Template:For Template:Use New Zealand English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox body of water Pegasus Bay, earlier known as Cook's Mistake, is a bay on the east coast of the South Island of New Zealand, to the north of Banks Peninsula.

ToponymyEdit

File:Pegasus Bay's view from Mount Pleasant 2022-10-30.jpg
A view of Pegasus Bay, New Brighton, New Zealand from Mount Pleasant. 30 October 2022.

Pegasus Bay takes its name from the brig Pegasus, a sealing ship that was sailing from Hobart to London via the sealing islands and was surveying this part of the South Island in 1809. Attempting to sail into Gore's Bay shown on Captain Cook's map between the supposed Island that Cook had named after Banks, the crew discovered a mistake in Cook's chart and found the island was a peninsula connected to the rest of the South Island mainland by a low-lying isthmus.<ref name="McNab">Template:Cite book</ref> Fortunately they discovered this before trying to pass between the supposed island and the mainland before dark while approaching from the north and were still in about Template:Convert of water.<ref name="McNab" /> Captain Chace (or Chase) and his first officer William Stewart, who had also surveyed Stewart Island on the same journey, were reported in the Oriental Navigator in 1816.<ref name="McNab" /><ref name="Purdy"/> Charts made of this part of New Zealand from the 1809 survey give the names Cook's Mistake or Pegasus Bay to this large bay.<ref name="McNab" />

Māori do not divide this part of the coast in the same way, so there is no equivalent Māori name. However, the sandy beach on the shoreline between the Ashley River and Avon Heathcote Estuary is known as Kairaki (which is an ancient name of unknown meaning for the Pacific). While a fishing ground to the east of Pegasus Bay is known as Komaka a Te KaiKai a Waro meaning the foodstore belonging to KaiKai a Waro.Template:Cn

GeographyEdit

Pegasus Bay lies on the east coast of the South Island of New Zealand, between the Motunau River and Motunau Island in the north and Banks Peninsula in the south.<ref name="NZPilot">Template:Cite book</ref> The bay is nearly Template:Convert across and Template:Convert deep, with Template:Convert of water that gradually shoals to about Template:Convert or Template:Convert about Template:Convert from shore.<ref name="NZPilot" /> The northern part of the coast are mostly cliffs, with stony or sandy beaches at low tide.<ref name="NZPilot" /> The bay has a sandy beach that runs for about Template:Convert from about the Waipara River mouth to the Christchurch suburbs of Sumner and Scarborough on Banks Peninsula.<ref name="NZPilot" />

RiversEdit

Rivers flowing into Pegasus Bay, from north to south, are:

FaunaEdit

Other than dolphins including the endemic, endangered Hector's dolphins that regularly live or visit into the waters, whales such as southern right and humpback are known to migrate into the bay.<ref>Clement D.. 2009. Assessment of Potential Effects on Marine Mammals of Proposed Capital Dredging of Approach Channel to Lyttelton Port of Christchurch and Offshore Disposal of Spoil. Cawthron Report. No. 1705. retrieved on 5 November 2014</ref><ref>Description of the Environment. Retrieved on 5 November 2014</ref>

DiscoveryEdit

The Pegasus was the name of the sailing ship which surveyed part of the South Island in 1809. The brig Pegasus was the former Pegaso, captured at the Peruvian port of Trujillo on 28 July 1807 by the British frigate Template:HMS, commanded by Captain Charles James Johnston, during a cruise against Spanish shipping and ports along the coasts of Spanish America.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Johnston dispatched Pegaso to Port Jackson, where she arrived at the end of October.<ref>John Harris to Anna Josépha King, 25 October 1807, Historical Records of New South Wales, Sydney, Vol.VI, 1898, p.348.</ref> Submitted to the Court of Admiralty in Sydney, Pegaso, was condemned as a prize on 24 January 1808 and sold off, renamed Pegasus. A few months later she was acquired by Thomas Moore and in May of that year she was made ready to go on the sealing trade to the southern part of New Zealand. This expedition took place between August 1808 and March 1809, when Pegasus was commanded by Captain Eber Bunker.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Pegasus went on a second expedition under the command of Samuel Chase from Port Jackson to London by way of the sealing grounds in southern New Zealand from May 1809 to August 1810: William W. Stewart was first officer and made charts of the New Zealand coast, including Stewart Island, which was subsequently named after him.<ref>The Sydney Gazette, 15 May 22 May, 29 May 5 June 17 July 24 July 21 August 28 August 11 September 18 September 1808, 19 March 12 March 9 April 16 April 7 May 1809.</ref><ref name="Purdy">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Excessive citations inline William Stewart gave Pegasus Bay its name.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The captain of the ship, Captain Samuel Chase (not to be confused with his contemporary, Captain Samuel Rodman Chace),<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> lays claim to correcting James Cook's charts by determining that "Banks Island" was in fact a peninsula. As late as 1843, the bay was referred to as Cook's Mistake.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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