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Tagula Island

Island in Papua New Guinea


Summary

Island in Papua New Guinea

FieldValue
nameVanatinai Island
native_name_langpng
sobriquetSudest Island / Tagula Island
image_nameVanatinai, Louisiade Archipelago.jpg
image_size250px
image_captionTagula Island as seen from space. Yeina Island is also visible to the north (top).
pushpin_mapPapua New Guinea
coordinates
locationOceania
archipelagoLouisiade Archipelago
waterbodySolomon Sea
total_islands1
major_islands
area_km2830
length_km63
width_km13
coastline_km
elevation_m806
highest_mountMount Riu
countryPapua New Guinea
country_admin_divisions_titleProvince
country_admin_divisionsMilne Bay
country_admin_divisions_title_1District
country_admin_divisions_1Samarai-Murua District
country_admin_divisions_title_2LLG
country_admin_divisions_2Yaleyamba Rural Local Level Government Area
country_admin_divisions_title_3Island Group
country_admin_divisions_3Vanatinai Islands
country_largest_cityRambuso
country_largest_city_population~500
population3628
population_as_of2014
density_km24.37
ethnic_groupsPapuans, Austronesians, Melanesians
timezone1AEST
utc_offset1+10
website
iso_code_typeISO code
iso_codePG-MBA

Vanatinai Island (also called Tagula and Sudest, for the names of the extreme capes of the island) is a volcanic island in the southeast of the Louisiade Archipelago within Milne Bay Province of Papua New Guinea. The reef-fringed island is approximately 360 km southeast of New Guinea and 30 km south of Misima. With an area of 830 km2, it is the largest island of the archipelago. Tagula town, the main settlement, is located on the northwest coast. The population was 3,628 . The principal export is copra.

Geography

The island is 63 km long, stretching from Cape Tagula to Cape Sudest, and up to 13 km wide. A wooded mountain range runs through the length of the island, with the summit, Mount Riu (806 m) near the center. The most important peaks of the range are, from west to east:

  • Mount Madau (269 m)
  • Mount Gangulua (439 m)
  • Mount Riu (formerly called Mount Rattlesnake) (806 m)
  • Mount Imau (485 m)
  • Mount Arumbi (350 m)

Climate

Most of Tagula island has a tropical rainforest climate (Af) but the main settlement of Tagula, located in the northernmost and driest part of the island, has a tropical monsoon climate (Am).

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History

The first recorded sighting by Europeans of Vanatinai Island was by the Spanish expedition of Luís Vaez de Torres on 14 July 1606.

The island was the site of a gold rush that began in 1888 and peaked in 1889. Gold was found in nearly all of the island's water courses.

Rambuso Village is located on the north coast of the eastern part of the island, where Rambuso Creek flows into the Pacific Ocean. Entry through the reef to the harbour is deep and easy to see during daylight. Many visiting yachts and local trading boats use this protected anchorage. In 2010 the villagers and several visiting yachties rebuilt the wharf and causeway. The villagers new slogan is "Rambuso Creek the gateway to Sudest". The new wharf helped Rambuso develop and now the busy town has some 500 citizens.

Transportation

The island has an airport, code (IATA-Code „TGL“) for public transport, near Tagula village.

Biodiversity

Several species are endemic to the island, including the aptly named Tagula white-eye, Tagula honeyeater and Tagula butcherbird. Among frogs, Cophixalus tagulensis is only known from Tagula.

References

References

  1. [https://books.google.com/books?id=TnHGVP_BfgUC&pg=PA168 Prostar Sailing Directions 2004 New Guinea Enroute], p. 168
  2. [http://www.pngimr.org.pg/png_med_journal/Empowerment%20-%20Sep_Dec%202000.pdf LLG map] {{Webarchive. link. (2010-08-11)
  3. Hilder, Brett ''The voyage of Torres'', Brisbane, 1980, pp.XXIV,24
  4. Sharp, Andrew ''The discovery of the Pacific Islands'' Oxford, 1960, p.66.
  5. Brand, Donald D. ''The Pacific Basin: A History of its Geographical Explorations'' The American Geographical Society, New York, 1967, p.137.
  6. Pacific Islands Yearbook, 13th ed., Sydney, New York 1972
  7. Frost, Darrel R.. (2016). "''Cophixalus tagulensis'' Zweifel, 1963". American Museum of Natural History.
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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