Woodlark Island

AS07-04-1609 (21 Oct. 1968) --- Woodlark Island in the Solomon Sea, east of New Guinea and northeast of Australia, as seen from the Apollo 7 spacecraft during its 158th revolution of Earth. Photographed from an altitude of 140 nautical miles, at ground elapsed time of 251 hours and 21 minutes.
Woodlark
Native name: <span class="nickname" ">Muyua, Muyuw

Woodlark Islands
Woodlark

Woodlark Island (Papua New Guinea)

Geography
Location Melanesia
Coordinates 9°7′35″S 152°48′20″E / 9.12639°S 152.80556°E / -9.12639; 152.80556
Highest elevation 240 m (790 ft)
Highest point Mount Kabat
Administration
Province Milne Bay Province
Largest settlement Kulumadau (pop. 242 in 1990 (est. 2,500 in 2010 by unofficial census))
Demographics
Population ~1,700 (est. 6,000 in 2010 by unofficial census) (1990)

Woodlark Island, known to its inhabitants simply as Woodlark or Muyua, is an island in Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea. Although no formal census has been conducted since 1990, the current population is estimated at approximately 6000 people (see section below on Population Issues). There is one primary school on the island (in Kulumadau) that teaches about 200 students (60 students are from outer islands); to attend highschool/secondary school, and all children must travel to Alotau on the mainland.[1]

Etymology

Woodlark Island is also called Woodlark or Woodlarks[2] by English language speakers. It is called Murua by the inhabitants of some other islands in the province.[2] The wider Woodlark Islands group also consists of Madau and Nusam to the west, Nubara to the east, and the Marshall Bennett group to the southwest.

History

An Italian missionary order of Catholic clergy, the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions (P.I.M.E.), sent five priests and two brothers to Woodlark Island in 1852. Giovanni Battista (John) Mazzucconi was killed there in 1855 by an islander called Avicoar who opposed the missionaries and their religion.[3]

Operation Chronicle was the name given to the landing of Allied forces on Woodlark Island and Kiriwina on June 30, 1943, during World War II. Within a few months of the landing U.S. Navy Seabees had constructed a major airbase at Guasopa Bay, known as Woodlark Airfield (later Guasopa Airport).

Woodlark Island has had a long history of gold mining dating back to the late 1800s with records showing an estimated pre-World War II gold production, including alluvial sources, of about 220,000 ounces of gold. The island has been extensively logged for ebony which has always been an important cash economy to the communities on the island since the 1970s. Modern gold exploration was initiated on Woodlark Island in 1962 with the Bureau of Mineral Resources undertaking surface geochemistry, limited geophysics and diamond drilling during 1962 and 1963 at Kulumadau.[4]

Population issue

The most recent figures are those of the 1990 census, which note about 1,700 people. The largest villages in the census were Kaulay (160), Moniveyova (140) and Wabunun (154), and these villages are the largest today. However, separate from the villages are the two post-colonial creations of Guasopa and Kulumadau (described in the census book as 'large rural non-villages'), which both have relatively large populations, 147 and 242 respectively. As such, Kulumadau is typically seen as the largest conglomeration of people on the island. Since the 1990 census, Guasopa has gained a health center, while Kulumadau has gained a medium-sized timber company (Milne Bay Logging) and a mining exploration camp (BHP).

In terms of the traditional divisions of the island, the eastern region (Muyuw) accounts for about 600 people (44% total population), central region (Wamwan) for 400 people (30% total population), and the southern region (Madau/Neyam) for 350 people (26% total population). An unofficial census in 2010 counts place the total population of Woodlark Island at around 6,000 people, with the largest conglomeration of people still in the non-villages of Kulumadau and Guasopa, and the largest village of Kaulay.[5]

Historically, the island may have lost up to two-thirds of its population between 1850 and 1920, according to Fred Damon, an anthropology professor from the University of Virginia who lived on Woodlark Island in the mid-1970s. That is, from an estimated 2,200 people on Woodlark Island during first European contact, the population had dropped to between 700 and 900 by about 1915, though it has rebounded over the years.[5]

Geography

Geology

The island includes a volcanic core of Tertiary age and a wide limestone belt, mainly originated by corals (coral reefs are still active around the island). Also intrusive rocks and sedimentary sands are found.[6][7]

Fauna

Murua Gharial

An extinct gharial species, "Gavialis" papuensis (occasionally informally referred to as "Murua Gharial"), occurred in Woodlark Island during the Pleistocene or Holocene period.[8] A late surviving gryposuchine, this 2-3 meter long piscivore was the last known truly marine crocodilian (modern saltwater crocodiles that still occur in the Solomon only occasionally venture into the sea, preferring freshwater environments), found in association with sirenian and sea turtle remains. Like other insular Pleistocene megafauna, it was presumably hunted to extinction by the first human settlers of the islands.

Conservation

A plan by the Malaysian company Vitroplant to use 70% of the island for palm oil production was scrapped after opposition from the islands inhabitants.[9][10][11] The project was seen as a threat to endemic organisms on the island.[11] As of 2009, a full wildlife survey of the island had not yet been carried out.[9]

Endemic snakes

Due to its relative isolation, Woodlark Island is home to two endemic snake taxa.

There are NO medically important terrestrial venomous snakes on Woodlark Island.

Demographics

Muyuw language, one of the Kilivila–Louisiades languages and part of the Austronesian language family, is spoken on the island.

References

  1. Kent Harland (2011). "A Brief Overview of Woodlark Island". Retrieved 2015-08-24.
  2. 1 2 Seligman, C.G. (1910). The Melanesians of British New Guinea. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 40.
  3. Thomas Mary Sennott (14 January 2009). "Blessed John Mazzucconi and the New Guinea Battlefield". catholicism.org.
  4. KulaGolda (2014). "Woodlock Island Gold Project". Retrieved 2015-08-24.
  5. 1 2 Michael Young (1990). "Fieldwork on Woodlark (Muyuw) Island". Retrieved 2015-08-24.
  6. D.S.Trails (1961). "The geology of Woodlark Island" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-09-07.
  7. D.S.Trails (1967). "Geology of Woodlark Island, Papua" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-09-07.
  8. Molnar, R. E. 1982. A longirostrine crocodilian from Murua (Woodlark), Solomon Sea. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 20, 675-685.
  9. 1 2 Gascoigne, Ingrid. Papua New Guinea (Cultures of the World). 2009-03. Benchmark Books. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-7614-3416-0.
  10. "70% of rainforest island to be cleared for palm oil". Mongabay.com. 2007-12-13. Retrieved 16 September 2010.
  11. 1 2 [Biofuels versus Native Rights: "Biofuels versus Native Rights: Planned logging of Woodlark Island for biofuels opposed by islanders and scientists"] Check |url= value (help). Mongabay.com. 2007-11-12. Retrieved 16 September 2010.
  12. Smith, H.M., D. Chiszar, K. Tepedelen & F. van Breukelen 2001 A revision of the bevelnosed boas (Candoia carinata complex) (Reptilia: Serpentes). Hamadryad. 26 (2):283-315.
  13. McDowell, S.B. 1979 A catalogue of the snakes of New Guinea and the Solomons, with special reference to those in the Bernice P. Bishop Museum. Journal of Herpetology. 13(1):1-92.
  14. Boulenger, G.A. 1896 Description of a new genus of elapine snakes from Woodlark Island, British New Guinea. Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 6 (18) (104):152.

Coordinates: 09°07′15″S 152°44′10″E / 9.12083°S 152.73611°E / -9.12083; 152.73611

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