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Micronesia

Micronesia (UK: /ˌmkrəˈnziə/, US: /-ˈnʒə/)[1] is a subregion of Oceania, consisting of about 2,000 small islands in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean. It has a close shared cultural history with three other island regions: Maritime Southeast Asia to the west, Polynesia to the east, and Melanesia to the south—as well as with the wider community of Austronesian peoples.

Subregions (Melanesia, Micronesia, Polynesia and Australasia), as well as sovereign and dependent islands of Oceania
Micronesia is one of three major cultural areas of the Pacific Ocean islands, along with Melanesia and Polynesia.
Outline of sovereign (dark orange) and dependent islands (bright orange)

The region has a tropical marine climate and is part of the Oceanian realm. It includes four main archipelagos—the Caroline Islands, the Gilbert Islands, the Mariana Islands, and the Marshall Islands — as well as numerous islands that are not part of any archipelago.

Political control of areas within Micronesia varies depending on the island, and is distributed among six sovereign nations. Some of the Caroline Islands are part of the Republic of Palau and some are part of the Federated States of Micronesia (often shortened to "FSM" or "Micronesia"—not to be confused with the identical name for the overall region). The Gilbert Islands (along with the Phoenix Islands and the Line Islands in Polynesia) comprise the Republic of Kiribati. The Mariana Islands are affiliated with the United States; some of them belong to the U.S. Territory of Guam and the rest belong to the U.S. Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. The island of Nauru is its own sovereign nation. The Marshall Islands all belong to the Republic of the Marshall Islands. The sovereignty of Wake Island is contested: it is claimed both by the United States and by the Republic of the Marshall Islands. The United States has actual possession of Wake Island, which is under the immediate administration of the United States Air Force.

Notwithstanding the fact that the notion of "Micronesia" has been quite well established since 1832 and has been used ever since, by most popular works, this set does not correspond to any geomorphological, archaeological, linguistic, ethnic or cultural unity, but on the contrary represents a disparate ensemble, with no real deep unity. In fact, "Micronesian people" doesn't exist as a subset of the sea-migrating Austronesian people, who may also include the Polynesian people and the hypothetical Australo-Melanesian or "Melanesian people".[2] Human settlement of Micronesia began several millennia ago.[3] Based on the current scientific consensus, the Austronesian peoples originated from a prehistoric seaborne migration, known as the Austronesian expansion, from pre-Han Formosa, at around 3000 to 1500 BCE. Austronesians reached the northernmost Philippines, specifically the Batanes Islands, by around 2200 BCE. Austronesians were the first people to invent oceangoing sailing technologies (notably catamarans, outrigger boats, lashed-lug boat building, and the crab claw sail), which enabled their rapid dispersal into the islands of the Indo-Pacific.[4][5][6] From 2000 BCE they assimilated (or were assimilated by) the earlier populations on the islands in their migration pathway.[7][8][9][10][11]

The earliest known contact of Europeans with Micronesia was in 1521, when Magellan expedition landed in the Marianas. Jules Dumont d'Urville is usually credited with coining the term "Micronesia" in 1832, but in fact, Louis Domeny de Rienzi [fr] used this term a year earlier.[12][13]

Geography edit

Micronesia is a region in Oceania that includes approximately 2100 islands, with a total land area of 2,700 km2 (1,000 sq mi), the largest of which is Guam, which covers 582 km2 (225 sq mi). The total ocean area within the perimeter of the islands is 7,400,000 km2 (2,900,000 sq mi).[14]

There are four main island groups in Micronesia:

This does not include the separate island nation of Nauru, along with other distinctly separate islands and smaller island groups.

Caroline Islands edit

The Caroline Islands are a widely scattered archipelago consisting of about 500 small coral islands, north of New Guinea and east of the Philippines. The Carolines consist of two nations: the Federated States of Micronesia, consisting of approximately 600 islands on the eastern side of the chain with Kosrae being the most eastern; and Palau consisting of 250 islands on the western side.

Gilbert Islands edit

The Gilbert Islands are a chain of sixteen atolls and coral islands, arranged in an approximate north-to-south line. In a geographical sense, the equator serves as the dividing line between the northern Gilbert Islands and the southern Gilbert Islands. The Republic of Kiribati contains all of the Gilberts, including the island of Tarawa, the site of the country's capital.

Mariana Islands edit

 
Mount Marpi in Saipan.

The Mariana Islands are an arc-shaped archipelago made up by the summits of fifteen volcanic mountains. The island chain arises as a result of the western edge of the Pacific Plate moving westward and plunging downward below the Mariana plate, a region that is the most volcanically active convergent plate boundary on Earth. The Marianas were politically divided in 1898, when the United States acquired title to Guam under the Treaty of Paris, 1898, which ended the Spanish–American War. Spain then sold the remaining northerly islands to Germany in 1899. Germany lost all of her colonies at the end of World War I and the Northern Mariana Islands became a League of Nations Mandate, with Japan as the mandatory. After World War II, the islands were transferred into the United Nations Trust Territory System, with the United States as Trustee. In 1976, the Northern Mariana Islands and the United States entered into a covenant of political union under which commonwealth status was granted the Northern Mariana Islands and its residents received United States citizenship.

Marshall Islands edit

 
Beach scenery at Laura, Majuro, Marshall Islands

The Marshall Islands are located north of Nauru and Kiribati, east of the Federated States of Micronesia, and south of the U.S. territory of Wake Island. The islands consist of 29 low-lying atolls and 5 isolated islands,[15] comprising 1,156 individual islands and islets. The atolls and islands form two groups: the Ratak Chain and the Ralik Chain (meaning "sunrise" and "sunset" chains). All the islands in the chain are part of the Republic of the Marshall Islands, a presidential republic in free association with the United States. Having few natural resources, the islands' wealth is based on a service economy, as well as some fishing and agriculture. Of the 29 atolls, 24 of them are inhabited.

Bikini Atoll is an atoll in the Marshall Islands. There are 23 islands in the Bikini Atoll. The islands of Bokonijien, Aerokojlol and Nam were vaporized during nuclear tests that occurred there.[16] The islands are composed of low coral limestone and sand.[citation needed][17] The average elevation is only about 2.1 metres (7 ft) above low tide level.

Nauru edit

Nauru is an oval-shaped island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, 42 km (26 mi) south of the Equator, listed as the world's smallest republic, covering just 21 km2 (8 sq mi).[19] With 12,511 residents, it is the third least-populated country, after Vatican City and Tuvalu. The island is surrounded by a coral reef, which is exposed at low tide and dotted with pinnacles.[20] The presence of the reef has prevented the establishment of a seaport, although channels in the reef allow small boats access to the island.[21] A fertile coastal strip 150 to 300 m (490 to 980 ft) wide lies inland from the beach.[20]

Wake Island edit

Wake Island is a coral atoll with a coastline of 19 km (12 mi) just north of the Marshall Islands. It is an unorganized, unincorporated territory of the United States. Access to the island is restricted and all activities on the island are managed by the United States Air Force. While geographically adjacent, it is not ethnoculturally part of Micronesia, due to its historical lack of human inhabitation.[citation needed] Micronesians may have possibly visited Wake Island in prehistoric times to harvest fish, but there is nothing to suggest any kind of settlement.[22]

Geology edit

The majority of the islands in the area are part of a coral atoll. Coral atolls begin as coral reefs that grow on the slopes of a central volcano. When the volcano sinks back down into the sea, the coral continues to grow, keeping the reef at or above water level. One exception is Pohnpei in the Federated States of Micronesia, which still has the central volcano and coral reefs around it.

Fauna edit

The Yap Islands host a number of endemic bird species, including the Yap monarch and the Olive white-eye, in addition to four other restricted-range bird species.[23] The endangered Yap flying-fox, though often considered a subspecies of the Pelew flying fox or the Mariana fruit bat, is also endemic to Yap.[23]

 
Spinner dolphins

Climate edit

The region has a tropical marine climate moderated by seasonal northeast trade winds. There is little seasonal temperature variation. The dry season runs from December or January to June and the rainy season from July to November or December. Because of the location of some islands, the rainy season can sometimes include typhoons.

History edit

Prehistory edit

 
Chronological dispersal of Austronesian peoples across the Indo-Pacific[24]

The Northern Mariana Islands were the first islands in Oceania colonized by the Austronesian peoples. They were settled by the voyagers who sailed eastwards from the Philippines in approximately 1500 BCE. These populations gradually moved southwards until they reached the Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands by 1300 BCE and reconnected with the Lapita culture of the southeast migration branch of Austronesians moving through coastal New Guinea and Island Melanesia. By 1200 BCE, they again began crossing open seas beyond inter-island visibility, reaching Vanuatu, Fiji, and New Caledonia; before continuing eastwards to become the ancestors of the Polynesian people.[24][25][26]

Further migrations by other Austronesians also followed, likely from Sulawesi, settling Palau and Yap by around 1000 BCE. The details of this colonization, however, are not very well known.[24][25][27] In 200 BCE, a loosely connected group of Lapita colonists from Island Melanesia also migrated back northwards, settling the islands of eastern Micronesia almost simultaneously. This region became the center of another wave of migrations radiating outwards, reconnecting them with other settled islands in western Micronesia.[24][25]

Around 800 CE, a second wave of migrants from Southeast Asia arrived in the Marianas, beginning what is now known as the Latte period. These new settlers built large structures with distinctive capped stone pillars known as haligi. They also reintroduced rice (which did not survive earlier voyages), making the Northern Marianas the only islands in Oceania where rice was grown prior to European contact. However, it was considered a high-status crop and only used in rituals. It did not become a staple until after Spanish colonization.[26][28][29]

Construction of Nan Madol, a megalithic complex made from basalt lava logs in Pohnpei, began in around 1180 CE. This was followed by the construction of the Leluh complex in Kosrae in around 1200.[25][30][31]

Early European contact edit

 
Manila Galleon in the Marianas and Carolinas, c. 1590 Boxer Codex

The earliest known contact with Europeans occurred in 1521, when a Spanish expedition under Ferdinand Magellan reached the Marianas.[32] This contact is recorded in Antonio Pigafetta's chronicle of Magellan's voyage, in which he recounts that the Chamorro people had no apparent knowledge of people outside of their island group.[33] A Portuguese account of the same voyage suggests that the Chamorro people who greeted the travellers did so "without any shyness as if they were good acquaintances".[34]

Further contact was made during the sixteenth century, although often initial encounters were very brief. Documents relating to the 1525 voyage of Diogo da Rocha suggest that he made the first European contact with inhabitants of the Caroline Islands, possibly staying on the Ulithi atoll for four months and encountering Yap. Marshall Islanders were encountered by the expedition of Spanish navigator Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón in 1529.[35] Other contact with the Yap islands occurred in 1625.[36]

Colonisation and conversion edit

In the early 17th century Spain colonized Guam, the Northern Marianas and the Caroline Islands (what would later become the Federated States of Micronesia and the Republic of Palau), creating the Spanish East Indies, which was governed from the Spanish Philippines.

