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Wake Island

Wake Island (Marshallese: Ānen Kio, lit.'island of the kio flower'), also known as Wake Atoll, is a coral atoll in the Micronesia subregion of the Pacific Ocean. The atoll is composed of three islets and a reef surrounding a lagoon. The nearest inhabited island is Utirik Atoll in the Marshall Islands, located 592 miles (953 kilometers) to the southeast.

This article is about the U.S. territory of Wake Island. For other uses, see Wake Island (disambiguation).

Wake Island
Ānen Kio (Marshallese)

January 17, 1899

13.86 km2 (5.35 sq mi)

7.38 km2 (2.85 sq mi)

6.48 km2 (2.5 sq mi)

5.17 km2 (2.00 sq mi)

407,241 km2 (157,237 sq mi)

6 m (21 ft)

0 m (0 ft)

0

c. 100

Wakean

96898

The first recorded discovery of the island was made by Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira in 1568, and ships visited the area until it was claimed by the United States in 1899. The island had little development until 1935, when Pan American Airways constructed an airfield and hotel as a waypoint for trans-Pacific flying boats. Japan seized the island at the opening of the Pacific Theatre of World War II in December 1941, and it remained under Japanese occupation until the end of the war in September 1945.[2] The United States military used the atoll as a processing location for Vietnamese refugees during Operation New Life in 1975.


The United States governs Wake Island as an unorganized and unincorporated territory and comprises part of the United States Minor Outlying Islands. The Marshall Islands also claims Wake Island. It is administered by the United States Air Force under an agreement with the Department of the Interior. The island has no permanent inhabitants, but approximately 100 people live there at any given time.


The natural areas of Wake are mix of tropical trees, scrub, and grasses that have adapted to the limited rainfall. Thousands of hermit crabs and rats live on Wake, and in the past there were also feral cats which had been there to help control the rat population, which at one time was estimated at 2 million. The Wake Island rail, a small flightless bird, once lived on the atoll but went extinct during World War II. Many species of seabird also visit Wake, although the thick vegetation has caused most birds to nest on a designated bird sanctuary on Wilkes Island. The submerged and emergent lands at Wake Island comprise a unit of the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument.

Wilkes Island

[14]

Peale Island

[15]

Location

Pacific Ocean

September 16, 1985

September 16, 1985

Several old shipwrecks, including at least six vessels from World War II and the remains of several sailing vessels

Bunkers and items from the World War II US and Japanese military bases such as pill boxes, bunkers, and gun emplacements

Additional cultural items from prisoners of war, memorials, and other structures

World War II aircraft underwater in the reefs

(US Ship named for Wake Island, commission during World War II)

USS Wake Island

Bryan, E. H. Jr. (1959). (PDF). Atoll Research Bulletin. 66: 1–22. doi:10.5479/si.00775630.66.1.

"Notes on the geography and natural history of Wake Island"

Daniel, Hawthorn (1943). "Wake Island". Islands of the Pacific.

Drechsler, Bernd; Begerow, Thomas; Pawlik, Peter-Michael (2007). Den Tod vor Augen : die unglückliche Reise der Bremer Bark Libelle in den Jahren 1864 bis 1866 (in German). Bremen: Hauschild.  978-3-89757-333-8.

ISBN

Grothe, P.R.; et al. (2010). . Boulder, Colo: National Geophysical Data Center, Marine Geology and Geophysics Division.

Digital Elevation Models of Wake Island: Procedures, Data Sources and Analysis

Heine, Dwight; Anderson, Jon A. (1971). "Enen-kio: Island of the Kio Flower". Micronesian Reporter. 14 (4): 34–37.  0026-2781.

ISSN

L., Klemen (1999–2000). . Archived from the original on July 26, 2011.

"Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942"

Lodge, Robert G.; Workman, Ricky (September 2010). (PDF) (Report). Cleveland, Ohio: McKay Lodge Art Conservation Laboratory. Retrieved August 28, 2021.

Survey, Design and Training for the Stabilization of WWII Historic Features, Objects and Monuments on Wake Atoll

Wake Atoll National Wildlife Refuge

 – Pacific Wreck Database

Wake Island

at IMDb

Wake Island (1942)

at IMDb

Wake Island: Alamo of the Pacific (2003)

Current Weather, Wake Island

 – Airport details, facilities and navigational aids

AirNav – Wake Island Airfield

Rocket launches at Wake Island

 – United States Marine Corps historical monograph

The Defense of Wake

 – Marines in World War II

Surrender of Wake by the Japanese

 – Logistics, flight schedules, facilities (archived – snapshot at December 8, 2016)

U.S. Army Strategic and Missile Defense Command

NPS – Pan American Airways on the Home Front in the Pacific

Photographic history of the 1975 Vietnamese refugee camp on Wake Island

CIA: Library – Publications – The World Factbook Archived September 5, 2017, at the Wayback Machine

Australia-Oceania: Wake Island

(HALS) No. UM-1, "Wake Island, Wake Island, Wake Island, UM", 58 photos, 62 data pages, 9 photo caption pages

Historic American Landscapes Survey