, it's not what
Rockall is that's important, it's what Rockall is on. Rockall
sits on the Rockall Bank, a massive sea bank which geologists
believe may contain significant amounts of natural gas and
oil. Added to this are the lucrative fishing grounds
surrounding the island. All this makes Rockall a highly
coveted prize.
The British originally claimed ownership on Rockall in
1955. A number of "annexation" forces actually climbed the
rock to rubber-stamp the territorial claim. The UK Government
subsequently passed an Act of Parliament in 1971 incorporating
Rockall into Invernesshire in Scotland. They followed this by
installing a navigational beacon on the island, and declaring
that no craft would be allowed within 50 miles of the rock. 2 This prompted a fierce
diplomatic fight where the status of Rockall as an island was
put into question. Enter John Ridgeway and SAS man Tom McLean
who, at separate times in the 1980's, climbed the rock and
stayed there for 1 month, thus apparently validating Rockall's
right to be an island, and therefore to be a sovereign part of
British territory. This feat of endurance was broken in 1997,
when Greenpeace activists landed on the island, stayed for 42
days, replaced the navigational beacon with a solar-powered
one and declared Rockall the sovereign territory of Waveland,
announcing that it was now "two steps closer to freedom from
oil development and industrialisation". The status of Rockall
remains unresolved to the present day.
The story of Rockall has inspired a number of fascinating
web-sites: The Rockall Times
is an anarchic and hilarious website featuring highly
satirical articles on the world's current affairs. You can
also visit the Waveland site and become a
citizen of this new country!