Maiana

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Maiana
File:7 Map of Maiana, Kiribati.jpg
Map of Maiana
GilbertIslandsPos.png
Geography
Location Pacific Ocean
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Archipelago Gilbert Islands
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Highest elevation 3 m (10 ft)
Country
Demographics
Population 2,027 (as of 2010 Census)
Density 121 /km2 (313 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups I-Kiribati 99.9%

Maiana is an atoll in Kiribati and is one of the Central Gilbert Islands. Maiana is 44 kilometres (27 mi) south of the capital island of South Tarawa and has a population of 2,027 as of 2010. The northern and eastern sides of the atoll are a single island, whilst the western edge consists of submerged reefs and many uninhabited islets, all surrounding a lagoon. The atoll is 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) long and is very narrow, with an average width of less than 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) and a total land area (including uninhabited islets) of 16.72 square kilometres (6.46 sq mi).[1]

Geography

File:Tarawa Maiana STS088-707-6.jpg
Maiana Atoll can be seen on the bottom of this photograph, with the larger formation being Tarawa Atoll

Most of the 2,027 people who live on Maiana live on the main island; the largest village is Bubutei, at the southern tip of the main island, which is home to 489 people or almost a quarter (24%) of the island’s total population. The population of Maiana is roughly stable and has been around 2,000 people since 1985.[1]

Abaiang: Population and Land Area
Census Area Population 2010[2] Land area by islet[2] Density (people per acre)
Tebikerai 93 61.2 acres (25 ha) 1.5
Tebiauea 211 3,805.6 acres (1,540 ha) 0.5
Raweai 214
Bubutei 489
Tekaranga 139
Tematantongo 164
Aobike 110
Tebanga 264
Temwangaua 115
Toora 115
Tebwangetua 65
Teitai 48
Uninhabited islets 0 263.5 acres (107 ha) 0
Maiana total 2,027 4,130.3 acres (1,671 ha) 0.5

Climate change

Many parts of Maiana suffer from coastal erosion, with the villages of Tekaranga and Tematantongo being particularly affected. Drought is another serious concern as the island's limited freshwater supply comes entirely from the shallow freshwater lens, which becomes salty close to the coast especially during drought periods. Like all of the atolls of Kiribati, Maiana is at serious risk from sea level rise, as even small changes in sea level can cause accelerated erosion and threaten infrastructure, agriculture and water supplies.[1][3]

Administration

File:Maiana Island Council compound.jpg
The Island Council compound in Maiana, Kiribati

Maiana is administered by an Island Council based in Tebangetua village. The Maiana constituency elects two representatives to the national House of Assembly in the capital of South Tarawa. At present, the MPs for Maiana are Dr. Anote Tong and Teiwaki Areieta.[4] Dr. Tong is also the current President of Kiribati.

Myths and legends

There are different stories told as to the creation of Maiana and the other islands in the Gilberts. An important legend in the culture of Maiana is that spirits who lived in a tree in Samoa migrated northward carrying branches from the tree, Te Kaintikuaba, which translates as the tree of life. It was these spirits, together with Nareau the Wise who created the islands of Tungaru (the Gilbert Islands).[Note 1]

History

Maiana Post Office opened around 1925.[7]

Maiana Ferry Disaster

On 13 July 2009, the vessel Uean Te Raoi II, owned by the Catholic Parish of Maiana and travelling from Bwairiki in Tarawa, capsized and foundered off Maiana with the loss of 35 lives.[8]

Notes

  1. Sir Arthur Grimble, cadet administrative officer in the Gilberts from 1914 and resident commissioner of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands colony from 1926, recorded the myths and oral traditions of the Kiribati people. He wrote the best-sellers A Pattern of Islands (London, John Murray 1952,[5] and Return to the Islands (1957), which was republished by Eland, London in 2011, ISBN 978-1-906011-45-1. He also wrote Tungaru Traditions: writings on the atoll culture of the Gilbert Islands, University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, 1989, ISBN 0-8248-1217-4.[6]

References

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  4. "Members of the Parliament of Kiribati for the Ninth Parliament", House of Assembly of Kiribati
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