:''For places named '"High Island"', see
High Island''
A 'high island' is, in
geology (and sometimes in
archaeology), an
island of
volcanic origin. The term is used to distinguish such islands from
low islands, whose origin is due to
sedimentation or
uplifting of
coral reefs.
This distinction is important to understand, as there are a number of "high islands" which rise no more than a few feet above
sea level, often classified as "
rocks", while some "low islands", such as
Makatea,
Nauru,
Niue,
Henderson and
Banaba, as
uplifted coral islands, rise several hundred feet above sea level.
The two types of islands are often found in proximity to each other, especially among the islands of the
South Pacific Ocean, where low islands are found on the
fringing reefs that surround most high islands.