In 1819, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions—a Protestant group—brought their Puritan ways to Polynesia. Soon after, the Hawaiian Missionary Society was founded and sent missionaries into Micronesia. Conversion was not met with as much opposition, as the local religions were less developed (at least according to Western ethnographic accounts). In contrast, it took until the end of the 19th to the beginning of the 20th centuries for missionaries to fully convert the inhabitants of Melanesia; however, a comparison of the cultural contrast must take into account the fact that Melanesia has always had deadly strains of malaria present in various degrees and distributions throughout its history (see De Rays Expedition) and up to the present; conversely, Micronesia does not have—and never seems to have had—any malarial mosquitos nor pathogens on any of its islands in the past.[37]

German–Spanish Treaty of 1899 edit

 
German New Guinea before and after the German-Spanish treaty of 1899

In the Spanish–American War, Spain lost many of its remaining colonies. In the Pacific, the United States took possession of the Spanish Philippines and Guam. On 17 January 1899, the United States also took possession of unclaimed and uninhabited Wake Island. This left Spain with the remainder of the Spanish East Indies, about 6,000 tiny islands that were sparsely populated and not very productive. These islands were ungovernable after the loss of the administrative center of Manila and indefensible after the loss of two Spanish fleets in the war. The Spanish government therefore decided to sell the remaining islands to a new colonial power: the German Empire.

The treaty, which was signed by Spanish Prime Minister Francisco Silvela on 12 February 1899, transferred the Caroline Islands (Kosrae in the east to Palau in the west), the Mariana Islands, and other possessions to Germany. Under German control, the islands became a protectorate and were administered from German New Guinea. Nauru had already been annexed and claimed as a colony by Germany in 1888.

20th century edit

 
Map from 1961 of the US Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, formerly Japan's South Seas Mandate.

In the early 20th century, the islands of Micronesia were divided between three foreign powers:

During World War I, Germany's Pacific island territories were seized and became League of Nations mandates in 1923. Nauru became an Australian mandate, while Germany's other territories in Micronesia were given as a mandate to Japan and were named the South Seas Mandate. During World War II, Nauru and Ocean Island were occupied by Japanese troops, with also an occupation of some of the Gilbert Islands and were bypassed by the Allied advance across the Pacific. Following Japan's defeat in World War II its mandate became a United Nations Trusteeship administered by the United States as the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.[38] Nauru became independent in 1968.

21st century edit

Today, most of Micronesia are independent states, except for the U.S. Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam and Wake Island, which are U.S. territories.

States and dependencies edit

Country Population (July 2021 estimate)[39][40] Area (km2) Population density (/km2) Urban population Life expectancy Literacy rate Official language(s) Main religion(s) Ethnic groups
  Federated States of Micronesia 113,131 702 158 22% 71.2 89% English Roman Catholic 50%, Protestant 47%, others 3% Chuukese 48.8%, Pohnpeian 24.2%, Kosraean 6.2%, Yapese 5.2%, Yap outer islands 4.5%, Asian 1.8%, Polynesian 1.5%, other 7.8%
  Guam (United States) 170,534 540 299 93% 78.2 99% English 38.3%, Chamorro 22.2%[41] Roman Catholic 85%, Buddhism 3.6, other religion 11.4% Chamorro 37.1%, Filipino 26.3%, other Pacific islander 11.3%, white 6.9%, other 8.6%, mixed 9.8%
  Kiribati 128,874 811 152 44% 64.0 92% English, Gilbertese (de facto) Roman Catholic 55%, Protestant 36% Micronesian 98.8%
  Marshall Islands 42,050 181 293 71% 71.5 93.7% Marshallese 98.2%, English Protestant 54.8%, other Christian 40.6% Marshallese 92.1%, mixed Marshallese 5.9%, other 2%
  Nauru 12,511 21 480 100% 65.0 99%[42] Nauruan[f], English (de facto) Nauru Congregational Church 35.4%, Roman Catholic 33.2%, Nauru Independent Church (Protestant)[43] 10.4%, Baha'i faith 10%, Buddhism 9% Nauruan 58%, other Pacific Islander 26%, Chinese 8%, European 8%
  Northern Mariana Islands (United States) 49,481 464 113 91% 76.9 97% English, Chamorro and Carolinian[44] Roman Catholic, Buddhism 10.6% Asian 56.3%, Pacific islander 36.3%, White 1.8%, other 0.8%, mixed 4.8%
  Palau 18,024 459 47 81% 71.5 92% Palauan 64.7%[d], English Roman Catholic 41.6%, Protestant 23.3% Palauan 69.9%, Filipino 15.3%, Chinese 4.9%, other Asian 2.4%, white 1.9%, Carolinian 1.4%, other Micronesian 1.1%, other 3.2%
Total 534,606 3,178

Politics edit

The Pacific Community (SPC) is a regional intergovernmental organisation whose membership includes both nations and territories in the Pacific Ocean and their metropolitan powers.

Economy edit

 
A proportional representation of Micronesia exports, 2019

Nationally, the primary income is the sale of fishing rights to foreign nations that harvest tuna using huge purse seiners. A few Japanese long liners still ply the waters. The crews aboard fishing fleets contribute little to the local economy since their ships typically set sail loaded with stores and provisions that are cheaper than local goods. Additional money comes in from government grants, mostly from the United States and the $150 million the US paid into a trust fund for reparations of residents of Bikini Atoll that had to move after nuclear testing. Few mineral deposits worth exploiting exist, except for some high-grade phosphate, especially on Nauru.

Most residents of Micronesia can freely move to and work within, the United States. Relatives working in the US that send money home to relatives represent the primary source of individual income. Additional individual income comes mainly from government jobs and work within shops and restaurants.

The tourist industry consists mainly of scuba divers that come to see the coral reefs, do wall dives and visit sunken ships from WWII. Major stops for scuba divers in approximate order are Palau, Chuuk, Yap and Pohnpei. Some private yacht owners visit the area for months or years at a time. However, they tend to stay mainly at ports of entry and are too few in number to be counted as a major source of income.

Copra production used to be a more significant source of income, however, world prices have dropped in part to large palm plantations that are now planted in places like Borneo.

Demographics edit

The people today form many ethnicities, but all are descended from and belong to the Micronesian culture.[45]

Because of this mixture of descent, many of the ethnicities of Micronesia feel closer to some groups in Melanesia, or the Philippines. A good example of this are the Yapese people who are related to Austronesian tribes in the northern Philippines.[46] Genetics also show a significant number of Micronesian have Japanese paternal ancestry: 9.5% of males from Micronesia as well as 0.2% in East Timor carry the Haplogroup D-M55.[47]

There are also substantial Asian communities found across the region, most notably in the Northern Mariana Islands where they form the majority and smaller communities of Europeans who have migrated from the United States or are descendants of settlers during European colonial rule in Micronesia.

Though they are all geographically part of the same region, they all have very different colonial histories. The US-administered areas of Micronesia have a unique experience that sets them apart from the rest of the Pacific. Micronesia has great economic dependency on its former or current motherlands, something only comparable to the French Pacific. Sometimes, the term American Micronesia is used to acknowledge the difference in cultural heritage.[48]

A 2011 survey found that 93.1% of Micronesian are Christians;[49] a survey in 2022 showed that 99% were Christian.[50]

Indigenous groups edit

Micronesians edit

Carolinian people edit

It is thought that ancestors of the Carolinian people may have originally immigrated from the Asian mainland and Indonesia to Micronesia around 2,000 years ago. Their primary language is Carolinian, called Refaluwasch by native speakers, which has a total of about 5,700 speakers. The Carolinians have a matriarchal society in which respect is a very important factor in their daily lives, especially toward the matriarchs. Most Carolinians are of the Roman Catholic faith.

The immigration of Carolinians to Saipan began in the early 19th century, after the Spanish reduced the local population of Chamorro natives to just 3,700. They began to immigrate mostly sailing from small canoes from other islands, which a typhoon previously devastated. The Carolinians have a much darker complexion than the native Chamorros.

Chamorro people edit
 
Chamorro people in 1915

The Chamorro people are the indigenous peoples of the Mariana Islands, which are politically divided between the United States territory of Guam and the United States Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Micronesia. The Chamorro are commonly believed to have come from Southeast Asia at around 2000 BC. They are most closely related to other Austronesian natives to the west in the Philippines and Taiwan, as well as the Carolines to the south.

