SHORTLAND ISLANDS WESTERN PROVINCE SOLOMON ISLANDS TOPOGRAPHIC MAP SERIES 2007 SCALE 1:150,000 5  0 10 20 Kilometres

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SHORTLAND ISLANDS WESTERN PROVINCE SOLOMON ISLANDS TOPOGRAPHIC MAP SERIES 2007 SCALE 1:150,000 5  0 10 20 Kilometres 155° 30' E 155° 45' E 156° 00' E 156° 15' E Rerenia Is Kokohiso Is Nunungari Is Oema Atoll Is Oema Is 6° 45' S ! 6° 45' S ! !! !! ! ! ! !!! !!! ! ! !! !! !! R O V E KapisiaKapisia Pt Pt !!! ! ! Sao Pae R ai R B O U G A I N V I L L E S T R A I T ! ! !!! Ovau S ! a !!!! v ! ! aav a R ! ! ! A ! AroaroAroaro Pt Pt !! N ! ! ! !! A i R A L E A L A N Tuma U Baibaisi Bay Masamasa Is !! ! ! SupiaSupiaSupia PtPtPt A SupiaSupiaSupia PtPtPt N AbaliAbali ToliToli Pt Pt A P A Uho Is SaruleaSaruleaSarulea PtPtPt E T North Bay A Samarai Is PatukovelaiPatukovelaiPatukovelai PtPtPt M Bagora Is New Is Obeani Is Piru Is Tauna Is (((( (((( KavoraniKavoraniKavorani KaheleaKahelea Pt Pt (((( KaheleaKahelea Pt Pt (((( KaheleaKahelea Pt Pt IriuaIriuaIriuaIriua PtPtPtPt (((( TaraTaraTara EA IN KarekiKareki Pt Pt Kavakava R GU Asie Is KarekiKareki Pt Pt yer W Bay Bo NE Bundia Bay Baobi Is (((( (((!( ((!(!( KeketaiaKeketaiaKeketaia UA DS KeketaiaKeketaiaKeketaia PAP LAN Mabuu Is IS Kavakava Bay N MO LO A Central Bay V (((( SO K A (((( BinasaBinasaBinasa (((( A ((((!! (((( !! (((!(! ! ! V R ((((! ((( A (((! KarikiKarikiKariki o !! K r ! Go NAPNAPwqq ! !! Ilina Is P O E A N A BoheaBoheaBohea PtPtPt Koria R MT RAUBOLEALA R o Outarara Nusave Is n MT LALAUKA ho ra R Nielai Is a au K A L I A KokorakaiKokorakai Pt Pt B n R Pa ba Ko MaeroMaero PtPt no ko Siniasoro Bay a he Raumoana Is ah il M Fauro a R Mahanavai Is M A G O T A I KoeraKoera Pt Pt S Uvuuvunu Is im i H ru a a PaupauPaupauPaupau PtPtPt l PaupauPaupauPaupau PtPtPt i R Nusakova Is u n a R KamaleaiKamaleai Pt Pt Benana Is S o qq((( KomaliaeKomaliaeKomaliae r qq KomaliaeKomaliaeKomaliae TupankoeTupankoeTupankoe PtPtPt u Haliuna Bay T I N I G H I R A R R KuruatunuKuruatunu Pt Pt (((( ((( hiso KuruatunuKuruatunu Pt Pt (((( PoikeaiPoikeaiPoikeai ((( SamanaghoSamanaghoSamanagho Koko Labou Reef PoikeaiPoikeaiPoikeai SamanaghoSamanaghoSamanagho Samanagho Is R A R A B U A U A t KokohaleKokohale Pt Pt e l n I PiringkonaPiringkonaPiringkona PtPtPt D PiringkonaPiringkonaPiringkona PtPtPt i wRHCRHC o RHCRHC Kamaleai Bay a ((( ToumoaToumoaToumoa qq !! ! u d qq ToumoaToumoaToumoa qq ! !ToumoaToumoaToumoa ToghaToghaTogha PtPtPt qq !! t o ToghaToghaTogha PtPtPt HarapaHarapa Pt Pt o Nuhanaha Is T HarapaHarapa Pt Pt wRHCRHC (((( HarapaHarapa Pt Pt RHCRHC (((( RHCRHC (((( TanrakeTanrakeTanrake L R TanrakeTanrakeTanrake SaenaiSaenaiSaenai PtPtPt e (((( TanrakeTanrakeTanrake SaenaiSaenaiSaenai PtPtPt NimutiaNimutia Pt Pt HarapaHarapa (((( a NimutiaNimutia Pt Pt HarapaHarapa qq P A O M A I B a Babaratai Reef Bakuluai Is y Aoa Is KovaeaKovaea Pt Pt Rohae Reef Balalai Is KovaeaKovaea Pt Pt KamareKamare Pt Pt Kupala KengereaiKengereai Pt Pt KamareKamare Pt Pt Ku