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On a small but spectacular coral cay, just off the far North Queensland coast, a simple gravesite serves as a solemn reminder. The Great Barrier Reef is one of the most complex ecosystems on earth and a tourist destination unlike any other. But for some of the region’s earliest maritime pioneers it could be a harsh and unforgiving frontier, where the lines between paradise and peril often blurred. Now, beneath shifting sands, their stories – and the Reef’s hidden heritage - are slowly coming to light.

When people picture the work of marine park managers, they often imagine scientists tagging turtles or counting corals. Few would picture them kneeling in the dunes, gently brushing away grains of sand from a 140-year-old grave.

Protecting the Great Barrier Reef is not only about safeguarding marine life. It also means caring for the human stories embedded in its islands and waters: from lighthouses and shipwrecks to lives shaped by resilience and loss. 

Low Isles
Copyright of Renata Musson, Low Isles caretaker and Low Isles Preservation Society member

Nowhere is that connection more vividly illustrated than on Low Island, part of the Low Isles group, located 15 km off Port Douglas. And it was here, where a unique project was born, after encroaching waves and rising tides threatened to wash away one of the island’s most incredible stories. 

Low Island is the final resting place of Jane Ann Owen, wife of the island’s first lighthouse superintendent, Daniel Owen.
Coral cays are shaped by the winds and the currents, meaning they are constantly shifting and by 2022, more than a century after she was laid to rest on the island’s western shore, rising tides were lapping at Jane’s grave. 

A collective decision was made to exhume her remains and move her grace to a site more protected from the elements. This was undertaken by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and the Queensland Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science, and Innovation (DETSI), supported by Traditional Custodians, university archaeologists, island caretakers and community volunteers. 

Over three years, the team pieced together a unique and moving story, one that reminds us why protecting the Reef means protecting its past as well as its future.


An island of light and loss

Light station
Copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)

 

In the late 19th century, lightstations were frontier posts. Families sent to tend them lived in profound isolation, dependent on rare supply boats and vulnerable to cyclones and sickness. For Jane, who journeyed across the country with her husband Daniel and their young daughter Susie to take up the post in 1878, life on Low Island meant hardship in an unfamiliar climate and, ultimately, tragedy.

Jane’s death left a young family behind on a remote island seemingly, at the edge of the world. When she passed in 1880, Jane was buried close to where she lived, her grave originally marked simply by a cross nailed to a tree and left to the elements.
 

Low Isles over time
Images copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)

 

A race against the tide

Decades of shifting sand and seasonal storms slowly narrowed the distance between Jane’s resting place and the sea. By the early 2020s, erosion had stripped away the protective dune, leaving the grave exposed.

“By the time we intervened, erosion had cut almost to the headstone,” Reef Authority Commonwealth Islands Manager Alicia Moisel said. “It was a race against time.” 

 

Commonwealth Islands Manager Alicia Moisel
Copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)

 

Temporary sandbag walls constructed with the support of QPWS and Indigenous rangers offered a brief reprieve, but Alicia and those involved faced a stark choice; allow the grave to be lost to the sea or relocate it further inland to safer ground.

 

Temporary sandbags
Images copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)
Excavation commences
Images copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)

 

That decision marked the beginning of the Low Isles Gravesite Relocation Project, an undertaking that combined archaeology, heritage management, cultural advice… and a lot of sweat and sand.

The first excavation began in November 2023. At that point, no one knew for certain whether the grave contained human remains or was only a memorial. The grave markers were carefully lifted and moved inland to a location still accessible to visitors but less threatened by erosion.

Soon after the dig began, watched closely by Eastern Kuku Yalanji and Yirrganydji cultural advisors, who also provided guidance and field assistance throughout the project. 

 

Eastern Kuku Yalanji and Yirrganydji cultural advisors
Copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)
Beginning of the dig on site
Copyright of the Queensland Government

First the dig team uncovered a layer of asbestos sheeting, a material not used in Australia until decades after Jane’s death, confirming the original cross had been replaced later by the stone grave markers and headstone that we see today. Next came a single small bone fragment. Laboratory analysis confirmed it belonged to a woman in her 40s and evidently, Jane Owen, although this was yet to be officially confirmed as the dig was temporarily halted to address some safety issues associated the discovery of the asbestos containing materials. 

A woman revealed

The answer came in September 2024, when a second excavation team returned. Led by DETSI Principal Heritage Officer and archaeologist Celeste Jordan with University of Southern Queensland Senior Archaeologist Dr Bryce Barker, the team stabilised and further excavated the site over several hot, sandy days.

The dig soon revealed the remarkably well-preserved remains of a ‘small and gracile’ woman, laid east to west, her head turned to the right. 
 