The Chamorro language is included in the Malayo-Polynesian subgroup of the Austronesian family. Because Guam was colonized by Spain for over 300 years, many words derive from the Spanish language. The traditional Chamorro number system was replaced by Spanish numbers.[51]

Chuukese people edit

The Chuukese people are an ethnic group in Oceania. They constitute 48% of the population of the Federated States of Micronesia. Their language is Chuukese. The home atoll of Chuuk is also known by the former name Truk.

Nauruan people edit

The Nauruan people are an ethnicity inhabiting the Pacific island of Nauru. They are most likely a blend of other Pacific peoples.[52]

The origin of the Nauruan people has not yet been finally determined. It can possibly be explained by the last Malayo-Pacific human migration (c. 1200). It was probably seafaring or shipwrecked Polynesians or Melanesians that established themselves in Nauru because there was not already an indigenous people present, whereas the Micronesians were already crossed with the Melanesians in this area.

Kaping people edit

The roughly 3000 residents of the Federated States of Micronesia that reside in Kapingamarangi, nicknamed 'Kapings', live in one of the most remote locations in both Micronesia and the world at large. Their home atoll is almost 800 km (500 mi) from the nearest point of immigration.[citation needed] There are no regular flights; the only reliable way to legally visit is to travel on a high-speed sailboat to the atoll. Owing to this difficulty, few sailors travelling the Pacific attempt to visit. The local language is the Kapingamarangi language. The children typically attend high school on Pohnpei where they stay with relatives in an enclave that is almost exclusively made up of Kapings.[citation needed]

Immigrant groups edit

East, South, and Southeast Asian people edit

There are large East, South and Southeast Asian communities found across certain Micronesian countries that are either immigrants, foreign workers or descendants of either one, most migrated to the islands during the 1800s and 1900s.[53] According to the 2010 census results Guam was 26.3% Filipino, 2.2% Korean, 1.6% Chinese and 2% other Asian.[54] The 2010 census showed the Northern Mariana Islands was 50% Asian of which 35.3% were Filipino, 6.8% Chinese, 4.2% Korean and 3.7% other Asian (mainly Japanese, Bangladeshi and Thai).[55] The 2010 census for the Federated States of Micronesia showed 1.4% were Asian while statistics for Nauru showed 8% of Nauruans were Chinese.[56][57] The 2005 census results for Palau showed 16.3% were Filipino, 1.6% Chinese, 1.6% Vietnamese and 3.4% other Asian (mostly Bangladeshi, Japanese and Korean).[58]

Japanese rule in Micronesia also led to Japanese people settling the islands and marrying native spouses. Kessai Note, the former president of the Marshall Islands has partial Japanese ancestry by way of his paternal grandfather, and Emanuel Mori, the former president of the Federated States of Micronesia, is descended from one of the first settlers from Japan, Koben Mori.

A significant number of Micronesians were shown to have paternal genetic relations with Japanese Haplogroup D-M55. Genetic testing found that 9.5% of males from Micronesia as well as 0.2% in East Timor[59] carry what is believed to reflect recent admixture from Japan. That is, D-M116.1 (D1b1) is generally believed to be a primary subclade of D-M64.1 (D1b), possibly as a result of the Japanese military occupation of Southeast Asia during World War II.[47]

European people edit

The 2010 census results of Guam showed 7.1% were white while the 2005 census for Palau showed 8% were European. Smaller numbers at 1.9% in Palau and 1.8% in the Northern Mariana Islands were recorded as "white". In conjunction to the European communities there are large amounts of mixed Micronesians, some of which have European ancestry.

 
Languages of Micronesia.

Languages edit

The largest group of languages spoken in Micronesia are the Micronesian languages. They are in the family of Oceanic languages, part of the Austronesian language group. They descended from the Proto-Oceanic, which in turn descended via Proto-Malayo-Polynesian from Proto-Austronesian. The languages in the Micronesian family are Marshallese, Gilbertese, Kosraean, Nauruan, as well as a large sub-family called the Chuukic–Pohnpeic languages containing 11 languages.

On the eastern edge of the Federated States of Micronesia, the languages Nukuoro and Kapingamarangi represent an extreme westward extension of the Polynesian branch of Oceanic.

Finally, there are two Malayo-Polynesian languages spoken in Micronesia that do not belong to the Oceanic languages: Chamorro in the Mariana Islands and Palauan in Palau.

Culture edit

Animals and food edit

By the time Western contact occurred, although Palau did not have dogs, they did have fowls and possibly pigs. Pigs are not native to Micronesia. Fruit bats are native to Palau, but other mammals are rare. Reptiles are numerous and both mollusks and fish are an important food source.[60] The people of Palau, the Marianas and Yap often chew betel nuts seasoned with lime and pepper leaf. Western Micronesia was unaware of the ceremonial drink, which was called saka on Kosrae and sakau on Pohnpei.[27]

Architecture edit

The book Prehistoric Architecture in Micronesia argues that the most prolific pre-colonial Micronesian architecture is: "Palau's monumental sculpted hills, megalithic stone carvings and elaborately decorated structure of wood placed on piers above elevated stone platforms".[61] The archeological traditions of the Yapese people remained relatively unchanged even after the first European contact with the region during Magellan's 1520s circumnavigation of the globe.[27]

Art edit

Micronesia's artistic tradition has developed from the Lapita culture. Among the most prominent works of the region is the megalithic floating city of Nan Madol. The city began in 1200 CE and was still being built when European explorers begin to arrive around 1600. The city, however, had declined by around 1800 along with the Saudeleur dynasty and was completely abandoned by the 1820s. During the 19th century, the region was divided between the colonial powers, but art continued to thrive. Wood-carving, particularly by men, flourished in the region, resulted in richly decorated ceremonial houses in Belau, stylized bowls, canoe ornaments, ceremonial vessels and sometimes sculptured figures. Women created textiles and ornaments such as bracelets and headbands. Stylistically, traditional Micronesian art is streamlined and of a practical simplicity to its function, but is typically finished to a high standard of quality. [62] This was mostly to make the best possible use of what few natural materials they had available to them.[63]

The first half of the 20th century saw a downturn in Micronesia's cultural integrity and a strong foreign influence from both western and Japanese Imperialist powers. A number of historical artistic traditions, especially sculpture, ceased to be practiced, although other art forms continued, including traditional architecture and weaving. Independence from colonial powers in the second half of the century resulted in a renewed interest in, and respect for, traditional arts. A notable movement of contemporary art also appeared in Micronesia towards the end of the 20th century.[64]

Cuisine edit

The cuisine of the Mariana Islands is tropical in nature, including such dishes as Kelaguen as well as many others.

Marshallese cuisine comprises the fare and foodways of the Marshall Islands, and includes local foods such as breadfruit, taro root, pandanus and seafood, among others.

Palauan cuisine includes local foods such as cassava, taro, yam, potato, fish and pork. Western cuisine is favored among young Palauans.

Education edit

The educational systems in the nations of Micronesia vary depending on the country and there are several higher-level educational institutions.

The CariPac consists of institutions of higher education in Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands and Palau. The Agricultural Development in the American Pacific is a partnership of the University of Hawaii, American Samoa Community College, College of Micronesia, Northern Marianas College and the University of Guam.

In the Federated States of Micronesia, education is required for citizens aged 6 to 13,[65] and is important to their economy.[66] The literacy rate for citizens aged 15 to 24 is 98.8%.[67] The College of Micronesia-FSM has a campus in each of the four states with its national campus in the capital city of Palikir, Pohnpei. The COM-FSM system also includes the Fisheries and Maritime Institute (FMI) on the Yap islands.[68][69]

The public education in Guam is organized by the Guam Department of Education. Guam also has several educational institutions, such as University of Guam, Pacific Islands University and Guam Community College, There is also the Guam Public Library System and the Umatac Outdoor Library.

Weriyeng[70] is one of the last two schools of traditional navigation found in the central Caroline Islands in Micronesia, the other being Fanur.[71]

The Northern Marianas College is a two-year community college located in the United States Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI).

The College of the Marshall Islands is a community college in the Marshall Islands.

Law edit

Understanding Law in Micronesia notes that The Federated States of Micronesia's laws and legal institutions are "uninterestingly similar to [those of Western countries]". However, it explains that "law in Micronesia is an extraordinary flux and flow of contrasting thought and meaning, inside and outside the legal system". It says that a knee-jerk reaction would be that law is disarrayed in the region and that improvement is required, but argues that the failure is "one endemic to the nature of law or to the ideological views we hold about law".[72]

The Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, a United Nations Trusteeship administered by the United States, borrowed heavily from United States law in establishing the Trust Territory Code during the Law and Development movement of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Many of those provisions were adopted by the new Congress of the Federated States of Micronesia when the Federated States of Micronesia became self-governing in 1979.[72]

Media edit

In September 2007, journalists in the region founded the Micronesian Media Association.[73]

Music and dance edit

Micronesian music is influential to those living in the Micronesian islands.[74] Some of the music is based around mythology and ancient Micronesian rituals. It covers a range of styles from traditional songs, handed down through generations, to contemporary music.

Traditional beliefs suggest that the music can be presented to people in dreams and trances, rather than being written by composers themselves. Micronesian folk music is, like Polynesian music, primarily vocal-based.

In the Marshall Islands, the roro is a kind of traditional chant, usually about ancient legends and performed to give guidance during navigation and strength for mothers in labour. Modern bands have blended the unique songs of each island in the country with modern music. Though drums are not generally common in Micronesian music, one-sided hourglass-shaped drums are a major part of Marshallese music.[75] There is a traditional Marshallese dance called beet, which is influenced by Spanish folk dances; in it, men and women side-step in parallel lines. There is a kind of stick dance performed by the Jobwa, nowadays only for very special occasions.