Bay BolunghaiBolunghaiBolunghai PtPtPt pala R BolunghaiBolunghaiBolunghai PtPtPt Boiluputu Is 7° 00' S LorauLorauLorau PtPtPt HioaiHioai Pt Pt 7° 00' S K LorauLorauLorau PtPtPt H LorauLorauLorau PtPtPt a i Moku Is s l Rohae Is i o Pisoko Reef a MakokunaangMakokunaang PtPt k ToanapinaToanapinaToanapina PtPtPt MakokunaangMakokunaang PtPt i a R l Aleaunu Is o l LeaoaLeaoaLeaoa PtPtPt a Pioghi Is Soipai Is LeaoaLeaoaLeaoa PtPtPt Alealelena Is R Mania Is (((( (((( MalohunaMalohuna Pt Pt (((( ManiaMania MalohunaMalohuna Pt Pt (((( SiviluaSiviluaSivilua ManiaMania MalohunaMalohuna Pt Pt Haluanonoa Passage (((( SiviluaSiviluaSivilua Maliusai La gama G H A R U G H A R U A N G Katuhi Is PiteaiPiteaiPiteai PtPtPt R R PeasariaPeasariaPeasaria PtPtPt Bay u R o t u R i t H a i a (((( R (((( Harumukiki Is H h Hoseai Bay a a Laomana Is i v o ((( K ((( KoliaiKoliaiKoliai k qq KoliaiKoliaiKoliai a R v S i o o Loboho Reef Taukuna Is Potai Bay so a ba K e T A L I A I BeraraangBeraraangBeraraang PtPtPt i R s BeraraangBeraraangBeraraang PtPtPt o AlalaiAlalai Pt Pt H KiakiaKiakia Pt Pt Isaiai Reef KaukauaiKaukauai Pt Pt KiakiaKiakia Pt Pt Shortland P U A L E K O A I (((( (((( HarehareHarehare (((( HarehareHarehare (((( (((( (((( HanabisiHanabisi Bubuana Reef Poruporu Is (Alu) HanabisiHanabisi Kovelakaha Reef Koang kopi R H O T U A N A K A N A G H A N A (((( ((( (((( LofungLofungLofung NAPNAPw ((( GaomaiGaomai So LofungLofungLofung NAPNAP sok GomaiGomai Pt Pt qq an P A U P A U R U N G T O U egh an a P Faisi Is H R i a a Kulitana #### #### (((( S h o r t l a n d l R (((( Onua Is o R ai R i litan Bay t u v K a ((( P A R E L E A u TuhaTuhaTuha 2 22 ((( H a r b o u r SiauSiauSiau PtPtPt e TuhaTuhaTuha 2 22 ((( SiauSiauSiau PtPtPt r g (((( R (((( KorovouKorovouKorovou u (((( qq KorovouKorovouKorovou Orlofi Is (((( qq i TuhaTuhaTuha 1 11 (((( qq v g TuhaTuhaTuha 1 11 KarakohiaiKarakohiai Pt Pt e a Sanaekiki r T O B I R I O L (((( Is (((( SapusapuaiSapusapuaiSapusapuai (((( P (((( NilaNila H A B I L I A I (((( NilaNila i TuiaiTuiaiTuiai (((( a TuiaiTuiaiTuiai PirumeriPirumeriPirumeri PtPtPt B KopakopanaKopakopanaKopakopana PirumeriPirumeriPirumeri PtPtPt AleangaAleangaAleanga AHCAHC ((( KopakopanaKopakopanaKopakopana AleangaAleangaAleanga a AHCAHCw (((( y (((( Poporang Is #### w #### #### PirumeriPirumeriPirumeri qq#### K O ' O K O ' O PirumeriPirumeriPirumeri qq (((( qq (((( qq #### NuhuNuhu #### qq NuhuNuhu (((( P A O B U (((( HahelaHahela SikuaiSikuaiSikuai PtPtPt ((( HahelaHahela SikuaiSikuaiSikuai PtPtPt Konagaluai Is MaleaiMaleai qq((( MaleaiMaleai KasiniaiKasiniai Pt Pt qq KasiniaiKasiniai Pt Pt Pirumeri Is Putiputimbila NAPNAP (((( Magusaiai Is NAPNAPw (((( TapokaiTapokaiTapokai Passage Manualai Is Haleta Bay O T U A N A Po'o Channel AinituAinitu Pt Pt SHORTLAND ISLANDS WESTERN PROVINCE SOLOMON ISLANDS TOPOGRAPHIC MAP SERIES 2007 SCALE 1:150,000 5 0 10 20 kilometres Elevation (m) Anchorage ; Town / Builtup Area Capital Cities -- 0 to 200 600 to 800 1200 to 1400 