PHOENIX ISLANDS


Meaning of PHOENIX ISLANDS in English

group of coral atolls, part of Kiribati, in the west-central Pacific Ocean, 1,650 miles (2,650 km) southwest of Hawaii. The group comprises Rawaki (Phoenix), Manra (Sydney), McKean, Nikumaroro (Gardner), Birnie, Orona (Hull), Kanton (Canton), and Enderbury atolls. They have a total land area of approximately 11 square miles (28 square km). All are low, sandy atolls that were discovered in the 19th century by American whaling ships. Several also were worked for their limited supplies of guano. The islands, which were annexed by Great Britain in 1889, were joined to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony in 1937. Settlement of Manra, Nikumaroro, and Orona islands by Gilbertese colonists in 1938 proved infeasible over time because of inconsistent rainfall. The entire population was moved to the Solomon Islands in 1958 and 1963. After 1939 Kanton and Enderbury were under joint U.S.-British administration for use as stops on transpacific airline flights. Starting in 1970, the United States used Kanton Atoll for missile tracking. All of the Phoenix Islands became part of independent Kiribati in 1979. Kanton is the only inhabited atoll of the Phoenix group. Pop. (1990) 45.

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