Tokara Islands

Tokara
Native name:
吐噶喇列島 (トカラ列島), Tokara rettō
Akusekijima
Map of Kagoshima Prefecture
Geography
Coordinates29°58′00″N 129°55′01″E / 29.9667°N 129.917°E / 29.9667; 129.917
Adjacent toPacific Ocean
Total islands12
Area101.35 km2 (39.13 sq mi)
Administration
PrefecturesKagoshima
DistrictKagoshima District
VillageToshima
Demographics
Population648 (2010)
Pop. density6.39/km2 (16.55/sq mi)
Ethnic groupsJapanese

The Tokara Islands (吐噶喇列島, Tokara-rettō) is an archipelago in the Nansei Islands, and are part of the Satsunan Islands, which is in turn part of the Ryukyu Archipelago. The 150 kilometres (81 nmi) chain consists of twelve small islands located between Yakushima and Amami-Oshima. The islands have a total area of 101.35 square kilometres (39.13 sq mi). Administratively, the whole group belongs to Toshima Village, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. Only seven of the islands are permanently inhabited. The islands, especially Takarajima, are home to the Tokara horse.

Etymology

[edit]

One theory[by whom?] holds that the name “Tokara” was derived from “tohara”, or “distant sea area”, as viewed from Okinawa. Another theory[by whom?] states that the name come from the Ainu word tokap, which means “breast”. The southernmost inhabited island in the archipelago, Takarajima, has a mountain, Megamiyama (lit. Goddess Mountain) with such a shape.

History

[edit]

Mention is made in the Shoku Nihongi under an entry for the year 699 of an island called “Tokan”, which is usually identified with Tokara, together with the islands of Tane, Yaku and Amami, although “Tokan” is also sometimes identified with Tokunoshima, an island approximately 150 kilometres (93 miles) away. (While an entry in the earlier Nihon Shoki for the year 654 mentions a "Tokara Country", Tokara no kuni, it is a reference to the Tokhara region of Central Asia, rather than the Tokara Islands.) During the 15th and 16th centuries, the islands came under the control of the Shimazu clan of Satsuma Domain and the Ryukyu Kingdom. Ryukyu ceded its territory in the Tokara Islands to Satsuma in 1611, which was confirmed by the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1624.

In 1908, the islands were administratively organized into Jitto Village, literally “Ten islands”, of which seven were inhabited. After World War II, from 2 February 1946 all of the Satsunan islands south of 30th Latitude, including the Tokara Islands, were placed under United States military administration as part of the Provisional Government of Northern Ryukyu Islands. However, the three northern inhabited islands in the archipelago, Iōjima, Kuroshima and Takeshima, remained under the control of Japan, and were placed under the administration of the village of Mishima. The remaining Tokara Islands reverted to Japan on 10 February 1952 and are now administered as the village of Toshima.

Important Bird Area

[edit]

The islands have been recognised as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because they support populations of Japanese wood pigeons, Ryukyu green pigeons, Ijima's leaf-warblers, Izu thrushes and Ryukyu robins.[1]

Islands

[edit]
The crater on the highest peak (Otake) in Nakano-shima. The stripes that can be seen at the right in this photograph are disused sulfur mining facilities.
Tokara Pony
Photo Name Kanji Area
(km²)
Population
2004[2]
highest point
(m)
Peak Coordinates
Hirase[3] - 30°2′32.26″N 130°3′0.29″E / 30.0422944°N 130.0500806°E / 30.0422944; 130.0500806 (Kuchinoshima) (Toudai-Se)
Kuchinoshima 口之島 13.33 140 628.5 Maedake 29°58′15″N 129°55′20″E / 29.97083°N 129.92222°E / 29.97083; 129.92222 (Kuchinoshima)
Nakanoshima 中之島 34.47 167 979.0 Otake 29°50′30″N 129°52′30″E / 29.84167°N 129.87500°E / 29.84167; 129.87500 (Nakanoshima)
Gajajima 臥蛇島 4.07 497.2 29°54′11″N 129°32′30″E / 29.90306°N 129.54167°E / 29.90306; 129.54167 (Gajajima)
Kogajajima 小臥蛇島 0.50 301,0 29°52′48″N 129°37′15″E / 29.88000°N 129.62083°E / 29.88000; 129.62083 (Kogajajima)
Tairajima 平島 2.08 88 245 Ontake 29°41′15″N 129°31′57″E / 29.68750°N 129.53250°E / 29.68750; 129.53250 (Tairajima)
Suwanosejima 諏訪之瀬島 27.66 48 796,0 Ontake 29°38′19″N 129°42′50″E / 29.63861°N 129.71389°E / 29.63861; 129.71389 (Suwanosejima)
Akusekijima 悪石島 7.49 72 584 Mitake 29°27′36″N 129°36′06″E / 29.46000°N 129.60167°E / 29.46000; 129.60167 (Akusekijima)
Kojima 小島 0.36 56,0 29°13′40″N 129°20′45″E / 29.22778°N 129.34583°E / 29.22778; 129.34583 (Kojima)
Kodakarajima 小宝島 1.00 43 102.7 29°13′26″N 129°19′34″E / 29.22389°N 129.32611°E / 29.22389; 129.32611 (Kodakarajima)
Takarajima 宝島 7.14 114 291.9 Imakira-dake 29°08′40″N 129°12′29″E / 29.14444°N 129.20806°E / 29.14444; 129.20806 (Takarajima)
Kaminonejima 上ノ根島 0.54 280,0 28°49′56″N 129°0′03″E / 28.83222°N 129.00083°E / 28.83222; 129.00083 (Kaminonejima)
Yokoate-jima 横当島 2.76 494.8 Higashimine 28°47′57″N 128°59′20″E / 28.79917°N 128.98889°E / 28.79917; 128.98889 (Yokoate-jima)

References

[edit]
  • National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (NGIA). Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Japan Enroute. Prostar Publications (2005). ISBN 1577856511
  1. ^ "Tokara Islands". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2021. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  2. ^ "Toshima" (PDF). 2004. Archived from the original (PDF; 19 kB) on 4 July 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  3. ^ 平 瀬 - トカラ列島 [Hirase - Tokara Islands]. National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 24 January 2013.
[edit]