Coastline Airports Large Settlement (( 200 to 400 800 to 1000 1400 to 1600 Reef Buildings Medium Settlement ((( (((( Rivers / Lake Roads Small Settlement (((( 400 to 600 1000 to 1200 #### Mountains f Tracks Unknown Settlement #### Depth (m) Swamp Trail Education Facilities qq 0 to 100 1000 to 2000 3000 to 4000 Orchard Bridges } Health Facilities w Crop Language Areas A A International Border 100 to 1000 2000 to 3000 4000 to 5000 7° 15' S 7° 15' S Grid...................................Longitude/Latitude WGS84 Caution: The depiction of an area name on this map is not to be taken as evidence of customary land ownership. Projection................................................Geographical Prepared, printed and published by the Ministry of Lands, Housing and Survey based upon reductions of Australian Department of Spheriod..........................................................WGS84 Defence data. Copies of this map are available from the Ministry of Lands, Housing and Survey. Elevation/Depth measurement........................ Meters Copyright Reserved Correspondence relating to amendments and requests for reproduction of all or part of this map should be directed to the Ministry of Lands, Housing and Survey, Honiara, Solomon Islands. For Limited Authorised Distribution Only. DISCLAIMER: The Ministry of Lands, Housing and Survey does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy of the information provided. REVISION DATE: 10/01/07 S O L O M O N I S L A N D S S O A N A T A L U PatuPatuPatu Kiniua KiniuaKiniua PtPtPt #### #### Maloini Bay B esa ra Ri T E L A T E L A S I V I A I CHOISEUL ver Luang Bay Mono L U A N G TAROTAROTARO A ' A R O T A L U A TolokoTolokoToloko PtPtPt -TAROTAROTARO Pa MALAITA MT MAORIA'ANG A N I A lu s ! MT KOHALIA ua ! R T E N T O A S A M U R A U A R S R K ISABEL o a i o M a v e k l e e l i o s o k h r o LaihaLaihaLaiha PtPtPt k e e LaihaLaihaLaiha PtPtPt o a LaihaLaihaLaiha PtPtPt A R R k o R - BUALABUALABUALA ((( - BUALABUALABUALA K T A M A K O A (((BetauiBetauiBetaui RHCRHC PatuteghesePatuteghesePatuteghese PtPtPt GIZOGIZO RHCRHCw((FalamaeFalamaeFalamae qq (((( (((( WilsonWilson PtPt B l a n c h e H a r b o u r MalukaeMalukae WilsonWilson PtPt MalukaeMalukae - AUKIAUKIAUKI Watson Is (((( (((( (((( KumboniaKumboniaKumbonia (((( KumboniaKumboniaKumbonia Taghaghoa Passage (((( CENTRAL SoalaSoalaSoala SoalaSoalaSoala WESTERN -TULAGHITULAGHITULAGHI Malo'u Stirling Is Bay -HONIARAHONIARA Mukuri Bay CummingCummingCumming PtPtPt HetunuHetunu Pt Pt GUADALCANAL -KIRAKIRAKIRAKIRAKIRAKIRA LATALATALATA - TEMOTU RENNELL AND BELLONA MAKIRA/ULAWA -TINGGOATINGGOATINGGOA 7° 30' S 7° 30' S 155° 30' E 155° 45' E 156° 00' E 156° 15' E Geographical Operations Group Ministry of Lands, Housing and Survey PO BOX G38 HONIARA Produced by the NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION CENTRE Assisted by the Solomon Islands Institutional Strengthening of Land Administration Project (SIISLAP) Copyright Solomon Islands Government.
