Republic of Palau

Map

Republic of Palau

Image source: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/islands_oceans_poles/palau.jpg

Data Links

Pacific Basin Wave and Wind model: http://www.lajollasurf.org/swpa.html
NOAA CRED Pacific-wide and local data: http://crei.pifsc.noaa.gov/ocean_data.html

Regional Representative

David Idip, PacIOOS Palau Representative
Palau Automated Land & Resource Info System
Ministry of Resources and Development
PO Box 100
Koror, PW, Republic of Palau 96940
Tel: 680.488.6654
Fax: 680.488.6460
idipd@palaugis.org

David Idip Jr. is a remote sensing/GIS analyst who currently holds a position at the Palau Automated Land And Resource Information Office (PALARIS).  After receiving his BA degree in Marine Science from the University of Hawaii at Hilo, David spent several years in Japan working as researcher for a biotechnology company.  After which he returned to Palau and started work at the Palau International Coral Reef Center (PICRC) as a researcher.  After several years at PICRC, he became interested in the application of remote sensing and GIS techniques for coastal environments therefore he continued his education and earned a MSc. degree in geography (specializing in coastal remote sensing).  When he is out of the office David enjoys fishing, golf and a nice cold beer.

PALARIS Mission statement: The Office of the Palau Automated Land and Resource Information System (PALARIS) has the responsibility to develop the National Geographic Information System (GIS), a centralized land and resource system to inventory and support the management of human, economic and natural resources of the Republic of Palau.  The National GIS will be a unified and integrated network system that will be used in support of decision making and enhance the formulation of policies for the development of Republic of Palau.  The Office of PALARIS has been mandated to provide services to government agencies and affiliates relating to the National GIS.  The PALARIS is responsible for the management of the National GIS and coordinate with government agencies and affiliates with respect to geographic information systems.  The system will provide coordination and a common view of data in a geographic context between programs.

Statistics

Land area: 495 km2 (~300 islands)
EEZ area: 629,000 km2
Political status: Independent nation in free association with the United States
Population: 19,626 (2003 estimate)
GDP: $124 million, GDP per capita: $6157 (2001 estimate, SOPAC)
Ethnicity: Palauan (70%), Filipino (16%), Chinese (5%), others (9%)
Economy: 71% of total economy is dependent on tourism
Max elevation above sea level: 213 m
Island minerals: Aggregate, bauxite, gold, insular phosphate, lignite, kaolinite
Note: The Belauan spellings are used for island names throughout this section.

Island History

Like the rest of Micronesia, Belau was first occupied between 1,000 and 2,000 B.C. by immigrants from the south­west Pacific—Indonesia, Melanesia, and perhaps Polynesia. The first western contact was a rather inauspicious occasion in l783, when the explorer Captain Henry Wilson of England, aboard the vessel Antelope, ran aground on one of the rock islands located between Oreor (formerly Koror) and Beliliou (formerly Peleliu) Islands. The crew spent several months on the islands rebuilding the ship. The British dominated trade with Belau until 1885, at which time Spain took control of the islands. Spain maintained control until 1899, at which time Belau and the rest of the Caroline and Northern Mari­ana Islands were sold to Germany, following the defeat of Spain in the Spanish-American War. Germany administered the islands from 1899 to 1914 and developed their natural resources by conscripting native laborers. These laborers mined phosphate on Ngeaur Island (formerly Angaur) and developed coconut plantations.

Japanese forces occupied Belau in 1914 by a mandate from the League of Nations, which recognized the Emperor of Japan as the authority in Micronesia. The Japanese increased development of mining, agriculture, and com­mercial fishing. They changed the economy from one of subsistence to a market economy. The population swelled to over 40,000, with less than 25 percent being Belauans. Belau became a closed military region in 1938, and campaigns during WWII took place throughout the islands, with major battles on Beliliou, Ngeaur, and Oreor.