Popular music, both from Micronesia and from other areas of the world, is played on radio stations in Micronesia.[74]

Sports edit

The region is home to the Micronesian Games.[76] This quadrennial international multi-sport event involves all of Micronesia's countries and territories except Wake Island.

Nauru has two national sports, weightlifting and Australian rules football.[77] According to 2007 Australian Football League International Census figures, there are around 180 players in the Nauru senior competition and 500 players in the junior competition,[78] representing a participation rate of over 30% overall for the country.

Religion and mythology edit

The predominant religion in Micronesia is Christianity (93%)[49] According to 2023 government statistics, 55% of the population were Catholic and 42% were Protestant, while 2% belonged to other Christian denominations. Other religious groups exist including Baha’is, Buddhists, Hindus, Jews, and Muslims.[50]

Micronesian mythology comprises the traditional belief systems of the people of Micronesia. There is no single belief system in the islands of Micronesia, as each island region has its own mythological beings. It was noted that 2.7% of the population followed folk religions in 2014.[50]

There are several significant figures and myths in the Federated States of Micronesia, Nauruan and Kiribati traditions.

Shinto shrines dating from during or after World War II exist in some Micronesian countries.[79]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ from Ancient Greek: μικρός mikrós "small" and νῆσος nêsos "island"
  2. ^ Patrick Vinton Kirch, On the Road of the Winds: an Archeological History of the Pacific Islands before European Contact, Berkeley, University of California Press, 2000:5.
  3. ^ Kirch 2001, p. 167.
  4. ^ Doran, Edwin B. (1981). Wangka: Austronesian Canoe Origins. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 9780890961070.
  5. ^ Dierking, Gary (2007). Building Outrigger Sailing Canoes: Modern Construction Methods for Three Fast, Beautiful Boats. International Marine/McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780071594561.
  6. ^ Horridge, Adrian (1986). "The Evolution of Pacific Canoe Rigs". The Journal of Pacific History. 21 (2): 83–89. doi:10.1080/00223348608572530. JSTOR 25168892.
  7. ^ Bellwood, Peter (1988). "A Hypothesis for Austronesian Origins" (PDF). Asian Perspectives. 26 (1): 107–117. (PDF) from the original on 1 May 2019. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  8. ^ Bellwood, Peter (1991). "The Austronesian Dispersal and the Origin of Languages". Scientific American. 265 (1): 88–93. Bibcode:1991SciAm.265a..88B. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0791-88. JSTOR 24936983.
  9. ^ Hill, Adrian V.S.; Serjeantson, Susan W., eds. (1989). The Colonization of the Pacific: A Genetic Trail. Research Monographs on Human Population Biology No. 7. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198576952.
  10. ^ Bellwood P, Fox JJ, Tryon D (2006). The Austronesians: Historical and Comparative Perspectives. Australian National University Press. ISBN 9781920942854. from the original on 2 April 2020. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  11. ^ Blench, Roger (2012). "Almost Everything You Believed about the Austronesians Isn't True" (PDF). In Tjoa-Bonatz, Mai Lin; Reinecke, Andreas; Bonatz, Dominik (eds.). Crossing Borders. National University of Singapore Press. pp. 128–148. ISBN 9789971696429. (PDF) from the original on 30 December 2019. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  12. ^ Rainbird 2004, p. 6.
  13. ^ « Although based on a superficial understanding of the Pacific islanders, Dumont d'Urville's tripartite classification stuck. Indeed, these categories — Polynesians, Micronesians, Melanesians — became so deeply entrenched in Western anthropological thought that it is difficult even now to break out the mould in which they entrap us (Thomas, 1989). Such labels provide handy geographical referents, yet they mislead us greatly if we take them to be meaningful segments of cultural history. Only Polynesia has stood the tests of time and increased knowledge, as a category with historical significance », Patrick Vinton Kirch, On the Road of the Winds : an Archeological History of the Pacific Islands before European Contact, Berkeley, University of California Press, 2000 : 5.
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General bibliography edit

  • Kirch, Patrick Vinton (2001). On the Road of the Winds: An Archaeological History of the Pacific Islands Before European Contact. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-92896-1.
  • Lal, Brij V.; Fortune, Kate (2000). The Pacific Islands: An Encyclopedia. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-2265-1.
  • Morgan, William N. (1988). Prehistoric Architecture in Micronesia. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780292786219.
  • Rainbird, Paul (2004). The Archaeology of Micronesia. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-65630-6.

Further reading edit

  • Goetzfridt, Nicholas J.; Peacock, Karen M. (2002). Micronesian Histories: An Analytical Bibliography and Guide to Interpretations. Westport, Connecticut, USA: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0313291039.