Preserved remains at gravesite
Images copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)

 

From here every detail was recorded: the simple burial without jewellery or coffin fittings, but with traces of dark fibres suggesting she had been wrapped in a blanket. On her chest lay a small, corroded metal plate, too fragile to reveal any markings, but deliberately placed.

Further analysis showed a woman who lived with hardship. Her spine revealed scoliosis, she suffered from arthritis in her neck, a congenital abnormality in her knee, and her jaw indicated poor dental health. These conditions would have caused pain, possibly chronic, in her daily life. Yet she had travelled across the world, raising a child in isolation and supporting her husband in maintaining one of the north’s most important maritime safety stations.

“Jane’s story is extraordinary because it connects so many threads: migration, maritime history and navigation, the challenges of women on the frontier,” DETSI Principal Heritage Officer Celeste Jordan said. “Through her, we glimpse what life was like for women and families who kept the lights burning, ensuring mariners, supplies and people could safely traverse the Great Barrier Reef.”

 

Cleaning of artifact
Images copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)

 

Who was Jane Anne Owen?

Jane Anne Owen, née Coulson, was born in Hexham, Northumberland, England, on 25 November 1836. In 1873, when she was 36 years old, Jane boarded the immigrant ship Great Queensland as a “second cabin” passenger, travelling with her brother William and sister-in-law Sophia Frances. On the same ship, but in the saloon class, was a Welsh-born mariner named Daniel Hugh Owen. When the ship arrived in Brisbane in September that year, Jane and Daniel were married three days later. The location of their berths on board the ship suggest they might even have met on their 3 month journey to Australia. 

A year later their daughter, Susie Janet, was born in Surry Hills, Sydney. In 1878, Daniel was appointed the first superintendent of the newly constructed Low Islets Lightstation, a lonely outpost in Far North Queensland. Jane, Daniel and four-year-old Susie moved to the island, beginning a life of isolation and responsibility.

Supplies arrived by boat only every few weeks, cyclones were a seasonal threat, and medical help was far away. A Port Douglas newspaper in 1878 described how two large fires were seen burning on Low Island, a widely recognised distress signal. When a customs boat finally reached the island two hours later, it found Jane and Daniel desperate for help as their daughter suffered a severe fit of whooping cough.

Only two years later, in July 1880, Jane herself fell gravely ill. After nine days of sickness, she died at just 41 years old. Her death certificate listed ‘congestion of the lungs’. Similarly, a Port Douglas newspaper noted she suffered from consumption (tuberculosis). The news spread quickly along the coast, noting she had “endeared herself to many near and far.” She was buried the next day on the island she had come to call home.

Her husband continued at the lightstation, raising young Susie in the wake of their loss. Jane’s grave became a marker not only of her life, but of the hardships faced by lighthouse families who kept the country’s seas safe.

 

Reburial and remembrance

Jane’s remains were delicately cleaned, recorded and placed in a hand-sewn calico shroud for reburial. Smaller bones, fragments and the corroded metal objects were sewn into a cotton handkerchief marked with a hand-stitched cross, modelled on the Hexham Abbey Cross from Jane’s hometown in Northumberland. The purple and brown thread symbolised both mourning and continuity.

The new grave, inland from the eroded shoreline, was prepared to face east as her original burial had. All sediment sifted from her bones was placed back beneath her, ensuring nothing was lost.

In respecting Jane’s faith, listed on her birth certificate as Church of England (now the Anglican Church), the local Anglican minister was invited to recommitted Jane’s remains to the earth in the presence of the project team. Wearing a stole embroidered with English roses to honour Jane’s ancestral home, the minister conducted the heartfelt ceremony on 12 September 2024. All involved stood together as words of prayer were shared, returning Jane to rest.

Janes remains
Copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)
Janes remains being buried
Copyright of the Commonwealth of Australia (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority)

 

Jane’s legacy

Heritage is not always about grand monuments. Sometimes it is about a single grave, weathered and almost forgotten, that tells a story of human endurance on the edge of civilisation.

For marine park managers, Jane’s story highlights that managing the Great Barrier Reef means protecting more than corals or fish. It also means safeguarding the historic heritage values of places like Low Island: the lightstations that guided ships, and the stories of lighthouse families.

Jane’s daughter Susie grew up in Queensland but never married or had children. She died in 1950, aged 75. Captain Daniel Owen continued as superintendent at Low Isles until 1899, later remarrying Agnes Bellairs, daughter of the late lightkeeper from Dent Island and they had one daughter together. He died in Brisbane in 1907 and is buried at Toowong.

Jane, meanwhile, remains part of the island’s historic fabric. Her relocated grave stands inland, stable and safe from erosion, where visitors can pause and reflect on her life. Interpretive signage is being developed to share her story.