Recommended publications
  • Food Security and Asset Creation in Solomon Islands: Gender and the Political Economy of Agricultural Production for Honiara Central Market
    PORTAL Journal of RESEARCH ARTICLE Multidisciplinary Food Security and Asset Creation in Solomon International Studies Islands: Gender and the Political Economy of Vol. 16, No. 1/2 2019 Agricultural Production for Honiara Central Market Nichole Georgeou1, Charles Hawksley2, James Monks3, Melina Ki’i4 © 2019 by the author(s). This 1 Humanitarian and Development Research Initiative (HADRI), Western Sydney University is an Open Access article 2 University of Wollongong distributed under the terms 3 HADRI, Western Sydney University of the Creative Commons 4 HADRI, Western Sydney University Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/ Corresponding author: Associate Professor Nichole Georgeou, Humanitarian and Development by/4.0/), allowing third parties Research Initiative (HADRI), Western Sydney University, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith NSW 2751, to copy and redistribute the Australia. Email: [email protected] material in any medium or format and to remix, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5130/portalv16i1/2.6542 transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even Article History: Received 04/04/2019; Revised 13/08/2019; Accepted 16/08/2019; Published commercially, provided the 13/11/2019 original work is properly cited and states its license. Citation: Georgeou, N., Abstract Hawksley, C., Monks, J. and Ki'i, M. 2019. Food This article presents data from a 2017 survey of vendors selling fresh produce at the Honiara Security and Asset Creation in Solomon Islands: Gender Central Market (HCM) over a twelve-week period from July–September. It aims to and the Political Economy understand the economic contribution of vendors, and in particular of producer-vendors, of Agricultural Production to their communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Ethnography of Ontong Java and Tasman Islands with Remarks Re: the Marqueen and Abgarris Islands
    PACIFIC STUDIES Vol. 9, No. 3 July 1986 ETHNOGRAPHY OF ONTONG JAVA AND TASMAN ISLANDS WITH REMARKS RE: THE MARQUEEN AND ABGARRIS ISLANDS by R. Parkinson Translated by Rose S. Hartmann, M.D. Introduced and Annotated by Richard Feinberg Kent State University INTRODUCTION The Polynesian outliers for years have held a special place in Oceanic studies. They have figured prominently in discussions of Polynesian set- tlement from Thilenius (1902), Churchill (1911), and Rivers (1914) to Bayard (1976) and Kirch and Yen (1982). Scattered strategically through territory generally regarded as either Melanesian or Microne- sian, they illustrate to varying degrees a merging of elements from the three great Oceanic culture areas—thus potentially illuminating pro- cesses of cultural diffusion. And as small bits of land, remote from urban and administrative centers, they have only relatively recently experienced the sustained European contact that many decades earlier wreaked havoc with most islands of the “Polynesian Triangle.” The last of these characteristics has made the outliers particularly attractive to scholars interested in glimpsing Polynesian cultures and societies that have been but minimally influenced by Western ideas and Pacific Studies, Vol. 9, No. 3—July 1986 1 2 Pacific Studies, Vol. 9, No. 3—July 1986 accoutrements. For example, Tikopia and Anuta in the eastern Solo- mons are exceptional in having maintained their traditional social structures, including their hereditary chieftainships, almost entirely intact. And Papua New Guinea’s three Polynesian outliers—Nukuria, Nukumanu, and Takuu—may be the only Polynesian islands that still systematically prohibit Christian missionary activities while proudly maintaining important elements of their old religions.
