Vatoa
Vatoa (pronounced [βaˈtoa]) (known as Turtle Island after Cook's visit) is an outlier of Fiji's Lau Group. HistoryVatoa was the only island of present-day Fiji visited by James Cook. The island was sighted on 2 July 1774. The next day, a Sunday, the Master and some of Cook's crew went ashore:
Cook's chart shows the name Turtle Isle. GeographyVatoa has varied rainfall and is usually cool because of trade winds. The island has an area of 4.45 square kilometres (445.00 hectares; 1,099.62 acres) and rises to more than 50 metres (160 feet) above sea level. It is composed wholly of limestone (Koroqara Limestone, Tokalau Limestone Group), probably Late Miocene in age. A single village has a population around 300. Interesting old fortifications occupy the highest part of the island. GovernmentViliame Naupoto, a noted son of Vatoa, is currently[when?] Commander of the Republic of Fiji Military Forces. He once served as Director of Immigration and Deputy Commander of the Republic of Fiji Navy. Shipwrecks of Vatoa and associated reef Vuata VatoaVatoa and its associated reef, Vuata Vatoa, have a surprising number of shipwrecks, given the closest island to the north is 85 kilometres (46 nmi) and to the south is 105 kilometres (57 nmi), but Vatoa with an elevation of only 50 metres (160 ft) can easily be missed. Some of the wrecks are listed below:
The schooner, Lyman D. Foster, bound for Suva carrying timber, was dismasted in a hurricane, off Vatoa in April 1913.[1] References
External links19°49′S 178°15′W / 19.817°S 178.250°W
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