In the end, the project wasn’t only about saving a headstone from the sea. It was about recognising that the Reef holds human stories as fragile and precious as coral. The Reef’s beauty is not only in its colours and creatures, but in the lives, like Jane’s, that are forever woven into its story.

 

For images and media enquiries, please contact the media teams below:

Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority | (07) 4750 0846 | media@gbrmpa.gov.au

Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation | (07) 3339 5831 | media@des.qld.gov.au

 

 

The grave belongs to Jane Ann Owen, wife of the first lighthouse superintendent. 

Jane died in 1880 at 41 years of age. Her death certificate records ‘congestion of the lungs’ as her cause of death. 

News from Port Douglas reported on her passing, noting that she had endeared herself to many near and far, and that although she had suffered from consumption (tuberculosis) for a long time her death was relatively unexpected.

The grave was originally located on the western side of Low Island (looking out towards the mainland). 

Low Island is a dynamic coral cay that experiences a lot of sand and shoreline movement. Where Jane was buried has the highest amount of sand movement of any part of the island. By 2022, there had been so much coastal erosion that it had reached the headstone of Jane’s grave. Sandbags were used to protect the gravesite until it could be relocated. 

The ‘Low Islets Lightstation’ is Commonwealth Heritage listed as an integral part of the establishment of maritime navigational aids in Queensland. The lightstation includes the lighthouse, the cottages and other associated buildings. The grave is also considered a highly significant part of the heritage values of the lightstation, as it evokes and demonstrates the isolation of lighthouse life and exemplifies the practice of lighthouse families burying family members at lightstations.

Low Island is also Commonwealth Heritage listed for its significance to Eastern Kuku Yalanji and Yirrganydji First Nations peoples as part of their Dreamings.

Visit the Australian Heritage Database (environment.gov.au) for the Commonwealth Heritage listing.

Initially, we didn’t know what we would find, if anything at all. In November 2023, a project was undertaken to determine the presence of human remains. Led by an archaeologist from the Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation, the grave was excavated, and a small bone fragment was discovered. Subsequent analysis determined that it was from a female human, aged approximately in her 40’s, consistent with Jane Ann Owen.

At this time, the stone grave markers and concrete headstone were moved to the new location where you see the grave today. The full exhumation of Jane’s remains and their relocation to the new site was done at a later date.

No. An article published in the Sydney Mail on 25 March 1936, written by a visitor to Low Island, notes a solitary grave on the island marked only by a white wooden cross nailed to a tree. 

A layer of fibro asbestos sheeting was found stabilising the current grave markers during the first excavation. Fibro was not commonly used in building construction in Australia until the 1920’s, supporting the theory that the current grave markers are not original. In fact, they might have been placed as late as 1960 when the original cottages were replaced with the fibro cottages that stand today.

The second excavation was undertaken between 9–12 September 2024. 

Led by archaeologists from the Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation and the University of Southern Queensland, Jane’s remains were recorded and carefully exhumed. The sand where she laid was sieved to make sure all bones and artefacts were recovered. The remains were taken to the laboratory for additional photo and data recording. 

DETSI and USQ archaeologists excavate the grave with support of Jabalbina Rangers.
DETSI and USQ archaeologists excavate the grave with support of Jabalbina Rangers. 

The trench was shored with plywood to ensure it didn’t collapse. Only plastic, wooden and rubber tools were used to exhume Jane’s remains to prevent damage that might otherwise be caused by trowels and other metal tools. A 2 mm sieve was used to find small bones and artefacts. Back in the lab, the remains were cleaned of sand using soft brushes and rubber tools.

We don’t know for sure. We did not find any evidence of wood or other coffin paraphernalia, such as coffin handles. 

Dark fibres were apparent on the bones and a dark stain could be seen around the grave cut suggesting that she may have been wrapped in material, such as a blanket.

What we do know is that Jane was given a very simple burial.

The skeleton was mostly articulated and found at a depth of 1.48 m and 1.65 m. The skeleton was oriented east/west, a traditional Christian burial practice symbolising readiness to rise and greet Christ on the day of resurrection. There was no jewellery or evidence that Jane was buried with clothes.

A metal plaque was found resting on Jane’s anterior (front) surface when she was buried, but it was too deteriorated to obtain any further information.

Post excavation recording of Jane’s skeletal remains revealed that she was gracile (slender), with a number of health issues that are likely to have caused her some level of pain and discomfort, perhaps even chronically.

For example, rounding of the superior articular processes on both the left and right sides of the vertebrae indicate that Jane suffered from osteoarthritis in the neck. 

The wedging of vertebrae and misalignment of ribs at the dorsal connection to the vertebrae also provided evidence that Jane experienced scoliosis. 

Another interesting finding is that Jane had false teeth. Her dental health was extremely poor by modern standards, but not unusual for the 1800s.