    [Show full text]
  • Solomon Islands Mission Office, Palm Drive, Lunga, Honiara, Solomon Islands
    Solomon Islands Mission office, Palm Drive, Lunga, Honiara, Solomon Islands. Photo courtesy of Travis Ronnie and Silent Tovosia. Solomon Islands Mission BARRY OLIVER Barry Oliver, Ph.D., retired in 2015 as president of the South Pacific Division of Seventh-day Adventists, Sydney, Australia. An Australian by birth Oliver has served the Church as a pastor, evangelist, college teacher, and administrator. In retirement, he is a conjoint associate professor at Avondale College of Higher Education. He has authored over 106 significant publications and 192 magazine articles. He is married to Julie with three adult sons and three grandchildren. The Solomon Islands Mission is the Seventh-day Adventist administrative unit for the Solomon Islands, a nation located in the southwest Pacific Ocean. The Solomon Islands has one of the highest proportions of Seventh-day Adventists to population in the world. In 1918, the ratio was one baptized Seventh-day Adventist for every twelve people in the country.1 The territory of the Solomon Islands Mission is the “Solomon Islands.”2 It is a part of and responsible to the Trans Pacific Union Mission which is based in Tamavua, Suva, Fiji Islands. The Trans Pacific Union comprises the Seventh- day Adventist Church entities in the countries of American Samoa, Fiji, Kiribati, Nauru, Niue, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. The administrative office of the Solomon Islands Mission is located at Palm Drive, Lunga, Honiara, Solomon Islands, on the southern outskirts of the nation’s capital. The postal address is PO Box R145, Ranandi, Honiara, Solomon Islands.3 The mission operates under General Conference and South Pacific Division (SPD) operating policies.
    [Show full text]
  • The Naturalist and His 'Beautiful Islands'
    The Naturalist and his ‘Beautiful Islands’ Charles Morris Woodford in the Western Pacific David Russell Lawrence The Naturalist and his ‘Beautiful Islands’ Charles Morris Woodford in the Western Pacific David Russell Lawrence Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at http://press.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Author: Lawrence, David (David Russell), author. Title: The naturalist and his ‘beautiful islands’ : Charles Morris Woodford in the Western Pacific / David Russell Lawrence. ISBN: 9781925022032 (paperback) 9781925022025 (ebook) Subjects: Woodford, C. M., 1852-1927. Great Britain. Colonial Office--Officials and employees--Biography. Ethnology--Solomon Islands. Natural history--Solomon Islands. Colonial administrators--Solomon Islands--Biography. Solomon Islands--Description and travel. Dewey Number: 577.099593 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover image: Woodford and men at Aola on return from Natalava (PMBPhoto56-021; Woodford 1890: 144). Cover design and layout by ANU Press Printed by Griffin Press This edition © 2014 ANU Press Contents Acknowledgments . xi Note on the text . xiii Introduction . 1 1 . Charles Morris Woodford: Early life and education . 9 2. Pacific journeys . 25 3 . Commerce, trade and labour . 35 4 . A naturalist in the Solomon Islands . 63 5 . Liberalism, Imperialism and colonial expansion . 139 6 . The British Solomon Islands Protectorate: Colonialism without capital . 169 7 . Expansion of the Protectorate 1898–1900 .
