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Fakaofo
Atoll in the South Pacific
Atoll in the South Pacific
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| archipelago | Tokelau |
| name | Fakaofo |
| image | Fakaofo Atoll.jpg |
| image_caption | Aerial view of Fakaofo |
| population | 483 |
| country_largest_city | Fale |
| area_km2 | 3 |
| image_map | Fakaofo map.png |
| image_map_caption | A map of Fakaofo Atoll and all its islands (map in Polish) |
| pushpin_map | Tokelau#Oceania#Pacific Ocean |
| total_islands | 43 |
| major_islands | Fale on Pacific Ocean |
| country | New Zealand |
| country_admin_divisions_title | Dependent territory |
| country_admin_divisions | Tokelau |
| country_leader_title | Faipule (leader) |
| country_leader_name | Esera Tuisano |
| country1_leader_title | Pulenuku (mayor) |
| country1_leader_name | Otinielu Tuumuli |
| languages | Tokelauan, English |
Fakaofo, formerly known as Bowditch Island, is a South Pacific Ocean atoll located in the Tokelau Group. The actual land area is only about 3 km2 (1.1 sq mi), consisting of islets on a coral reef surrounding a central lagoon of some 45 km2. According to the 2006 census 483 people officially live on Fakaofo (however just 370 were present at census night). Of those present 70% belong to the Congregational Church and 22% to the Catholic Church.
Geography and government

The main settlement on the island is Fale on Fale Islet, towards the western side of the atoll. Located two kilometres to the west of it is the relatively large Fenua Fala Islet, where a second settlement was established in 1960. Other islets in the group include Teafua, Nukumatau, Nukulakia, Fenua Loa, Saumatafanga, Motu Akea, Matangi, Lalo, and Mulifenua.
Fakaofo's Council of Elders is made up of citizens over the age of 60.
History

The island was sighted by the whale ship General Jackson in 1835 and named DeWolf Island after their ship's owner. The General Jackson returned in 1839.
The island was then named Bowditch (after Nathaniel Bowditch), this island was visited by the American ship which was part of the first American voyage of discovery – The United States Exploring Expedition (also known as "the Ex Ex" or "the Wilkes Expedition"), 1838–1842, United States Navy Lieutenant Charles Wilkes commanding. Nathaniel Bowditch (1773–1838) was a noted American navigator who wrote a famous two-volume encyclopedia of navigation and sailing that is still used and published today by the Defense Mapping Agency Topographic Center (DMATC). In Twenty Years Before The Mast, Charles Erskine wrote "The people found on this island had no knowledge of fire, which I believe, is the only instance of the kind on record."
In a village on the island is a coral slab monument personifying Tui Tokelau, a god once worshiped in the islands.
In 1889, Fakaofu and several other Tokelauan islands were claimed by Great Britain as part of the Union Islands. In 1916, the Union Islands were annexed to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands colony and then, in 1925, reassigned to the Dominion of New Zealand under the administration of Territory of Western Samoa. Unlike Atafu and Nukunono, no U.S. claims under the Guano Island Act were ever made on Fakaofu. Despite this, in 1979, as part of the Treaty of Tokehega, the U.S. formally renounced its prior claim on all Tokelauan islands now under New Zealand sovereignty, including Fakaofu, and a maritime boundary between Tokelau and American Samoa was established.
Climate crisis
Five-metre high concrete walls surround one of Fakaofo's atolls, that were constructed by residents to protect the islet from rising sea levels.
List of islands
- Mulifenua
- Vini
- Motu Pelu
- Avaono
- Talapeka
- Te Lafu
- Olokalaga
- Palea
- Manumea
- Ofuna
- Kavivave
- Heketai
- Motuloa
- Motu Akea
- Motu Iti
- Niue
- Fugalei
- Manuafe
- Otafi Loto
- Otafi Loa
- Kaivai
- Nukuheheke
- Nukamahaga Lahi
- Nukamahaga Iti
- Tenki
- Pagai
- Matakitoga
- Vaiaha
- Falatutahi
- Lapa
- Hugalu
- Logotaua
- Tafolaelo
- Otano
- Akegamutu
- Te Loto
- Kapiomotu
- Metu
- Hakea Mahaga
- Pukava
- Hakea
- Te Kau Afua o Humu
- Nukulakia
- Te Papaloa
- Pataliga
- Nukumatau
- Fale
- Te Afua tau Lua
- Fenua Fala
Notes
References
References
- (30 January 2023). "Results are in for the 2023 Tokelau national election". [[Radio New Zealand.
- "2006 Census Tabular Report".
- (1975). "The Great United States Exploring Expedition". University of California Press.
- Erskine, Charles. (1896). "Twenty Years Before The Mast". George W. Jacobs & Co.
- Skaggs, Jimmy M.. (1994). "The Great Guano Rush: Entrepreneurs and American Overseas Expansion". Palgrave Macmillan.
- Rogers, E.S.. (January 9, 1933). "The Sovereignty of Guano Islands in the Pacific Ocean". Department of State, Office of the Legal Advisor.
- [https://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/Volume%201643/v1643.pdf Treaty on the delimitation of the maritime boundary between Tokelau and the United States of America (with map)], United Nations Treaty Series, 1998.
- (2017-02-09). "See How Pacific Islanders Are Living With Climate Change".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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