External links edit

micronesia, this, article, about, geographical, region, sovereign, state, federated, states, confused, with, macaronesia, indonesia, subregion, oceania, consisting, about, small, islands, northwestern, pacific, ocean, close, shared, cultural, history, with, th. This article is about the geographical region of Micronesia For the sovereign state see Federated States of Micronesia Not to be confused with Macaronesia or Indonesia Micronesia UK ˌ m aɪ k r e ˈ n iː z i e US ˈ n iː ʒ e 1 is a subregion of Oceania consisting of about 2 000 small islands in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean It has a close shared cultural history with three other island regions Maritime Southeast Asia to the west Polynesia to the east and Melanesia to the south as well as with the wider community of Austronesian peoples Subregions Melanesia Micronesia Polynesia and Australasia as well as sovereign and dependent islands of OceaniaMicronesia is one of three major cultural areas of the Pacific Ocean islands along with Melanesia and Polynesia Outline of sovereign dark orange and dependent islands bright orange The region has a tropical marine climate and is part of the Oceanian realm It includes four main archipelagos the Caroline Islands the Gilbert Islands the Mariana Islands and the Marshall Islands as well as numerous islands that are not part of any archipelago Political control of areas within Micronesia varies depending on the island and is distributed among six sovereign nations Some of the Caroline Islands are part of the Republic of Palau and some are part of the Federated States of Micronesia often shortened to FSM or Micronesia not to be confused with the identical name for the overall region The Gilbert Islands along with the Phoenix Islands and the Line Islands in Polynesia comprise the Republic of Kiribati The Mariana Islands are affiliated with the United States some of them belong to the U S Territory of Guam and the rest belong to the U S Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands The island of Nauru is its own sovereign nation The Marshall Islands all belong to the Republic of the Marshall Islands The sovereignty of Wake Island is contested it is claimed both by the United States and by the Republic of the Marshall Islands The United States has actual possession of Wake Island which is under the immediate administration of the United States Air Force Notwithstanding the fact that the notion of Micronesia has been quite well established since 1832 and has been used ever since by most popular works this set does not correspond to any geomorphological archaeological linguistic ethnic or cultural unity but on the contrary represents a disparate ensemble with no real deep unity In fact Micronesian people doesn t exist as a subset of the sea migrating Austronesian people who may also include the Polynesian people and the hypothetical Australo Melanesian or Melanesian people 2 Human settlement of Micronesia began several millennia ago 3 Based on the current scientific consensus the Austronesian peoples originated from a prehistoric seaborne migration known as the Austronesian expansion from pre Han Formosa at around 3000 to 1500 BCE Austronesians reached the northernmost Philippines specifically the Batanes Islands by around 2200 BCE Austronesians were the first people to invent oceangoing sailing technologies notably catamarans outrigger boats lashed lug boat building and the crab claw sail which enabled their rapid dispersal into the islands of the Indo Pacific 4 5 6 From 2000 BCE they assimilated or were assimilated by the earlier populations on the islands in their migration pathway 7 8 9 10 11 The earliest known contact of Europeans with Micronesia was in 1521 when Magellan expedition landed in the Marianas Jules Dumont d Urville is usually credited with coining the term Micronesia in 1832 but in fact Louis Domeny de Rienzi fr used this term a year earlier 12 13 Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Caroline Islands 1 2 Gilbert Islands 1 3 Mariana Islands 1 4 Marshall Islands 1 5 Nauru 1 6 Wake Island 1 7 Geology 1 8 Fauna 1 9 Climate 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Early European contact 2 3 Colonisation and conversion 2 4 German Spanish Treaty of 1899 2 5 20th century 2 6 21st century 3 States and dependencies 3 1 Politics 4 Economy 5 Demographics 5 1 Indigenous groups 5 1 1 Micronesians 5 1 1 1 Carolinian people 5 1 1 2 Chamorro people 5 1 1 3 Chuukese people 5 1 1 4 Nauruan people 5 1 2 Kaping people 5 2 Immigrant groups 5 2 1 East South and Southeast Asian people 5 2 2 European people 5 3 Languages 6 Culture 6 1 Animals and food 6 2 Architecture 6 3 Art 6 4 Cuisine 6 5 Education 6 6 Law 6 7 Media 6 8 Music and dance 6 9 Sports 7 Religion and mythology 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 General bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksGeography editMicronesia is a region in Oceania that includes approximately 2100 islands with a total land area of 2 700 km2 1 000 sq mi the largest of which is Guam which covers 582 km2 225 sq mi The total ocean area within the perimeter of the islands is 7 400 000 km2 2 900 000 sq mi 14 There are four main island groups in Micronesia the Caroline Islands Federated States of Micronesia and Palau the Gilbert Islands Kiribati the Mariana Islands Northern Mariana Islands and Guam US the Marshall IslandsThis does not include the separate island nation of Nauru along with other distinctly separate islands and smaller island groups Caroline Islands edit The Caroline Islands are a widely scattered archipelago consisting of about 500 small coral islands north of New Guinea and east of the Philippines The Carolines consist of two nations the Federated States of Micronesia consisting of approximately 600 islands on the eastern side of the chain with Kosrae being the most eastern and Palau consisting of 250 islands on the western side Gilbert Islands edit The Gilbert Islands are a chain of sixteen atolls and coral islands arranged in an approximate north to south line In a geographical sense the equator serves as the dividing line between the northern Gilbert Islands and the southern Gilbert Islands The Republic of Kiribati contains all of the Gilberts including the island of Tarawa the site of the country s capital Mariana Islands edit nbsp Mount Marpi in Saipan The Mariana Islands are an arc shaped archipelago made up by the summits of fifteen volcanic mountains The island chain arises as a result of the western edge of the Pacific Plate moving westward and plunging downward below the Mariana plate a region that is the most volcanically active convergent plate boundary on Earth The Marianas were politically divided in 1898 when the United States acquired title to Guam under the Treaty of Paris 1898 which ended the Spanish American War Spain then sold the remaining northerly islands to Germany in 1899 Germany lost all of her colonies at the end of World War I and the Northern Mariana Islands became a League of Nations Mandate with Japan as the mandatory After World War II the islands were transferred into the United Nations Trust Territory System with the United States as Trustee In 1976 the Northern Mariana Islands and the United States entered into a covenant of political union under which commonwealth status was granted the Northern Mariana Islands and its residents received United States citizenship Marshall Islands edit nbsp Beach scenery at Laura Majuro Marshall IslandsThe Marshall Islands are located north of Nauru and Kiribati east of the Federated States of Micronesia and south of the U S territory of Wake Island The islands consist of 29 low lying atolls and 5 isolated islands 15 comprising 1 156 individual islands and islets The atolls and islands form two groups the Ratak Chain and the Ralik Chain meaning sunrise and sunset chains All the islands in the chain are part of the Republic of the Marshall Islands a presidential republic in free association with the United States Having few natural resources the islands wealth is based on a service economy as well as some fishing and agriculture Of the 29 atolls 24 of them are inhabited Bikini Atoll is an atoll in the Marshall Islands There are 23 islands in the Bikini Atoll The islands of Bokonijien Aerokojlol and Nam were vaporized during nuclear tests that occurred there 16 The islands are composed of low coral limestone and sand citation needed 17 The average elevation is only about 2 1 metres 7 ft above low tide level nbsp Image of the Castle Bravo nuclear test detonated on 1 March 1954 at Bikini Atoll nbsp An illustration of the Cross Spikes Club 18 of the US Navy on Bikini Atoll one of several Marshall Islands used for atomic bomb tests nbsp Kili Island is one of the smallest islands in the Marshall Islands Nauru edit Nauru is an oval shaped island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean 42 km 26 mi south of the Equator listed as the world s smallest republic covering just 21 km2 8 sq mi 19 With 12 511 residents it is the third least populated country after Vatican City and Tuvalu The island is surrounded by a coral reef which is exposed at low tide and dotted with pinnacles 20 The presence of the reef has prevented the establishment of a seaport although channels in the reef allow small boats access to the island 21 A fertile coastal strip 150 to 300 m 490 to 980 ft wide lies inland from the beach 20 nbsp Aerial view of Nauru nbsp Nauruan districts of Denigomodu and NibokWake Island edit Wake Island is a coral atoll with a coastline of 19 km 12 mi just north of the Marshall Islands It is an unorganized unincorporated territory of the United States Access to the island is restricted and all activities on the island are managed by the United States Air Force While geographically adjacent it is not ethnoculturally part of Micronesia due to its historical lack of human inhabitation citation needed Micronesians may have possibly visited Wake Island in prehistoric times to harvest fish but there is nothing to suggest any kind of settlement 22 nbsp Wake Island as depicted by the United States Exploring Expedition drawn by Alfred Thomas Agate nbsp Aerial view Wake Island looking westwardGeology edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2013 The majority of the islands in the area are part of a coral atoll Coral atolls begin as coral reefs that grow on the slopes of a central volcano When the volcano sinks back down into the sea the coral continues to grow keeping the reef at or above water level One exception is Pohnpei in the Federated States of Micronesia which still has the central volcano and coral reefs around it Fauna edit Main articles List of mammals of Micronesia and List of birds of MicronesiaThe Yap Islands host a number of endemic bird species including the Yap monarch and the Olive white eye in addition to four other restricted range bird species 23 The endangered Yap flying fox though often considered a subspecies of the Pelew flying fox or the Mariana fruit bat is also endemic to Yap 23 nbsp Spinner dolphinsThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2013 Climate edit The region has a tropical marine climate moderated by seasonal northeast trade winds There is little seasonal temperature variation The dry season runs from December or January to June and the rainy season from July to November or December Because of the location of some islands the rainy season can sometimes include typhoons History editSee also History of the Federated States of Micronesia and History of the Marshall Islands Prehistory edit Further information Austronesian peoples nbsp Chronological dispersal of Austronesian peoples across the Indo Pacific 24 The Northern Mariana Islands were the first islands in Oceania colonized by the Austronesian peoples They were settled by the voyagers who sailed eastwards from the Philippines in approximately 1500 BCE These populations gradually moved southwards until they reached the Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands by 1300 BCE and reconnected with the Lapita culture of the southeast migration branch of Austronesians moving through coastal New Guinea and Island Melanesia By 1200 BCE they again began crossing open seas beyond inter island visibility reaching Vanuatu Fiji and New Caledonia before continuing eastwards to become the ancestors of the Polynesian people 24 25 26 Further migrations by other Austronesians also followed likely from Sulawesi settling Palau and Yap by around 1000 BCE The details of this colonization however are not very well known 24 25 27 In 200 BCE a loosely connected group of Lapita colonists from Island Melanesia also migrated back northwards settling the islands of