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Crozet Islands

France · Europe

Crozet Islands, France
Crozet Islands, France. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.

About Crozet Islands

The Crozet Islands (French and very commonly in English: Îles Crozet) are an uninhabited Subantarctic archipelago that makes up one of the five districts of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands in the southern Indian Ocean. The only sign of human civilisation that exists is 1 Alfred Faure, a research station on Île de la Possession.

The volcanic archipelago is remote – the closest other islands are the Prince Edward Islands a little over 1,050 km (650 mi) to the west, Kerguelen around 1,400 km (870 mi) ESE and the Heard Island and McDonald Islands 1,800 km (1,100 mi) to the southeast, keeping in mind that these islands are mostly uninhabited.

Crozet Islands travel guide

Understand

History The archipelago was discovered on 24 January 1772 by Marc-Joseph Marion du Fresne, who named them after his second-in-command Jules Crozet who claimed the archipelago for France whilst en route towards New Zealand. Unfortunately, much of the crew, including Captain Marion, died in conflict with the Maori, but Crozet survived and led his survivors back to Mauritius. When Cook set sail for the archipelago, he decided in 1776 to name all of these islands after their two discoverers, Marion and Crozet Islands, but only the name of Crozet was kept. Later, the toponym Marion was used to refer to the western group and Crozet to the eastern – the western group now refers to the Prince Edward Islands administered by South Africa, while the eastern referred to the Crozet Islands. Like many Subantarctic and Antarctic islands, the Crozet Islands were popular with sealers and had almost exterminated them by 1835; likewise, whalers had also nearly exploited the islands' whale population, which was completely legal – it would take almost a century for conservation efforts to grow. However, as the archipelago's seal and whale population had been near-exploited, the islands were seldom visited until the early 20th century. France reasserted its sovereignty of the islands in 1923 and between 1924 and 1955, the archipelago was administered from Madagascar (back when it was a French colony) and almost a century after the archipelago's seal and whale population was near-exploited, the islands were declared a nature reserve in 1938. After 1955, the islands became a part of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands and the Alfred Faure research station was set up six years later and is the only human activity on the archipelago where they perform meteorological, biological and geological research.

Flora and fauna The vegetation is tundra-like, but there is no permafrost. The rich wildlife was partially wiped out in the 19th century, but penguins (golden-crested penguins and kin

Getting there

There is no air service, and only a small landing pier on the main island of Île de la Possession. This is visited four times a year by the support ship Marion Dufresne II, which starts from Réunion and sails on from Crozet Islands to Kerguelen, Île Saint-Paul, Île Amsterdam then back to Réunion. Until 2019 tourist berths were available on these sailings; they were suspended because of Covid and in 2024 it was announced that they will not resume.

Getting around

The only way to get around is by using the same boat you arrived in – the Marion Dufresne will likely have that organised for you.

Buy

Being an official French possession, the official currency is the euro but there is no economic activity on this archipelago. All supplies must be brought with you.

Sleep

Accommodation should be handled by your tour operator – you'll likely be staying on the Marion Durfense as the few beds and pillows at Alfred Faure are for the researchers only.

Go next

You have go wherever your tour is heading. On the Marion Dufresne that will be to Kerguelen, Île Saint-Paul where you may not go ashore, then Île Amsterdam and back to Réunion.

Overview adapted from Wikipedia, travel guide fromWikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。Photography via Wikimedia Commons.

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