Ontong Java Atoll
Ontong Java Atoll or Luangiua is an atoll in the Solomon Islands, and one of the largest atolls on earth.
It is inhabited by a Polynesian community of about people, who speak the Ontong Java language.
Description
Geographically, Ontong Java belongs to a scattered group of three atolls which includes nearby Nukumanu Atoll and the wholly submerged Roncador Reef located to the south.Administratively Ontong Java belongs to Solomon Islands. As an outlying part of Malaita Province, it forms the northernmost tract of land of this state, over north of Santa Isabel Island.
The closest land, however, is Nukumanu Atoll, which lies only due north of Ontong Java's northern tip and, though historically closely related to Ontong Java, is now under the administration of Papua New Guinea.
Ontong Java is roughly boot-shaped. The entire size of the atoll is, but there are only of land, spread out over 122 small islands. The islands are mostly low-lying coral formations, the highest elevation being.
Approximately 2000 people live on the atoll. There are two main villages where the population is concentrated with 1,386 on the island of Luaniua in the eastern end and 689 on Pelau in the northeast.
History
The islands were first inhabited by Polynesians approximately 2000 years ago. The main cultural and commercial exchanges took place with the inhabitants of neighboring Nukumanu Atoll, with whom Ontong Java people share many cultural affinities.It is likely that the first European sighting was by the Spanish expedition of Álvaro de Mendaña on 1 February 1568. It was charted by them as Bajos de la Candelaria. The following verifiable sighting by Europeans was by Abel Tasman in 1643 who named it Ontong Java; however, it was not until 1791 that Europeans set foot on the islands, when Capt. John Hunter named it Lord Howe Atoll. In 1893 the islands were annexed by Germany and ceded to Great Britain in 1899.
Today the atoll's inhabitants make a subsistence living by means of coconut and taro cultivation, as well as fishing. Until a ban in 2005, the primary source of income was beche de mer and trochus shells, which were shipped to Hong Kong. The inhabitants are also involved in copra production. It also has a prolific number of sea birds, including the black-naped tern, which uses Ontong Java Atoll as a breeding site.
Anthropology and linguistics
Ontong Java is a Polynesian outlier. The inhabitants retain a Polynesian character despite their location in the Melanesian Archipelago of Solomon Islands. In former times both men and women wore elaborate tattoos all over their bodies. Two dialects of one language are spoken in this atoll, Luangiua and Pelau. This language belongs to the Polynesian stock.Ontong Java was visited by English missionary George Brown in mid 19th century. Brown described the population as Polynesian and referred to the place as Lua Niua. He recorded the existence of a two-class system in Ontong Java and, based on it, inferred that it was probable that exogamous classes formerly existed in Samoa as well.
The first detailed research on Ontong Java's inhabitants, however, was conducted by German ethnographers Ernst Sarfert and Hans Damm, during a German scientific expedition of the Southern Seas that took place in 1908–1910. This expedition visited both Ontong Java and neighboring Nukumanu Atoll, where they also carried out their research. Their work, "Luangiua und Nukumanu" was published in 1931. Sarfert and Damm claimed that both names of the atoll, Lord Howe and Ontong Java, were incorrect and called this atoll Luangiua in their works.
Jack London first called this atoll "Oolong". Later he would write in one of his novels:
Ontong Java was later visited by Sydney University anthropologist Herbert Ian Hogbin in 1927. Hogbin's study of Ontong Java was published in 1934.
In late July 2025, Binghamton University Anthropology Professor Carl Lipo, University of Arizona archaeologist Terry, Hunt, and Christopher Filimoehala and Timothy Rieth from the International Archeological Research Institute, traveled Ontong Java to engage in a new exploratory dig on this remote atoll. These scientists aimed to hunt for physical evidence that might connect the concept of creating the massive moai statues found on Rapa Nui to ancient stone monuments found on Ontong Java. These researchers were in luck as excavation found a site with deposits of charcoal and food waste that went down to the high tide line, suggesting humans may have been here not long after this remote volcanic island had emerged from the sea. They also found bones of the Pacific rat which typically accompanied Polynesians wherever they traveled. In addition to their archeological digs, these scientists have chosen to involve the local population through sharing their findings with the local population.
In religious terms, Ontong Java is part of the Anglican Church of Melanesia Diocese of Malaita.