eastern Micronesia almost simultaneously This region became the center of another wave of migrations radiating outwards reconnecting them with other settled islands in western Micronesia 24 25 Around 800 CE a second wave of migrants from Southeast Asia arrived in the Marianas beginning what is now known as the Latte period These new settlers built large structures with distinctive capped stone pillars known as haligi They also reintroduced rice which did not survive earlier voyages making the Northern Marianas the only islands in Oceania where rice was grown prior to European contact However it was considered a high status crop and only used in rituals It did not become a staple until after Spanish colonization 26 28 29 Construction of Nan Madol a megalithic complex made from basalt lava logs in Pohnpei began in around 1180 CE This was followed by the construction of the Leluh complex in Kosrae in around 1200 25 30 31 nbsp Central Nan Madol map nbsp Nan Madol nbsp Leluh nbsp Latte stones nbsp Rai stoneEarly European contact edit nbsp Manila Galleon in the Marianas and Carolinas c 1590 Boxer CodexThe earliest known contact with Europeans occurred in 1521 when a Spanish expedition under Ferdinand Magellan reached the Marianas 32 This contact is recorded in Antonio Pigafetta s chronicle of Magellan s voyage in which he recounts that the Chamorro people had no apparent knowledge of people outside of their island group 33 A Portuguese account of the same voyage suggests that the Chamorro people who greeted the travellers did so without any shyness as if they were good acquaintances 34 Further contact was made during the sixteenth century although often initial encounters were very brief Documents relating to the 1525 voyage of Diogo da Rocha suggest that he made the first European contact with inhabitants of the Caroline Islands possibly staying on the Ulithi atoll for four months and encountering Yap Marshall Islanders were encountered by the expedition of Spanish navigator Alvaro de Saavedra Ceron in 1529 35 Other contact with the Yap islands occurred in 1625 36 Colonisation and conversion edit In the early 17th century Spain colonized Guam the Northern Marianas and the Caroline Islands what would later become the Federated States of Micronesia and the Republic of Palau creating the Spanish East Indies which was governed from the Spanish Philippines In 1819 the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions a Protestant group brought their Puritan ways to Polynesia Soon after the Hawaiian Missionary Society was founded and sent missionaries into Micronesia Conversion was not met with as much opposition as the local religions were less developed at least according to Western ethnographic accounts In contrast it took until the end of the 19th to the beginning of the 20th centuries for missionaries to fully convert the inhabitants of Melanesia however a comparison of the cultural contrast must take into account the fact that Melanesia has always had deadly strains of malaria present in various degrees and distributions throughout its history see De Rays Expedition and up to the present conversely Micronesia does not have and never seems to have had any malarial mosquitos nor pathogens on any of its islands in the past 37 German Spanish Treaty of 1899 edit Main article German Spanish Treaty 1899 nbsp German New Guinea before and after the German Spanish treaty of 1899In the Spanish American War Spain lost many of its remaining colonies In the Pacific the United States took possession of the Spanish Philippines and Guam On 17 January 1899 the United States also took possession of unclaimed and uninhabited Wake Island This left Spain with the remainder of the Spanish East Indies about 6 000 tiny islands that were sparsely populated and not very productive These islands were ungovernable after the loss of the administrative center of Manila and indefensible after the loss of two Spanish fleets in the war The Spanish government therefore decided to sell the remaining islands to a new colonial power the German Empire The treaty which was signed by Spanish Prime Minister Francisco Silvela on 12 February 1899 transferred the Caroline Islands Kosrae in the east to Palau in the west the Mariana Islands and other possessions to Germany Under German control the islands became a protectorate and were administered from German New Guinea Nauru had already been annexed and claimed as a colony by Germany in 1888 20th century edit nbsp Map from 1961 of the US Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands formerly Japan s South Seas Mandate In the early 20th century the islands of Micronesia were divided between three foreign powers the United States which took control of Guam following the Spanish American War of 1898 and claimed Wake Island Germany which took Nauru and bought the Marshall Caroline and Northern Mariana Islands from Spain and the British Empire which took the Gilbert Islands Kiribati During World War I Germany s Pacific island territories were seized and became League of Nations mandates in 1923 Nauru became an Australian mandate while Germany s other territories in Micronesia were given as a mandate to Japan and were named the South Seas Mandate During World War II Nauru and Ocean Island were occupied by Japanese troops with also an occupation of some of the Gilbert Islands and were bypassed by the Allied advance across the Pacific Following Japan s defeat in World War II its mandate became a United Nations Trusteeship administered by the United States as the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands 38 Nauru became independent in 1968 21st century edit Today most of Micronesia are independent states except for the U S Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Guam and Wake Island which are U S territories States and dependencies editCountry Population July 2021 estimate 39 40 Area km2 Population density km2 Urban population Life expectancy Literacy rate Official language s Main religion s Ethnic groups nbsp Federated States of Micronesia 113 131 702 158 22 71 2 89 English Roman Catholic 50 Protestant 47 others 3 Chuukese 48 8 Pohnpeian 24 2 Kosraean 6 2 Yapese 5 2 Yap outer islands 4 5 Asian 1 8 Polynesian 1 5 other 7 8 nbsp Guam United States 170 534 540 299 93 78 2 99 English 38 3 Chamorro 22 2 41 Roman Catholic 85 Buddhism 3 6 other religion 11 4 Chamorro 37 1 Filipino 26 3 other Pacific islander 11 3 white 6 9 other 8 6 mixed 9 8 nbsp Kiribati 128 874 811 152 44 64 0 92 English Gilbertese de facto Roman Catholic 55 Protestant 36 Micronesian 98 8 nbsp Marshall Islands 42 050 181 293 71 71 5 93 7 Marshallese 98 2 English Protestant 54 8 other Christian 40 6 Marshallese 92 1 mixed Marshallese 5 9 other 2 nbsp Nauru 12 511 21 480 100 65 0 99 42 Nauruan f English de facto Nauru Congregational Church 35 4 Roman Catholic 33 2 Nauru Independent Church Protestant 43 10 4 Baha i faith 10 Buddhism 9 Nauruan 58 other Pacific Islander 26 Chinese 8 European 8 nbsp Northern Mariana Islands United States 49 481 464 113 91 76 9 97 English Chamorro and Carolinian 44 Roman Catholic Buddhism 10 6 Asian 56 3 Pacific islander 36 3 White 1 8 other 0 8 mixed 4 8 nbsp Palau 18 024 459 47 81 71 5 92 Palauan 64 7 d English Roman Catholic 41 6 Protestant 23 3 Palauan 69 9 Filipino 15 3 Chinese 4 9 other Asian 2 4 white 1 9 Carolinian 1 4 other Micronesian 1 1 other 3 2 Total 534 606 3 178Politics edit The Pacific Community SPC is a regional intergovernmental organisation whose membership includes both nations and territories in the Pacific Ocean and their metropolitan powers Economy edit nbsp A proportional representation of Micronesia exports 2019Nationally the primary income is the sale of fishing rights to foreign nations that harvest tuna using huge purse seiners A few Japanese long liners still ply the waters The crews aboard fishing fleets contribute little to the local economy since their ships typically set sail loaded with stores and provisions that are cheaper than local goods Additional money comes in from government grants mostly from the United States and the 150 million the US paid into a trust fund for reparations of residents of Bikini Atoll that had to move after nuclear testing Few mineral deposits worth exploiting exist except for some high grade phosphate especially on Nauru Most residents of Micronesia can freely move to and work within the United States Relatives working in the US that send money home to relatives represent the primary source of individual income Additional individual income comes mainly from government jobs and work within shops and restaurants The tourist industry consists mainly of scuba divers that come to see the coral reefs do wall dives and visit sunken ships from WWII Major stops for scuba divers in approximate order are Palau Chuuk Yap and Pohnpei Some private yacht owners visit the area for months or years at a time However they tend to stay mainly at ports of entry and are too few in number to be counted as a major source of income Copra production used to be a more significant source of income however world prices have dropped in part to large palm plantations that are now planted in places like Borneo Demographics editFurther information Demographics of Oceania The people today form many ethnicities but all are descended from and belong to the Micronesian culture 45 Because of this mixture of descent many of the ethnicities of Micronesia feel closer to some groups in Melanesia or the Philippines A good example of this are the Yapese people who are related to Austronesian tribes in the northern Philippines 46 Genetics also show a significant number of Micronesian have Japanese paternal ancestry 9 5 of males from Micronesia as well as 0 2 in East Timor carry the Haplogroup D M55 47 There are also substantial Asian communities found across the region most notably in the Northern Mariana Islands where they form the majority and smaller communities of Europeans who have migrated from the United States or are descendants of settlers during European colonial rule in Micronesia Though they are all geographically part of the same region they all have very different colonial histories The US administered areas of Micronesia have a unique experience that sets them apart from the rest of the Pacific Micronesia has great economic dependency on its former or current motherlands something only comparable to the French Pacific Sometimes the term American Micronesia is used to acknowledge the difference in cultural heritage 48 A 2011 survey found that 93 1 of Micronesian are Christians 49 a survey in 2022 showed that 99 were Christian 50 Indigenous groups edit Micronesians edit Main article Micronesians Carolinian people edit It is thought that ancestors of the Carolinian people may have originally immigrated from the Asian mainland and Indonesia to Micronesia around 2 000 years ago Their primary language is Carolinian called Refaluwasch by native speakers which has a total of about 5 700 speakers The Carolinians have a matriarchal society in which respect is a very important factor in their daily lives especially toward the matriarchs Most Carolinians are of the Roman Catholic faith The immigration of Carolinians to Saipan began in the early 19th century after the Spanish reduced the local population of Chamorro natives to just 3 700 They began to immigrate mostly sailing from small canoes from other islands which a typhoon previously devastated The Carolinians have a much darker complexion than the native Chamorros Chamorro people edit nbsp Chamorro people in 1915The Chamorro people are the indigenous peoples of the Mariana Islands which are politically divided between the United States territory of Guam and the United States Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Micronesia The Chamorro are commonly believed to have come from Southeast Asia at around 2000 BC They are most closely related to other Austronesian natives to the west in the Philippines and Taiwan as well as the Carolines to the south The Chamorro language is included in the Malayo Polynesian subgroup of the Austronesian family Because Guam was colonized by Spain for over 300 years many words derive from the Spanish language The traditional Chamorro number system was replaced by Spanish numbers 51 Chuukese people edit The Chuukese people are an ethnic group in Oceania They constitute 48 of the population of the Federated States of Micronesia Their language is Chuukese The home atoll of Chuuk is also known by the former name Truk Nauruan people edit The Nauruan people are an ethnicity inhabiting the Pacific island of Nauru They are most likely a blend of other Pacific peoples 52 The origin of the Nauruan people has not yet been finally determined