The English pirate William Ambrosia Cowley named it Dassigney's Island in 1684,[2] later shortened to Dassigney or Dassigny Island,[3] in honor of Philip Dassigny, the member of Bartholomew Sharp's crew who translated the Spanish atlas[4] that saved the captain from being hanged for piracy. The BritishcaptainJames Colnett renamed it Lord Chatham Island in 1793 after John Pitt, 2nd Earl of Chatham and First Lord of the Admiralty, on the specious claim it had never been previously charted.[4] Colnett also named Kicker Rock, which lies in Stephens Bay, on the western side of the island. That name is thought to be a reference to two English navigational towers, Kickergill and Gilkicker, that were erected in Hampshire, England in the 17th century, to help ships navigate the entrance to Portsmouth Harbour.[5].
History
San Cristobal Island is composed of three or four fused volcanoes, all extinct. It is home to the oldest permanent settlement of the islands and is the island where Darwin first went ashore in 1835. A small lake called El Junco is the only source of fresh water in the islands. The availability of fresh water is what led to the early settlement of San Cristobal.[6] A penal colony was built on San Cristóbal Island in 1880 for prisoners from mainland Ecuador. This later turned into a military base for Ecuador and export center for the island's products including sugar, coffee, cassava, cattle, fish and lime.[7]
San Cristóbal has an area of 558 km2 (215 sq mi) and its highest point rises to 730 metres (2,400 ft). The population is approximately 6000.[6] San Cristóbal is the most fertile island of the archipelago and is the second most populated after Santa Cruz.[1] The capital of the archipelago, Puerto Baquerizo Moreno, lies at the south-western tip of the island.
Air transport
The island is served by San Cristóbal Airport, with daily flights from Quito and Guayaquil.
The largest fresh water lake in the archipelago, Laguna El Junco, is located in a crater in the highlands of San Cristóbal, in the southern half of the island. The lake harbors a large population of birdlife, but reaching the lake requires a short uphill walk. Nearby, La Galapaguera is a breeding station and sanctuary for giant tortoises.
Economy
Most inhabitants of San Cristóbal Island make their living in government, tourism, and fishing. The majority of the residents of San Cristóbal live in the port city of Puerto Baquerizo Moreno, which is the capital of Ecuador′s Galápagos Province.[6] Island tourism sites nearer the town of Puerto Baquerizo Moreno include the Cerro Tijeretas, a nesting colony for frigate birds, and a statue of Charles Darwin, marking the original site where he first disembarked in the Galápagos Islands during the second voyage of HMS Beagle on 16 September 1835.[10]La Loberia, a colony of sea lions, lies about ten minutes by bus from the town.
Local boat tours also take visitors to two popular nearby dive sites. "Kicker Rock" (the Spanish name is "León Dormido") is the remains of a lava cone, now split in two. Isla Lobos ("Sea Lion Island") is also a nesting site for blue-footed boobies.
Panorama from the West
Climate
San Cristóbal Island has a tropical climate with warm, dry winters and hot, humid summers with more precipitation than in winter.
Climate data for San Cristóbal Island, 1981–2010 normals
^Larson, Edward J. (2001). Evolution's Workshop: God and Science on the Galápagos Islands. New York, New York: Basic Books. p. 108. ISBN0-465-03810-7. The ship's captain report "great numbers of cattle, horses, mules, donkeys, sheep and hogs were running wild" where native species once flourished, and a new sugarcane plantation and cattle ranch on Chatham Island that also encroached on wild habitat.
^"Isla San Cristóbal". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2021. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
^Keynes, R. D. ed. 2001, Charles Darwin's Beagle Diary, p. 351.
Colinvaux, Paul A.; et al. (November 1976), "Historical Ecology in the Galapagos Islands: I. A Holocene Pollen Record from El Junco Lake, Isla San Cristoba", Journal of Ecology, vol. 64, Wiley, British Ecological Society, pp. 989–1012, doi:10.2307/2258820, JSTOR2258820.