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Suwarrow
At the southern extremity
of the northern group of the Cook Islands is Suwarrow , a
true atoll. There is no continuous history of Polynesian habitation
and therefore no traditional Polynesian name for the island.
Its first recorded discovery was by a Russian ship, the "Suvorov"
on September 17 1814. The crew found the island to be uninhabited.
However, Europeans were certainly in residence over the previous
several hundred years because Suwarrow is a true treasure
island on which chests of coins have been found.
The atoll has one of the best harbors in the Pacific. It is
quadrilateral in shape and 50 miles (80 km) in circumference.
Its reef encloses a land-locked lagoon 12 miles (19 km) by
eight (13 km). Cyclones have often created waves which sweep
right over the atoll since its small component of land is
extremely low-lying.
Suwarrow has a
mysterious past. It was described by Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson
as "the most romantic island in the world" . Although
it is a tempting thought, it was not the model for "Treasure
Island" by her husband Robert Louis Stevenson, since
he knew nothing of Suwarrow when he wrote his famous book.
In the mid-19th
century a ship out of Tahiti carrying out salvage work on
a wreck on Suwarrow's reef unearthed a box containing $15,000
in coins. In 1876 a New Zealander, Henry Mair, discovered
silver pieces of eight in a turtle nest. The main find was
hastily covered again because of a fracas Mair was involved
and has never yet been rediscovered. An interesting sidelight
on Henry Mair is that he was a relative of the well-known
New Zealand Maori rights activist of the mid-1990s, Ken Mair.
The coins were from 100 years before, during the period when
the British navigator, George Anson, crossed the Pacific in
1742 in the HMS "Centurion" after losing five ships
in a raid on Spanish shipping in the Pacific.
The main island
was once covered with tall forest and banyan trees which were
cleared in the mid-1870s when excavations uncovered stone
walls and platforms, lime kilns, a flintlock, a musket and
a skeleton holding an iron bolt.
Theories abound
on the origin of these remains. For more than 250 years Spanish
galleons crossed the Pacific from the west coast of the Americas
to the Philippines and back again. Most used a more northerly
route but it is entirely possible that some of these ships
wandered further south and were shipwrecked as a result of
the violent storms and cyclones common in these latitudes.
In 1565 the Spanish
ship "San Lucas" under the command of Alonso de
Arellano, successfully completed the first return trip from
Mexico to the Philippines. This epic journey opened the way
for the Spanish to develop trade between the two countries
and to transport goods overland for onward shipment across
the Atlantic to Spain. It says something for the seamanship
of the Spaniards that during these 250 years only six ships
were completely lost and three were wrecked. A further six
European ships are known to have disappeared in the central
Pacific between 1526 and 1768.
In the 1950s Suwarrow
achieved fame as the home of the New Zealand hermit, Tom Neale,
who stayed alone there from 1952 to 1954 and again from 1960
to 1963. His experiences were documented in his book "An
Island to Oneself".
Suwarrow is currently
the subject of environmental impact investigations because
of plans by a Hawaiian company to set up a black pearl farming
operation in its huge lagoon. There is some resistance to
this from environmentalists both because of the likely impact
on marine life of up to 100 workers taking up residence and
because of a reduction in bio-diversity from the possible
importation of pearl shell stock from Manihiki.
Today a caretaker and his family live on the atoll for most
of the year, their solitude disturbed only by the occasional
visiting yacht.
Suwarrow is now
a conservation reserve.
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