Yes. Jane’s remains were carefully parcelled into calico and placed into the grave at the new location in accordance with international reinterment practices. 

It was also appropriate that Jane Owen be reinterred according to her faith, listed on her death certificate as Church of England, now the Anglican church. The Priest from the Mossman Port-Douglas Anglican Church provided a formal re-committal ceremony of Jane’s remains to ‘rest eternal grant’ and ‘let her perpetual light shine on’.

The new location is in an area that was already clear of vegetation, is less susceptible to erosion, and can still be viewed by visitors for education and interpretative purposes. The new grave faces the same direction as the previous location, directly east, in accordance with the burial practices of the Church of England.

Low Island is owned by the Reef Authority on behalf of the Commonwealth of Australia. The project is considered to be a management action under section 5.4 of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Zoning Plan 2003 which allows the Reef Authority to undertake an activity for the purposes of management of the Marine Park.

The Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act) requires referral of any project that may have an impact on any matters of national significance protected under the EPBC Act (such as protected animals, plants, habitats or places). An impact assessment was undertaken in accordance with the EPBC Act and the project was deemed to not have any significant impacts on protected matters of national significance. 

There is no reinterment legislation or regulations in Australia. The lead archaeologist consulted with a third-generation funeral director and it was decided to parcel Jane Owen’s remains in calico. This is a normal practice worldwide where burial plots are not in perpetuity. 

Jane had no direct living descendants that needed to be consulted. Jane had one daughter, Susie, who was five years old at the time of Jane’s death. Susie spent her life in Queensland and there are no records of her marrying or having children. Susie died in Ingham on 11 July 1950 at 75 years of age.

Yes, this is the long-term goal pending development of an interpretive framework for the island.

We learnt that Jane was born Jane Coulsen in Hexham, Northumberland, England around 1837. She travelled to Australia as a ‘second cabin’ passenger on the immigrant ship Great Queensland, accompanied by her brother William Coulson, and sister-in-law Sophia Frances.

Jane married Captain Daniel Hugh Owen, in Brisbane on 5 September 1873, when she was 36 years old. Daniel had also travelled on the Great Queensland as a ‘saloon’ passenger. 

Jane and Daniel had a child a year later, Susie Janet, born in Surry Hills in Sydney.

Captain Daniel Owen was a captain of shipping along the Queensland coast before taking up the position as the first superintendent of the Low Islets Lightstation in 1878, five years into their marriage.

As the wife of a lighthouse keeper, Jane would have experienced the hardships of an isolated life in the Queensland tropics where cyclones were a common occurrence and access to the mainland was limited. Food and mail were delivered every few weeks by boat, and visitors would have been mostly occasional officials arriving for inspections or maintenance purposes. 

Life on a remote island with a young child would also have proven incredibly challenging. A newspaper article from 1878 describes an evening where bystanders in Port Douglas could see two large fires burning on Low Island, which was a widely accepted distress signal. It took two hours for men in a customs boat to get across to Low Island, to discover that Jane and Captain Owen had lit the fires as their daughter struggled to breathe with a fit of whooping cough. 

We did not find any confirmed photos of Jane. 

The project was a collaborative project managed through the Reef Joint Field Management Program by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service (part of the Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation [DETSI]). Archaeological expertise was provided by a DETSI Principal Heritage Officer and the University of Southern Queensland.

Operational support was provided by Jabalbina Yalanji Aboriginal Corporation, the Low Isles caretakers, and Low Isles Preservation Society (LIPS) volunteers. 

Eastern Kuku Yalanji and Yirrganydji cultural advisors also provided advice and support during the first excavation.

BH Electrics, on site conducting electrical works, also provided assistance with the relocation of the headstone.

 

Eastern Kuku Yalanji and Yirrganydji cultural advisors
Left to right: Alicia Moisel (Reef Authority), Gavin Singleton (Dawul Wuru Aboriginal Corporation), Uncle Alfred Diamond (Eastern Kuku Yalanji Elder/Cultural Advisor), Uncle George Singleton (Yirrganydji Elder/Cultural Advisor) during the first excavation.
Second excavation project team
Back row (left to right): Lili Jansen (Low Isles Preservation Society), Tyreese Yeatman (Jabalbina Aboriginal Corporation), Renata Musson (Low Isles Caretaker), Andrew Woods (Jabalbina Aboriginal Corporation), Glen Warrick (Jabalbina Aboriginal Corporation), Colin Musson (Low Isles Caretaker).Front Row: Celeste Jordan (DETSI Principal Heritage Officer/Maritime Archaeologist), Professor Bryce Barker (University of Southern Queensland/Senior Archaeologist), Alicia Moisel (Reef Authority).

 

Created
Updated 6 May 2026
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