Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

PACIFIC ISLANDS


The 'Pacific Ocean' contains an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 'islands' (the exact number has yet to be precisely determined). Those islands lying south of the tropic of Cancer but excluding Australia are traditionally grouped into three divisions: Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia. Inhabitants are sometimes referred to as Pacific Islanders.
Pacific islands are also sometimes collectively called ''Oceania'' [1] (although Oceania is sometimes defined as also including Australasia and the Malay Archipelago),
'Melanesia' means ''black islands''. These include New Guinea (the largest Pacific island, which is divided into the sovereign nation of Papua New Guinea and the Indonesian provinces of Papua and West Irian Jaya), New Caledonia, Vanuatu, Fiji, and the Solomon Islands.
'Micronesia' means ''small islands''. These include the Marianas, Guam, Wake Island, Palau, the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Nauru, and the Federated States of Micronesia. Most of these lie north of the equator.
'Polynesia' means ''many islands''. These include New Zealand, the Hawaiian Islands, Rotuma, the Midway Islands, Samoa, American Samoa, Tonga, Tuvalu, the Cook Islands, French Polynesia, and Easter Island. It is the largest of the three zones.
The region's islands are classified into two groups, high islands and low islands. Volcanoes form high islands, which generally can support more people and have a more fertile soil. Low islands are reefs or atolls, and are relatively small and infertile. Melanesia, the most populated of the three regions, contains mainly high islands, while most of Micronesia and Polynesia are low islands.
There are also many other islands located within the boundaries of the Pacific Ocean, but these are not considered part of Oceania. These islands include the Galápagos Islands of Ecuador; the Aleutian Islands in Alaska; the Russian islands of Sakhalin and Kuril Islands; Taiwan; the Philippines; the South China Sea Islands; most of the islands of Indonesia; and the island nation of Japan, which includes the Ryukyu Islands. The inhabitants of these islands are not considered to be Pacific Islanders and are usually identified with their nearest continent.

Contents
List of islands
See also
Footnotes
References

List of islands


This is a list of many of the major Pacific Islands, organized by archipelago or political unit. In order to keep this list of moderate size, links are given to more complete lists for countries with large numbers of small or uninhabited islands.

Note: many Polynesian languages have a glottal stop, which in most of them is seldomly written, however. If a name with a < '' > cannot be found, try to rewrite it without it. See 'okina for more info.


American Samoa (United States)


Aunuu


Ofu


Olosega


Rose Island


Swains Island (Olosenga, Olohega) (disputed)


Tau


Tutuila


East Timor

Baker Island (United States)

Caroline Islands (Federated States of Micronesia)

Chatham Islands (New Zealand)


Chatham Island


Pitt Island

Clipperton Island (France)

Desventuradas Islands (Chile)

Cook Islands


Aitutaki


Atiu


Palmerston


Mangaia


Manihiki (Humphrey)


Manuae (Hervey)


Mauke (Parry)


Mitiaro


Nassau


Pukapuka (Danger)


Rakahanga (Reirson)


Rarotonga


Suwarrow (Anchorage)


Takutea


Tongareva (Penrhyn)

Easter Island/Rapa Nui (Chile)

Fiji Islands


Rotuma

French Polynesia (France)


Austral Islands



Tubuai


Society Islands



Iles du Vent (Windward Islands)




Moorea




Tahiti




Tetiaroa




Maiao




Mehetia



Iles Sous le Vent (Leeward Islands)




Bora Bora




Huahine




Maupiti




Raiatea & Tahaa




Tupai




Mopelia (aka Maupihaa)




Manuae (aka Scilly Atoll)




Motu One (aka Bellinghausen)


Marquesas



Fatu Hiva



Hiva Oa



Nuku Hiva



Tahuata



Ua Huka



Ua Pou


Tuamotus



Rangiroa



Fakarava



Moruroa



Fangataufa


Gambier Islands



Mangareva



Helena Island

Galapagos Islands (Ecuador)

Gilbert Islands (Kiribati)

Hawaiian Islands (United States)


★ Main islands



Hawaii



Kahoolawe



Kauai



Lanai



Maui



Molokai



Niihau



Oahu


Northwestern Hawaiian Islands



Kaula



Nihoa



Necker



French Frigate Shoals



Gardner Pinnacles



Maro Reef



Laysan



Lisianski



Pearl and Hermes Reef



Midway



Kure

Howland Island (United States)