It can possibly be explained by the last Malayo Pacific human migration c 1200 It was probably seafaring or shipwrecked Polynesians or Melanesians that established themselves in Nauru because there was not already an indigenous people present whereas the Micronesians were already crossed with the Melanesians in this area Kaping people edit The roughly 3000 residents of the Federated States of Micronesia that reside in Kapingamarangi nicknamed Kapings live in one of the most remote locations in both Micronesia and the world at large Their home atoll is almost 800 km 500 mi from the nearest point of immigration citation needed There are no regular flights the only reliable way to legally visit is to travel on a high speed sailboat to the atoll Owing to this difficulty few sailors travelling the Pacific attempt to visit The local language is the Kapingamarangi language The children typically attend high school on Pohnpei where they stay with relatives in an enclave that is almost exclusively made up of Kapings citation needed Immigrant groups edit East South and Southeast Asian people edit See also Japanese settlement in Palau Japanese settlement in the Federated States of Micronesia Koreans in Micronesia Chinese in Palau and Filipinos in Palau There are large East South and Southeast Asian communities found across certain Micronesian countries that are either immigrants foreign workers or descendants of either one most migrated to the islands during the 1800s and 1900s 53 According to the 2010 census results Guam was 26 3 Filipino 2 2 Korean 1 6 Chinese and 2 other Asian 54 The 2010 census showed the Northern Mariana Islands was 50 Asian of which 35 3 were Filipino 6 8 Chinese 4 2 Korean and 3 7 other Asian mainly Japanese Bangladeshi and Thai 55 The 2010 census for the Federated States of Micronesia showed 1 4 were Asian while statistics for Nauru showed 8 of Nauruans were Chinese 56 57 The 2005 census results for Palau showed 16 3 were Filipino 1 6 Chinese 1 6 Vietnamese and 3 4 other Asian mostly Bangladeshi Japanese and Korean 58 Japanese rule in Micronesia also led to Japanese people settling the islands and marrying native spouses Kessai Note the former president of the Marshall Islands has partial Japanese ancestry by way of his paternal grandfather and Emanuel Mori the former president of the Federated States of Micronesia is descended from one of the first settlers from Japan Koben Mori A significant number of Micronesians were shown to have paternal genetic relations with Japanese Haplogroup D M55 Genetic testing found that 9 5 of males from Micronesia as well as 0 2 in East Timor 59 carry what is believed to reflect recent admixture from Japan That is D M116 1 D1b1 is generally believed to be a primary subclade of D M64 1 D1b possibly as a result of the Japanese military occupation of Southeast Asia during World War II 47 European people edit The 2010 census results of Guam showed 7 1 were white while the 2005 census for Palau showed 8 were European Smaller numbers at 1 9 in Palau and 1 8 in the Northern Mariana Islands were recorded as white In conjunction to the European communities there are large amounts of mixed Micronesians some of which have European ancestry nbsp Languages of Micronesia Languages edit The largest group of languages spoken in Micronesia are the Micronesian languages They are in the family of Oceanic languages part of the Austronesian language group They descended from the Proto Oceanic which in turn descended via Proto Malayo Polynesian from Proto Austronesian The languages in the Micronesian family are Marshallese Gilbertese Kosraean Nauruan as well as a large sub family called the Chuukic Pohnpeic languages containing 11 languages On the eastern edge of the Federated States of Micronesia the languages Nukuoro and Kapingamarangi represent an extreme westward extension of the Polynesian branch of Oceanic Finally there are two Malayo Polynesian languages spoken in Micronesia that do not belong to the Oceanic languages Chamorro in the Mariana Islands and Palauan in Palau Culture editAnimals and food edit By the time Western contact occurred although Palau did not have dogs they did have fowls and possibly pigs Pigs are not native to Micronesia Fruit bats are native to Palau but other mammals are rare Reptiles are numerous and both mollusks and fish are an important food source 60 The people of Palau the Marianas and Yap often chew betel nuts seasoned with lime and pepper leaf Western Micronesia was unaware of the ceremonial drink which was called saka on Kosrae and sakau on Pohnpei 27 Architecture edit The book Prehistoric Architecture in Micronesia argues that the most prolific pre colonial Micronesian architecture is Palau s monumental sculpted hills megalithic stone carvings and elaborately decorated structure of wood placed on piers above elevated stone platforms 61 The archeological traditions of the Yapese people remained relatively unchanged even after the first European contact with the region during Magellan s 1520s circumnavigation of the globe 27 Art edit Micronesia s artistic tradition has developed from the Lapita culture Among the most prominent works of the region is the megalithic floating city of Nan Madol The city began in 1200 CE and was still being built when European explorers begin to arrive around 1600 The city however had declined by around 1800 along with the Saudeleur dynasty and was completely abandoned by the 1820s During the 19th century the region was divided between the colonial powers but art continued to thrive Wood carving particularly by men flourished in the region resulted in richly decorated ceremonial houses in Belau stylized bowls canoe ornaments ceremonial vessels and sometimes sculptured figures Women created textiles and ornaments such as bracelets and headbands Stylistically traditional Micronesian art is streamlined and of a practical simplicity to its function but is typically finished to a high standard of quality 62 This was mostly to make the best possible use of what few natural materials they had available to them 63 The first half of the 20th century saw a downturn in Micronesia s cultural integrity and a strong foreign influence from both western and Japanese Imperialist powers A number of historical artistic traditions especially sculpture ceased to be practiced although other art forms continued including traditional architecture and weaving Independence from colonial powers in the second half of the century resulted in a renewed interest in and respect for traditional arts A notable movement of contemporary art also appeared in Micronesia towards the end of the 20th century 64 Cuisine edit The cuisine of the Mariana Islands is tropical in nature including such dishes as Kelaguen as well as many others Marshallese cuisine comprises the fare and foodways of the Marshall Islands and includes local foods such as breadfruit taro root pandanus and seafood among others Palauan cuisine includes local foods such as cassava taro yam potato fish and pork Western cuisine is favored among young Palauans Education edit The educational systems in the nations of Micronesia vary depending on the country and there are several higher level educational institutions The CariPac consists of institutions of higher education in Guam the Northern Mariana Islands American Samoa Puerto Rico the U S Virgin Islands the Federated States of Micronesia the Marshall Islands and Palau The Agricultural Development in the American Pacific is a partnership of the University of Hawaii American Samoa Community College College of Micronesia Northern Marianas College and the University of Guam In the Federated States of Micronesia education is required for citizens aged 6 to 13 65 and is important to their economy 66 The literacy rate for citizens aged 15 to 24 is 98 8 67 The College of Micronesia FSM has a campus in each of the four states with its national campus in the capital city of Palikir Pohnpei The COM FSM system also includes the Fisheries and Maritime Institute FMI on the Yap islands 68 69 The public education in Guam is organized by the Guam Department of Education Guam also has several educational institutions such as University of Guam Pacific Islands University and Guam Community College There is also the Guam Public Library System and the Umatac Outdoor Library Weriyeng 70 is one of the last two schools of traditional navigation found in the central Caroline Islands in Micronesia the other being Fanur 71 The Northern Marianas College is a two year community college located in the United States Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands CNMI The College of the Marshall Islands is a community college in the Marshall Islands Law edit Understanding Law in Micronesia notes that The Federated States of Micronesia s laws and legal institutions are uninterestingly similar to those of Western countries However it explains that law in Micronesia is an extraordinary flux and flow of contrasting thought and meaning inside and outside the legal system It says that a knee jerk reaction would be that law is disarrayed in the region and that improvement is required but argues that the failure is one endemic to the nature of law or to the ideological views we hold about law 72 The Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands a United Nations Trusteeship administered by the United States borrowed heavily from United States law in establishing the Trust Territory Code during the Law and Development movement of the late 1950s and early 1960s Many of those provisions were adopted by the new Congress of the Federated States of Micronesia when the Federated States of Micronesia became self governing in 1979 72 Media edit In September 2007 journalists in the region founded the Micronesian Media Association 73 Music and dance edit See also Music of the Federated States of Micronesia Micronesian music is influential to those living in the Micronesian islands 74 Some of the music is based around mythology and ancient Micronesian rituals It covers a range of styles from traditional songs handed down through generations to contemporary music Traditional beliefs suggest that the music can be presented to people in dreams and trances rather than being written by composers themselves Micronesian folk music is like Polynesian music primarily vocal based In the Marshall Islands the roro is a kind of traditional chant usually about ancient legends and performed to give guidance during navigation and strength for mothers in labour Modern bands have blended the unique songs of each island in the country with modern music Though drums are not generally common in Micronesian music one sided hourglass shaped drums are a major part of Marshallese music 75 There is a traditional Marshallese dance called beet which is influenced by Spanish folk dances in it men and women side step in parallel lines There is a kind of stick dance performed by the Jobwa nowadays only for very special occasions Popular music both from Micronesia and from other areas of the world is played on radio stations in Micronesia 74 Sports edit The region is home to the Micronesian Games 76 This quadrennial international multi sport event involves all of Micronesia s countries and territories except Wake Island Nauru has two national sports weightlifting and Australian rules football 77 According to 2007 Australian Football League International Census figures there are around 180 players in the Nauru senior competition and 500 players in the junior competition 78 representing a participation rate of over 30 overall for the country Religion and mythology editThe predominant religion in Micronesia is Christianity 93 49 According to 2023 government statistics 55 of the population were Catholic and 42 were Protestant while 2 belonged to other Christian denominations Other religious groups exist including Baha is Buddhists Hindus Jews and Muslims 50 Micronesian mythology comprises the traditional belief systems of the people of Micronesia There is no single belief system in the islands of Micronesia as each island region has its own mythological beings It was noted that 2 7 of the population followed folk religions in 2014 50 There are several significant figures and myths in the Federated States of Micronesia Nauruan and Kiribati traditions Shinto shrines dating from during or after World War II exist in some Micronesian countries 79 See also edit nbsp Oceania portal nbsp Islands portalFlags of OceaniaReferences editCitations edit from Ancient Greek mikros mikros small and nῆsos nesos island Patrick Vinton Kirch On the Road of the Winds an Archeological History of the Pacific Islands before European Contact Berkeley University of California Press 2000 