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It lies within the ] on the NSW side, and the ] on the Victorian side. The seas around the point are the ]. It lies within the ] on the NSW side, and the ] on the Victorian side. The seas around the point are the ].


The point was named by ] when he passed it on ] ], honouring ] who was ] at that time. The coordinates Cook gave ({{coor dm|37|28|S|210|3|W}}) are almost exactly the modern surveyed location.<ref>{{gutenberg|no=8106|name=Captain Cook's Journal During the First Voyage Round the World}}</ref> The point was named by ] when he passed it on ] ], honouring ] who was ] at that time. The coordinates Cook gave ("<nowiki>Latitude 37 degrees 28 minutes South; Longitude 210 degrees 3 minutes West</nowiki>") are almost exactly the modern surveyed location.<ref>{{gutenberg|no=8106|name=Captain Cook's Journal During the First Voyage Round the World}}</ref>


There is also a western one. There is also a western one.

Revision as of 11:29, 5 September 2008

Cape Howe (37°30′S 149°58′E / 37.500°S 149.967°E / -37.500; 149.967) is a coastal headland in Australia, forming the border of New South Wales and Victoria.

It lies within the Nadgee Nature Reserve on the NSW side, and the Croajingolong National Park on the Victorian side. The seas around the point are the Cape Howe Marine National Park.

The point was named by Captain Cook when he passed it on 20 April 1770, honouring Richard Howe, 1st Earl Howe who was Treasurer of the Navy at that time. The coordinates Cook gave ("Latitude 37 degrees 28 minutes South; Longitude 210 degrees 3 minutes West") are almost exactly the modern surveyed location.

There is also a western one.

References

  1. Cape Howe page at Geoscience Australia
Australian places named on the First voyage of James Cook in 1770
Victoria
New South Wales
Queensland
*Places where Cook landed
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