Johnston Atoll (United States)

Juan Fernández Islands (Chile)

Kermadec Islands (New Zealand)


Macauley Island


Raoul Island

Line Islands


Caroline Island


Flint Island (Kiribati)


Jarvis Island (United States)


Kingman Reef (United States)


Kiritimati/Christmas Island (Kiribati)


Malden Island (Kiribati)


Palmyra Atoll (United States)


Starbuck Island (Kiribati)


Tabuaeran/Fanning Island (Kiribati)


Teraina/Washington Island (Kiribati)


Tongareva/Penhryn Island (Cook Islands)


Vostok Island (Kiribati)

Marcus Island (Japan)

Marianas Islands (United States)


Guam


Northern Marianas Islands



Saipan



Rota



Tinian



Farallon de Pajaros

Marshall Islands


Bikini


Enewetak


Kwajalein

Federated States of Micronesia (Caroline Islands)


Chuuk (Truk)


Pohnpei


Ulithi


Yap

Nauru

New Caledonia (France)


Chesterfield Islands


Ilots du Mouillage


New Caledonia



Isle of Pines



Belep Islands



New Caledonia


Loyalty Islands



Bagao



Lifou Island



Maré Island



Ouvéa Island



Tiga Island

New Zealand (see also Islands of New Zealand)


D'Urville Island


Great Barrier Island


Kapiti Island


North Island


South Island


Stewart Island/Rakiura


Waiheke Island

Niue (Savage Island)

Palau


Tobi

Papua New Guinea


Bismarck Archipelago



Admiralty Islands



New Britain



New Ireland



Saint Matthias Group


Bougainville


D'Entrecasteaux Islands


Louisiade Archipelago


Trobriand Islands

Phoenix Islands (Kiribati)

Pitcairn Islands (UK)

Revillagigedo Islands (Mexico)

Samoa


Savaii


Upolu


Apolima

Solomon Islands (see also Islands of the Solomon Islands)


Bellona


Choiseul


Florida Island


Guadalcanal


Malaita


Maramasike


New Georgia Islands


Rennell


Russell Islands


San Cristobal


Santa Cruz Islands


Santa Isabel


Shortland Islands


Sikaiana (Stewart Islands)


Tulagi


Ulawa


Uki

Tokelau


Atafu (Duke of York Island)


Fakaofo (Bowditch Island)


Nukunonu (Duke of Clarence Island)


Olohega (Swains island) (disputed)

Tonga (only main islands or groups, on north-south order. See also complete list of islands in Tonga)


Niuafoou


Niuatoputapu (Keppel's Island)


Vavau


Kao


Tofua


Haapai


Tongatapu


Eua

Tuvalu (see also Islands of Tuvalu)


Funafuti (atoll of at least 30 islands)


Nanumanga (or ''Nanumaga'')


Nanumea (atoll of at least 6 islands)


Niulakita


Niutao


Nui (atoll of at least 21 islands)


Nukufetau (atoll of at least 33 islands)


Nukulaelae (atoll of at least 15 islands)


Vaitupu (atoll of at least 9 islands)

Vanuatu (New Hebrides; see also Islands of Vanuatu)


Ambrym


Anatom


Aoba


Éfaté


Erromango


Espiritu Santo


Futuna


Hunter (claimed by France and Vanuatu)


Îles Banks


Îles Torres


Maéwo


Matthew (claimed by France and Vanuatu)


Malakula


Pentecóte


Tanna

Wake Island (United States)

Wallis and Futuna (France)


Alofi


Futuna


Wallis (Uvea)

★ Western Samoa (see Samoa)

Australia


Lord Howe Island


Norfolk Island


Willis Island


Torres Strait Islands



list of islands in the South China Sea

list of islands in the East China Sea

list of islands in the Sea of Japan

Japanese archipelago

list of islands of the Republic of China

Philippine archipelago

See also



List of islands

List of islands in the United States

List of islands in the Arctic Ocean

List of islands in the Atlantic Ocean

List of islands in the Caribbean

List of islands in the Indian Ocean

List of islands of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean

List of islands of Australia

List of islands of Asia

List of islands belonging to Kiribati

List of islands of New Zealand

List of islands of North America

List of islands of South America

List of islands in Tonga

Footnotes



1. Collins Atlas of the World, Page 83


References





This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.