The United Nations (U.N.) created the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (TTPI) in 1947 and named the United States the administrative authority. Belau was the last TTPI district to reach independence. In the late 1970s, the United States installed a considerable capital improvement program (CIP) with the goal of building major infrastructure projects (airport, dock, roads, and water, power, and sewer systems) in each of the TTPI district centers. Independence from the U.S.-administered U.N. Trusteeship and initiation of the Compact of Free Association with the United States were entered into on 1 October 1994. U.S. and Belau officials had initially signed the compact eight years before that date, on 10 January 1986. It was officially enacted on 14 November 1986. Belau became the 185th member of the U.N. on 15 December 1994.

Geography

There are about 300 islands in Belau, and nine of them are permanently inhabited. The archipelago extends for about 240 kilometers, but the length of the Belau volcanic arc is about 350 kilometers. The Belau Islands represent the exposed summit of an arcuate submarine ridge, the Belau Ridge (Belau volcanic arc), which is the southernmost arc in a series of arc-trench systems that include the Yap, Mariana, and Izu-Bonin systems to the north. The largest island is Babeldaob (Babelth­uap), most of which has been inaccessible until recently. A ring road is presently being built around Babeldaob.

The Belau group of islands is encircled by a part-bar­rier part-fringing reef, except for the northernmost islands, Ngcheangel (formerly Kayangel), and the southernmost island, Ngeaur. The Ngcheangel Islands constitute an atoll, and Ngeaur Island is an uplifted coral platform with a maxi­mum elevation of 56 m. The atoll surrounded by the barrier reef extends south and west of Babeldaob Island. It encloses many smaller islands, which themselves have fringing reefs. The highest elevation in Belau, 287 meters above sea level, is on Babeldaob.

Geologic Setting

The Belau volcanic arc, of which the Belau Islands are the subaerial expression, began formation just under 40 mil­lion years ago. It remained volcanically active until about 20 million years ago, at which time subduction of the Pacific Plate under the Philippine Plate ceased in that region, though it continued further northeast along the Yap and Mariana arcs. It is likely that subduction is currently occurring only at a very slow rate along the Yap Trench, but it is very active along the Mariana Trench. The Belau Arc is now part of the Palau-Kyushu Ridge, which is an extinct volcanic arc (rem­nant arc), located for the most part in the Philippine Sea back-arc basin.

The southeastern part of the Belau EEZ consists of the sediment-covered West Caroline Basin. That basin is part of the West Caroline microplate, which formed by sea-floor spreading about 35 million years ago. The northeastern part of the EEZ includes the westernmost extent of the Yap Trench and Arc and the southwesternmost part of the Parece Vela Basin, part of the Yap-Mariana back-arc basin. The Parece Vela Basin crust began formation about 40 million years ago. The central part of the Belau EEZ is occupied by the Belau arc-trench system and the northern extension of the arc into the Palau-Kyushu Ridge, where volcanism ended about 25 million years ago. The western third of the EEZ consists of the sediment-covered West Philippine Basin, which began to form by sea-floor spreading about 60 million years ago. Numerous seamounts penetrate through the sediment in that basin.

The oldest rocks exposed on the Belau Islands are of volcanic origin and are related to subduction and arc forma­tion. Those rocks are overlain in places by carbonate reef limestones of Pliocene through Holocene ages (less than 5 million years old). Similar rocks largely make up the uplifted carbonate platform islands of Beliliou and Ngeaur. Bauxite (aluminum ore) was mined on Babeldaob Island from two (Ngardmau, Ngeremlengui) of the dozens of prospects identi­fied there. Mining ceased during World War II after a total of 369,227 metric tones, averaging 52 percent aluminum oxide (Al2O3), was produced between 1938 and 1944. About 2 mil­lion tonnes of proved reserves of 30 percent Al2O3 still exists, as well as much more lower grade ore. Phosphate was mined in Belau and is discussed below. At the Rois Malk epithermal gold deposit on southeast Babeldaob Island, volcanic rocks are overlain in fault contact by a sequence of poorly consolidated shale, shaly siltstone, and pebble conglomerate. Locally, these rocks are highly enriched in organic matter, constituting lignite (coal) deposits. The lignite was briefly mined during World War II along with interbedded layers of kaolinite (white clay) that was used for ceramics.

Sources:

PacIOOS regional representatives (personal communication)
SOPAC website (www.sopac.org)
USGS Circular 1286 (http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/2005/1286)
University of Texas Library (http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps)

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