    [Show full text]
  • Zootaxa: Simuliidae (Diptera) of the Solomon Islands
    Zootaxa 1328: 1–26 (2006) ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ ZOOTAXA 1328 Copyright © 2006 Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) Simuliidae (Diptera) of the Solomon Islands: new records and species, ecology, and biogeography D. A. CRAIG1, R. A. ENGLUND2 & H. TAKAOKA3 1Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2E9 Canada. E-mail: [email protected] 2Pacific Biological Survey, Bishop Museum, 1525 Bernice Street, Honolulu, Hawai'i, 96817 USA. E-mail: [email protected] 3Department of Infectious Disease Control, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University, Hasama, Yufu City, Oita, 879-5593 Japan. E-mail: [email protected] Table of contents Abstract ............................................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction ....................................................................................................................................... 2 Material and methods ........................................................................................................................ 4 Observations and descriptions ........................................................................................................... 5 Choiseul ..................................................................................................................................... 5 New Georgia Islands .................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Geological–Tectonic Framework of Solomon Islands, SW Pacific
    ELSEVIER Tectonophysics 301 (1999) 35±60 Geological±tectonic framework of Solomon Islands, SW Paci®c: crustal accretion and growth within an intra-oceanic setting M.G. Petterson a,Ł, T. Babbs b, C.R. Neal c, J.J. Mahoney d, A.D. Saunders b, R.A. Duncan e, D. Tolia a,R.Magua, C. Qopoto a,H.Mahoaa, D. Natogga a a Ministry of Energy Water and Mineral Resources, Water and Mineral Resources Division, P.O. Box G37, Honiara, Solomon Islands b Department of Geology, University of Leicester, University Road, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK c Department of Civil Engineering and Geological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA d School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawaii, 2525 Correa Road, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, USA e College of Oceanographic and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA Received 10 June 1997; accepted 12 August 1998 Abstract The Solomon Islands are a complex collage of crustal units or terrains (herein termed the `Solomon block') which have formed and accreted within an intra-oceanic environment since Cretaceous times. Predominantly Cretaceous basaltic basement sequences are divided into: (1) a plume-related Ontong Java Plateau terrain (OJPT) which includes Malaita, Ulawa, and northern Santa Isabel; (2) a `normal' ocean ridge related South Solomon MORB terrain (SSMT) which includes Choiseul and Guadalcanal; and (3) a hybrid `Makira terrain' which has both MORB and plume=plateau af®nities. The OJPT formed as an integral part of the massive Ontong Java Plateau (OJP), at c. 122 Ma and 90 Ma, respectively, was subsequently affected by Eocene±Oligocene alkaline and alnoitic magmatism, and was unaffected by subsequent arc development.
    [Show full text]
  • 12. George Bogese (1904–1959): 'Just a Bloody Traitor'?
    12. George Bogese (1904–1959): ‘Just a bloody traitor’? Although World War II, especially the battle for Guadalcanal, brought the Solomon Islands to international prominence, few of the Islanders emerged from the war with significantly enhanced reputations. Of those who did, probably only three became well known outside the group. Of these, two, Jacob Vouza and Bill Bennett, have been honoured as heroes for their service on the side of the victorious Allies: Vouza for an act of bravery in refusing to tell his Japanese captors about American defence positions and then providing useful information to the US marines; Bennett for sustained bravery while serving behind Japanese lines with the coast watcher and guerrilla leader Donald Kennedy.1 Other Solomon Islanders, who also served the Allies faithfully, though less dramatically, were left in obscurity.2 But it is in the nature of things for honours to be acquired selectively and sparingly—and somewhat fortuitously George Bogese, the third of the trio, discovered that those who do not find favour with the victors are distinctly vulnerable. Not all Solomon Islanders, especially in the areas that were longest under Japanese occupation, as in parts of Choiseul and Australian- ruled Bougainville, were immovably staunch supporters of the Allies. Indeed, some of them were subjected to summary punishment for ‘disloyalty’. But only two individuals, John McDonald from the Shortland Islands and Geoge Bogese from Santa Isabel, were subjected to the indignity of a trial and the ignominy of a conviction.3 And of these two it was the fate of Bogese, partly because of a close, if hostile, involvement with the well-publicised heroics of Kennedy and Bennett, to become the more notorious.
