The island that isn't ... how it is highlighted on a map "We became suspicious when the navigation charts used by the ship showed a depth of 1400 metres in an area where our scientific maps and Google Earth showed the existence of a large island," Dr Maria Seton, a geologist from the University of Sydney, said. "Somehow this error has propagated through to the world coastline database from which a lot of maps are made." The missing island has regularly appeared in scientific publications since at least 2000. "Even onboard the ship, the weather maps the captain had showed an island in this location," Dr Seton said.

Chief scientist Dr Maria Seton on board the RV Southern Surveyor. Neither the French government - the invisible island would sit within French territorial waters if it existed - nor the ship's nautical charts, which are based on depth measurements, had the island marked on their maps. Dr Seton had no idea how the island came to be on so many maps, but she is determined to get to the bottom of the mystery. Steven Micklethwaite from the University of Western Australia said, "We all had a good giggle at Google as we sailed through the island, then we started compiling information about the seafloor, which we will send to the relevant authorities so that we can change the world map." Mike Prince, the director of charting services for the Australian Hydrographic Service, a department within the Navy that produces the country’s official nautical charts, said the world coastline database incorporated individual reports that were sometimes old or contained errors.

"We take anything off that database with a pinch of salt," he said. While some map makers intentionally include phantom streets to deter copyright infringements, that was not standard practice with nautical charts, said Mr Prince. "[That would] reduce confidence in what is actually correct," he said. Nabil Naghdy, the product manager of Google Maps for Australia and New Zealand, said Google Earth consulted a variety of authoritative public and commercial data sources in building its maps. "The world is a constantly changing place, and keeping on top of these changes is a never-ending endeavour,’’ Mr Naghdy said.

He encouraged users to alert Google to incorrect entires using the 'Report a Problem' tool, found at the bottom right corner of the map, which they would then confirm with other users or data providers. The discovery took place onboard the RV Southern Surveyor, Australia's Marine National Facility research vessel, during a 25-day research trip in the eastern Coral Sea. Large fragments of eastern Australia split from the mainland as the Tasman Sea formed about 100 million years ago, when Australia split apart from the super continent Gondwana, which included Antarctica, India and Africa. "This dispersed all the continental fragments in the area, which subsided and [went] below sea level," Dr Seton, who docked in Brisbane on Monday, said. "We went to find those fragments of our country," she said.

The team collected 197 different rock samples, more than 6800 km of marine geophysical data and mapped over 14,000 square kilometres of the ocean floor. They also recovered limestone, which forms from near surface coral reefs, from a depth of three kilometres. "That means we've had this massive drowning of the area. That's was a surprising discovery," said Dr Seton.