5 Kirch 2001 p 167 Doran Edwin B 1981 Wangka Austronesian Canoe Origins Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 9780890961070 Dierking Gary 2007 Building Outrigger Sailing Canoes Modern Construction Methods for Three Fast Beautiful Boats International Marine McGraw Hill ISBN 9780071594561 Horridge Adrian 1986 The Evolution of Pacific Canoe Rigs The Journal of Pacific History 21 2 83 89 doi 10 1080 00223348608572530 JSTOR 25168892 Bellwood Peter 1988 A Hypothesis for Austronesian Origins PDF Asian Perspectives 26 1 107 117 Archived PDF from the original on 1 May 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Bellwood Peter 1991 The Austronesian Dispersal and the Origin of Languages Scientific American 265 1 88 93 Bibcode 1991SciAm 265a 88B doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0791 88 JSTOR 24936983 Hill Adrian V S Serjeantson Susan W eds 1989 The Colonization of the Pacific A Genetic Trail Research Monographs on Human Population Biology No 7 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198576952 Bellwood P Fox JJ Tryon D 2006 The Austronesians Historical and Comparative Perspectives Australian National University Press ISBN 9781920942854 Archived from the original on 2 April 2020 Retrieved 23 March 2019 Blench Roger 2012 Almost Everything You Believed about the Austronesians Isn t True PDF In Tjoa Bonatz Mai Lin Reinecke Andreas Bonatz Dominik eds Crossing Borders National University of Singapore Press pp 128 148 ISBN 9789971696429 Archived PDF from the original on 30 December 2019 Retrieved 23 March 2019 Rainbird 2004 p 6 Although based on a superficial understanding of the Pacific islanders Dumont d Urville s tripartite classification stuck Indeed these categories Polynesians Micronesians Melanesians became so deeply entrenched in Western anthropological thought that it is difficult even now to break out the mould in which they entrap us Thomas 1989 Such labels provide handy geographical referents yet they mislead us greatly if we take them to be meaningful segments of cultural history Only Polynesia has stood the tests of time and increased knowledge as a category with historical significance Patrick Vinton Kirch On the Road of the Winds an Archeological History of the Pacific Islands before European Contact Berkeley University of California Press 2000 5 Kirch 2001 p 165 Geography Overview Embassy of the Republic of the Marshall Islands Republic of the Marshall Islands Archived from the original on 15 November 2013 Bikini Atoll Reference Facts Bikini Atoll Retrieved 12 August 2013 Emery Kenneth O Tracey J I Jr Ladd H S 1954 Geology of Bikini and Nearby Atolls PDF Retrieved 20 April 2021 Operation Crossroads Bikini Atoll Navy Historical Center Department of the Navy Archived from the original on 21 May 2000 Retrieved 4 December 2013 Central Intelligence Agency 2011 Nauru The World Factbook Retrieved 12 February 2011 a b Background Note Nauru State Department Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs September 2005 Retrieved 11 May 2006 Thaman RR Hassall DC 1996 Nauru National Environmental Management Strategy and National Environmental Action Plan PDF South Pacific Regional Environment Programme p 234 The State of Coral Reef Ecosystems of the U S Pacific Remote Island Areas PDF Pacific Regional Environment Programme a b Yap Islands State Federated States of Micronesia Ecoregions WWF World Wildlife Fund Retrieved 12 January 2021 a b c d Chambers Geoff 15 January 2013 Genetics and the Origins of the Polynesians eLS John Wiley amp Sons Inc doi 10 1002 9780470015902 a0020808 pub2 ISBN 978 0470016176 a b c d Wilson Meredith Ballard Chris 2018 Rock Art of the Pacific Context and Intertextuality In David Bruno McNiven Ian J eds The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology and Anthropology of Rock Art Oxford University Press pp 221 252 ISBN 9780190844950 a b Bellwood Peter 9 December 2011 The Checkered Prehistory of Rice Movement Southwards as a Domesticated Cereal from the Yangzi to the Equator PDF Rice 4 3 4 93 103 doi 10 1007 s12284 011 9068 9 S2CID 44675525 a b c Morgan 1988 p 30 Carson Mike T 2012 An overview of latte period archaeology PDF Micronesica 42 1 2 1 79 Peterson John A 2012 Latte villages in Guam and the Marianas Monumentality or monumenterity PDF Micronesica 42 1 2 183 08 Richards Zoe T Shen Chuan Chou Hobbs Jean Paul A Wu Chung Che Jiang Xiuyang Beardsley Felicia March 2015 New precise dates for the ancient and sacred coral pyramidal tombs of Leluh Kosrae Micronesia Science Advances 1 2 e1400060 Bibcode 2015SciA 1E0060R doi 10 1126 sciadv 1400060 PMC 4643814 PMID 26601144 Rainbird Paul Wilson Meredith 2 January 2015 Crossing the line the enveloped cross in Pohnpei Federated States of Micronesia Antiquity 76 293 635 636 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00091018 S2CID 161654405 Tucker Spencer 2009 The Encyclopedia of the Spanish American and Philippine American Wars A Political Social and Military History Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 9781851099511 Levesque Rodrigue ed 1992 1997 History of Micronesia A collection of source documents Vols 1 20 Quebec Canada Levesque Publications pp 249 251 Rainbird 2004 p 13 14 Geological Survey Professional Paper 1954 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Rainbird 2004 p 14 Ridgell Reilly 1995 Pacific Nations and Territories The Islands of Micronesia Melanesia and Polonesia Third Revised ed Honolulu Hawai i Bess Press p 43 ISBN 9781573060011 Pelzer Karl J 1950 Micronesia A Changing Frontier World Politics 2 2 251 266 doi 10 2307 2009190 ISSN 1086 3338 JSTOR 2009190 S2CID 154463511 World Population Prospects 2022 population un org United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved 17 July 2022 World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XSLX population un org Total Population as of 1 July thousands United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved 17 July 2022 Languages of Guahan The Guam Website Afa Adai n d archived from the original on 23 December 2013 retrieved 12 November 2010 Nauru TalkTalk Tiscali UK Limited 2010 Archived from the original on 20 June 2010 Retrieved 12 November 2010 Nauru TravelBlog TravelBlog org 24 August 2006 Retrieved 12 November 2010 Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Overview Office of Insular Affairs U S Department of the Interior Office of Insular Affairs Archived from the original on 9 June 2007 Retrieved 12 November 2010 Hudjashov Georgi Endicott Phillip Post Helen Nagle Nano Ho Simon Y W Lawson Daniel J Reidla Maere Karmin Monika Rootsi Siiri Metspalu Ene Saag Lauri 29 January 2018 Investigating the origins of eastern Polynesians using genome wide data from the Leeward Society Isles Scientific Reports 8 1 1823 Bibcode 2018NatSR 8 1823H doi 10 1038 s41598 018 20026 8 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5789021 PMID 29379068 Micronesians Introduction Location Language Folklore Religion Major holidays Rites of passage everyculture com a b Tumonggor Meryanne K Karafet Tatiana M Downey Sean Lansing J Stephen Norquest Peter Sudoyo Herawati Hammer Michael F Cox Murray P September 2014 Isolation contact and social behavior shaped genetic diversity in West Timor Journal of Human Genetics 59 9 494 503 doi 10 1038 jhg 2014 62 PMC 4521296 PMID 25078354 Kiste Robert C Marshall Mac eds 1999 American Anthropology in Micronesia An Assessment Honolulu Hawai i University of Hawai i Press p 1 ISBN 9780824820176 a b Center for the Study of Global Christianity June 2013 Christianity in its Global Context 1970 2020 Society Religion and Mission PDF South Hamilton Massachusetts USA Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary archived from the original PDF on 15 August 2013 a b c US State Dept 2022 report Rodriguez Ponga Salamanca Rafael 2009 Del espanol al chamorro Lenguas en contacto en el Pacifico From Spanish to Chamorro languages in contact in the Pacific in Spanish Madrid Ediciones Gondo ISBN 978 84 933774 4 1 OCLC 436267171 Bay Hansen C D 2006 FutureFish 2001 FutureFish in Century 21 The North Pacific Fisheries Tackle Asian Markets the Can Am Salmon Treaty and Micronesian Seas Trafford Publishing p 277 ISBN 1 55369 293 4 Crocombe R G 1 January 2007 Asia in the Pacific Islands Replacing the West IPS Publications University of the South Pacific ISBN 9789820203884 via Google Books Guam Ethnic groups Demographics indexmundi com Northern Mariana Islands Demographics Profile 2016 indexmundi com Federated States of Micronesia Ethnic groups Demographics indexmundi com Nauru Ethnic groups Demographics indexmundi com Palau Ethnic groups Demographics indexmundi com Hammer Michael F Karafet Tatiana M Park Hwayong Omoto Keiichi Harihara Shinji Stoneking Mark Horai Satoshi 2006 Dual origins of the Japanese Common ground for hunter gatherer and farmer Y chromosomes Journal of Human Genetics 51 1 47 58 doi 10 1007 s10038 005 0322 0 PMID 16328082 Morgan 1988 p 3 Morgan 1988 p 2 Micronesia 1800 1900 a d Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2000 Archived from the original on 1 December 2008 Oceanic art Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth ed Columbia University Press 2006 Micronesia 1900 a d present Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2000 Archived from the original on 21 May 2009 Education Profile of Micronesia Micronesia Education Education in Micronesia Universities in Micronesia Schools in Micronesia Micronesia Education Profile micronesiaeducation info Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 13 October 2011 Dunford Betty Ridgell Reilly 1996 Pacific neighbors the islands of Micronesia Melanesia and Polynesia Honolulu Hawaii Bess Press ISBN 1 57306 023 2 UNESCO Institute for Statistics UNESCO Retrieved 13 October 2011 Fisheries and Maritime Institute College of Micronesia FSM College Of Micronesia FSM 1 December 2011 Outline of the Fisheries Training Project in the Federated States of Micronesia Japan International Cooperation Agency Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Partner Country s Implementing Organization Fisheries and Maritime Institute FMI College of Micronesia COM Gladwin Thomas 1970 East Is a Big Bird Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 200 ISBN 0 674 22425 6 Woodward David 1998 History of Cartography University of Chicago Press p 470 ISBN 0 226 90728 7 Retrieved 4 August 2010 a b Tamanaha Brian Z 1993 Understanding Law in Micronesia An Interpretive Approach to Transplanted Law Leiden Netherlands E J Brill pp 1 2 ISBN 9004097686 Regional journalists form Micronesian media group Saipan Tribune 26 September 2007 Archived from the original on 16 January 2008 a b The Music and Dance of Micronesia The Concise Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Volume 1 New York Routledge 2013 pp 697 706 ISBN 978 1136095702 Telford Hans W n d Music of the Pacific Island Nations Music Archive for Pacific Island Nations School of Arts Southern Cross University Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Micronesian Games begin in Palau Asia Pacific News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1 August 2010 Archived from the original on 15 December 2013 Retrieved 15 December 2013 Australian Sports Commission 2004 Pacific Sporting Needs Assessment PDF Australian Government archived from the original PDF on 3 December 2007 INTERNATIONAL FOOTBALL CENSUS 2007 Clubs amp Players Internationally PDF Australian Football League Archived from the original PDF on 24 May 2011 Oskow Noah 13 July 2020 When Japan Ruled the Waves The Forgotten Colonies of Micronesia Unseen Japan Retrieved 24 September 2023 General bibliography edit Kirch Patrick Vinton 2001 On the Road of the Winds An Archaeological History of the Pacific Islands Before European Contact University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 92896 1 Lal Brij V Fortune Kate 2000 The Pacific Islands An Encyclopedia University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2265 1 Morgan William N 1988 Prehistoric Architecture in Micronesia Austin Texas University of Texas Press p 30 ISBN 9780292786219 Rainbird Paul 2004 The Archaeology of Micronesia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65630 6 Further reading editGoetzfridt Nicholas J Peacock Karen M 2002 Micronesian Histories An Analytical Bibliography and Guide to Interpretations Westport Connecticut USA Greenwood Press ISBN 0313291039 External links editMicronesia at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage nbsp Data from Wikidata History of Micronesia Micronesian Games Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Micronesia amp oldid 1193031329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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