    [Show full text]
  • Watriama and Co Further Pacific Islands Portraits
    Watriama and Co Further Pacific Islands Portraits Hugh Laracy Watriama and Co Further Pacific Islands Portraits Hugh Laracy Published by ANU E Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at http://epress.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Author: Laracy, Hugh, author. Title: Watriama and Co : further Pacific Islands portraits / Hugh Laracy. ISBN: 9781921666322 (paperback) 9781921666339 (ebook) Subjects: Watriama, William Jacob, 1880?-1925. Islands of the Pacific--History. Dewey Number: 995.7 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design and layout by ANU E Press Printed by Griffin Press This edition © 2013 ANU E Press Contents Preface . ix 1 . Pierre Chanel of Futuna (1803–1841): The making of a saint . 1 2 . The Sinclairs Of Pigeon Bay, or ‘The Prehistory of the Robinsons of Ni’ihau’: An essay in historiography, or ‘tales their mother told them’ . 33 3 . Insular Eminence: Cardinal Moran (1830–1911) and the Pacific islands . 53 4 . Constance Frederica Gordon-Cumming (1837–1924): Traveller, author, painter . 69 5 . Niels Peter Sorensen (1848–1935): The story of a criminal adventurer . 93 6 . John Strasburg (1856–1924): A plain sailor . 111 7 . Ernest Frederick Hughes Allen (1867–1924): South Seas trader . 127 8 . Beatrice Grimshaw (1870–1953): Pride and prejudice in Papua . 141 9 . W .J . Watriama (c . 1880–1925): Pretender and patriot, (or ‘a blackman’s defence of White Australia’) .
    [Show full text]
  • Library of Congress Subject Headings for the Pacific Islands
    Library of Congress Subject Headings for the Pacific Islands First compiled by Nancy Sack and Gwen Sinclair Updated by Nancy Sack Current to January 2020 Library of Congress Subject Headings for the Pacific Islands Background An inquiry from a librarian in Micronesia about how to identify subject headings for the Pacific islands highlighted the need for a list of authorized Library of Congress subject headings that are uniquely relevant to the Pacific islands or that are important to the social, economic, or cultural life of the islands. We reasoned that compiling all of the existing subject headings would reveal the extent to which additional subjects may need to be established or updated and we wish to encourage librarians in the Pacific area to contribute new and changed subject headings through the Hawai‘i/Pacific subject headings funnel, coordinated at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa.. We captured headings developed for the Pacific, including those for ethnic groups, World War II battles, languages, literatures, place names, traditional religions, etc. Headings for subjects important to the politics, economy, social life, and culture of the Pacific region, such as agricultural products and cultural sites, were also included. Scope Topics related to Australia, New Zealand, and Hawai‘i would predominate in our compilation had they been included. Accordingly, we focused on the Pacific islands in Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia (excluding Hawai‘i and New Zealand). Island groups in other parts of the Pacific were also excluded. References to broader or related terms having no connection with the Pacific were not included. Overview This compilation is modeled on similar publications such as Music Subject Headings: Compiled from Library of Congress Subject Headings and Library of Congress Subject Headings in Jewish Studies.
    [Show full text]
  • Soil Information, As ICSU World Data Centre for Soils
    Scanned from original by ISRIC - World Soil Information, as ICSU World Data Centre for Soils. The purpose is to make a safe depository for endangered documents and to make the accrued information available for consultation, following Fair Use Guidelines. Every effort is taken to respect Copyright of the materials within the archives where the identification of the Copyright holder is clear and, where feasible, to contact the originators. For questions please contact soil.isricOwur.nl indicating the item reference number concerned. Land resources of the Solomon Islands Volume 6 Choiseul and the Shortland Islands i6"M^ A deep, well drained, reddish clay Tropohumult overlying finely banded Moli Sediments on Moli Island 1 I Land Resources Division Land resources of the Solomon Islands Volume 6 Choiseul and the Shortland Islands J R D Wall and J R F Hansell Land Resource Study 18 Land Resources Division, Ministry of Overseas Development Tolworth Tower, Surbiton, Surrey, England KT6 7DY 1976 THE LAND RESOURCES DIVISION me L.OIIU iicauuii/co uivtaiuii ui Li ic mil nau y ui uvci scaa L^cvciu|j||iei IL aaai3L3 ucvciupil ILJ countries in mapping, investigating and assessing land resources, and makes recommenda­ tions on the use of these resources for the development of agriculture, livestock husbandry and forestry; it also gives advice on related subjects to overseas governments and organisations, makes scientific personnel available for appointment abroad and provides lectures and training courses in the basic techniques of resource appraisal. The Division works in close co-operation with government departments, research institutes, universities and international organisations concerned with land resources assessment and development planning.
