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Nggela Islands

Island group in Solomon Islands


Summary

Island group in Solomon Islands

FieldValue
nameNggela Islands
native_nameNggela Sule and Nggela Pile
sobriquet
imageSolomon Isles.jpg
image_captionThe Nggela Islands from the air
image_mapNggelaSolomons.png
image_map_captionMap of the Nggela islands group
pushpin_mapSolomon Islands
coordinates
locationSouth Pacific Ocean
archipelagoSolomon Islands (archipelago)
total_islands4
major_islands2
area_km2
length_km
width_km
coastline_km
countrySolomon Islands
country_admin_divisions_titleProvince
country_admin_divisionsCentral Province
country_area_km2
country1_area_km2

The Nggela Islands or Ngella Islands, previously known as the Florida Islands, are a small island group in the Central Province of Solomon Islands, a sovereign state, since 1978, in the southwest Pacific Ocean. The name Florida Islands fell into disuse following Solomon Islands' independence in 1978.

The group is composed of four larger islands and about 50 smaller ones, many with white coral beaches. The four main islands are, Nggela Sule with Nggela Pile to its southeast, separated by the narrow Mboli Passage, Olevugha (also known as Mobokonimbeti, and previously Sandfly Is.) and Vatilau (also known as Buenavista) to the northwest. Smaller islands include: Anuha, (70 ha), south of Nggela Sule, Tulagi just off the southwest coast of Nggela Sule, now the capital of Central Province and previously the British administrative centre for the Solomons, Gavutu and Tanambogo.

History

The first recorded sighting by Europeans was by the Spanish expedition of Álvaro de Mendaña on 16 April 1568. More precisely the sighting was due to a local voyage done by a small boat, in the accounts the brigantine Santiago, commanded by Maestre de campo Pedro Ortega Valencia and having Hernán Gallego as pilot. They were who charted it as "Pascua Florida" (from the festival of that name) from where its present-day name "Florida" derives. Tulagi in Nggela Sule was the seat of the administration of the British Solomon Islands prior to the 1942 Japanese invasion in World War II.

The Nggela Islands group lies immediately north of the more famous island of Guadalcanal, the scene of the Guadalcanal Campaign during World War II; however, Nggela Sule itself was garrisoned by the Japanese in April 1942 in connection with their efforts to establish a seaplane base on neighbouring Gavutu. On 7 August of the same year, the United States 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment landed on the island to provide cover for the assault on the neighbouring Tulagi islet. Florida Island served as a small, secondary base of operations for the US and Australian and New Zealand war effort in the Pacific for the duration of the war. Following the Allied liberation of the island from the Japanese, it became the site of a US seaplane base. About 80 Japanese troops from Tulagi escaped to Florida Island and fought Marine and British Solomon Islands Protectorate Defence Force patrols for the next two months until being wiped out. The island subsequently served as a watering point for the US Navy, diverting water from an underground source on the island.

After World War II, the British administration moved to Honiara, Guadalcanal.

Fauna

The Florida naked-tailed rat – possibly extinct – was endemic to the Nggela Islands. The black rat was introduced.

Other animals include:

  • dark sheath-tailed bat
  • diadem leaf-nosed bat
  • dwarf flying fox
  • Geoffroy's rousette
  • great bent-winged bat
  • island tube-nosed fruit bat
  • long-tongued nectar bat
  • Solomon's naked-backed fruit bat
  • Woodford's fruit bat

References

References

  1. "Central Province, Solomon Islands {{!}} Solomon Airlines".
  2. Larson, Thomas J.. (2003). "Hell's Kitchen Tulagi 1942–1943". iUniverse.
  3. "A Guide to the United States' History of Recognition, Diplomatic, and Consular Relations, by Country, since 1776: The Solomon Islands". Office of The Historian, US Department of State.
  4. Macdonald, Ian. (2010-12-03). "Provincial Flags (Solomon Islands)".
  5. "Geographic Names: Sandfly Passage: Solomon Islands". National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency.
  6. Sharp, Andrew. (1960). "The Discovery of the Pacific Islands". Clarendon Press.
  7. Brand, Donald D.. (1967). "The Pacific Basin: A History of its Geographical Explorations". [[The American Geographical Society]].
Wikipedia Source

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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