Adi Island

Adi (Indonesian: Palau Adi) is an Indonesian island.

Location

Adi is located approximately 450 km south of the Equator in the Seram Sea off the western coast of New Guinea. It is severed from the Bomberai peninsula by Street Nautilus, the narrowest width of which is only 10 km. Adi marks the southern border of the Kamrau Bay; beyond lies the open Seram Sea.[1]

Geography

The island is about 158 km² in an elongated shape. From its most north-westerly point to Cape Watukebo in the south-east it measures roughly 44 km, with a maximum breadth from south-west to north-east of nearly 7 km. The highest point is in the north-west and approximately 200 m above sea level. The main settlement is the north-centrally located village of Manggawitu.

Biology

The natural vegetation on the island consists of tropical rain forest. The only indigenous mammal is the sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps). Adi is surrounded by coral reefs.

Linguistics

Though Indonesian is the official language, a creole Papuan variant of Malayan is generally spoken. Kowiai, a small austronesian language, is in decline.

Politically

Adi is part of the Indonesian province West Papua (Indonesian: Papua Barat) and within it of the regency Kaimana. It is part of the disputed territory claimed by the indigenous population as organized in the Free Papua Movement (OPM).

References

  1. "National Geographic Adi Island".

Coordinates: 4°12′25″S 133°27′22″E / 4.207°S 133.456°E / -4.207; 133.456

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.