    [Show full text]
  • In the Solomon Islands
    A preliminary desk study identifying important bird areas (IBAs) in the Solomon Islands Draft for restricted circulation only Prepared for BirdLife International Catherine E. Filardi David Boseto Christopher E. Filardi December 2007 Solomon IBA Desk Study DRAFT The Solomon Islands lie at a biogeographic crossroads. Separating the rich continental faunas of Australasia and the isolated islands of a sprawling Pacific, no other oceanic archipelago supports a greater proportion of the Earth’s living diversity, or a richer array of human ways of life and languages. To an ornithologist, this translates into exceptional patterns of endemism, which are increasingly being revealed as an evolutionary fulcrum generating diversity to the east and to the west. Significantly, as across much of the Pacific, the living diversity of the Solomons is threatened by a rapidly growing population and increasing pressure to liquidate forest resources. Hope lies in our collective efforts to capture pieces of these stunning landscapes in partnership with the diverse human communities whose futures have been entangled with the birds of the Solomons for all of living memory. 1. GENERAL NATIONAL INTRODUCTION The Solomon Islands are located in the southwest Pacific, between latitudes 5o and 12o S and longitudes 152o to 170o E (see Maps). The nation stretches across 1450 km of the Pacific, from the Shortland Islands off the eastern edge of Bougainville (the westernmost and largest island in the Solomon Archipelago, but politically part of Papua New Guinea), to the Santa Cruz islands just north of Vanuatu. The country, which gained independence from Britain in 1978, includes seven major island groups (Guadalcanal, Malaita, Makira-Ulawa, Isabel, the New Georgia group, Rennell and Bellona, and Choiseul) and over 900 smaller islands, islets, atolls and cayes.
    [Show full text]
  • Solomon Islanders in World War Ii an Indigenous Perspective
    SOLOMON ISLANDERS IN WORLD WAR II AN INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVE SOLOMON ISLANDERS IN WORLD WAR II AN INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVE ANNA ANNIE KWAI STATE, SOCIETY AND GOVERNANCE IN MELANESIA SERIES Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at press.anu.edu.au A catalogue record for this book is available from the National Library of Australia ISBN(s): 9781760461652 (print) 9781760461669 (eBook) All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design and layout by ANU Press. Cover photograph: ‘Members of Donald Kennedy’s coastwatching group in training at Seghe Point, New Georgia, June 1943’, by Michael Currin, courtesy University of Hawai‘i Hamilton Library collection. This edition © 2017 ANU Press Contents List of Figures . vii Acknowledgements . ix Preface . xi 1 . Introduction . 1 2 . Islanders at War . 15 3 . Why Support the Allies? . 51 4 . Impacts of the War . 75 5 . Monument-building and Nation-building . 93 6 . Conclusion . 113 Appendix 1: Prime Minister Derek Sikua’s letter of endorsement of the Solomon Scouts and Coastwatchers Trust . 119 Appendix 2: Letter of recognition from President Barack Obama . 121 Bibliography . 125 List of Figures Figure 1: Unveiling of the Pride of Our Nation monument, 7 August 2011. 2 Figure 2: Map of Solomon Islands ............................4 Figure 3: Locations of coastwatcher stations, Solomon Islands ......17 Figure 4: Sergeant Harry Wickham, British Solomon Islands Defence Force and Major M.S.
    [Show full text]