Pre-colonisation The islands of the Torres Strait have been inhabited by humans for at least 2,500 years and possibly much longer. The various
Torres Strait Islander communities have a unique culture and long-standing history with the islands and nearby coastlines. Their maritime-based trade and interactions with the Papuans to the north and the
Australian Aboriginal communities have maintained a steady
cultural diffusion among the three societal groups, dating back thousands of years.
Era of European colonisation The first recorded European navigation of the strait was by
Luís Vaz de Torres, a pilot who was second-in-command on the
Spanish expedition led by navigator
Pedro Fernandes de Queirós who sailed from
Peru to the
South Pacific in 1605. After Queirós's ship returned to
Mexico, Torres resumed the intended voyage to
Manila via the
Maluku Islands. He sailed along the south coast of New Guinea and discovered the strait that still bears his name. This discovery recorded in Spanish maps of the
Pacific would later make possible
James Cook's expedition to
Australia. Torres and his crew are not known to have sighted the Australian mainland visited just
four months earlier by
Willem Janszoon sailing without conversely becoming aware of the strait now known as Torres Strait. No specific records exists of Torres sighting the coast of a major land mass to his south, and early Spanish maps show the coast of New Guinea correctly but omit Australia. In 1769, the
Scottish geographer
Alexander Dalrymple, whilst translating some Spanish documents captured in the Philippines in 1762, had found Luís Vaz de Torres's testimony proving a passage south of New Guinea now known as Torres Strait. This discovery led Dalrymple to publish the
Historical Collection of the Several Voyages and Discoveries in the South Pacific Ocean in 1770–1771, which aroused widespread interest in his claim of the existence of an unknown continent. It was Dalrymple who named the strait after Torres. Dalrymple was bitterly disappointed that it was
James Cook and not he who was appointed commander of the expedition that eventually led in 1770 to the British encounter and charting of the eastern coastline of Australia. In 1770, Lieutenant
James Cook rounded Cape York, turned south-west and landed on
Possession Island. From the top of a hill, he signalled down to the ship that he could see a navigable passage through the dangerous Strait. Later in
Batavia. It has been postulated that when he learned that the French had preceded him across the
Pacific, that Cook re-wrote this signalling drill as a possession ceremony, saying he had claimed Australia's east coast for the British Crown. In 1823, Captain John Lihou, Master of the 550-ton merchant ship ''
of Calcutta, was on passage from Manila to South America and chose a route through Torres Strait. Remarkably, this would become the first time for a ship to be navigated through the Torres Strait from west to east. According to the Sydney Gazette'' of April 1823: "This essay of nautical skill was accomplished after the loss of four anchors and the rudder". It was also the first occasion a ship was navigated through the
Coral Sea from Torres Strait, south-eastward to the southward of
New Caledonia. Lihou saw Sir James Saumarez' Shoal (now
Saumarez Reefs) on 27 February and named the reef system after Vice-Admiral
James Saumarez. On this same trip, Lihou discovered the
Lihou Reef and Cays and Port Lihou (originally named Port Yarborough, on the southern shore of
Prince of Wales Island). The
London Missionary Society arrived on Erub (Darnley Island) in 1871. Although some of the Torres Strait islands lie just off the coast of New Guinea, they were annexed in 1879 by
colony of Queensland, then a British colony. There was an important
pearling industry from the 1860s until about 1970 when it collapsed in the face of competition from the plastics industry. Pearl-shelling was responsible for the arrival of experienced divers from many countries, notably
Japan.
Modern history In 1959, Australian
Michael 'Tarzan' Fomenko paddled a homemade
dugout canoe from
Queensland to
New Guinea through the Torres Strait via
Horn Island. Fomenko's journey captured the attention of the Australian media for weeks, with updates on his progress and the Torres Strait Islanders who helped him often appearing on the front page of
The Canberra Times. In 1978, an agreement between Australia and
Papua New Guinea determined the
maritime border in the Torres Strait. In the 1980s, Torres Strait Island people wanted to create a name for the islands which related to their culture. Initially the name "Magani Malu Kes" was suggested for the region, but later adopting the
acronym "Zenadh Kes", to refer to the Torres Strait. The acronym "ZENADTH KES" was first derived from 'Zey' (south), 'Naygay' (north), 'Dagam' (place/side), 'Thawathaw' (coastline) and KES (passage/channel/waterway). However, this has become modified and it is now spelt Zenadh Kes. Due to proximity to the
Papua New Guinea mainland, the northern Torres Strait islands experience occasional
asylum seeker arrivals from across the Strait. A total of ten asylum seekers from Papua New Guinea were detected in each of 2012 and 2013. == Geography ==