New Caledonia
- French:
- Nouvelle-Calédonie
New Caledonia, largest island of the French unique collectivity of New Caledonia, in the southwestern Pacific Ocean 750 miles (1,200 km) east of Australia. Also known as Grande Terre (Mainland), it is approximately 250 miles (400 km) long and 25 miles (40 km) wide.
From its coast, the island of New Caledonia rises to a double chain of central mountains, the highest peak of which is Mount Panié, with an elevation of 5,341 feet (1,628 meters). The island is encircled by one of the world’s longest barrier reefs (second only to Australia’s Great Barrier Reef), and it has extensive lagoons, which, together with its reefs and associated ecosystems, were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2008. New Caledonia’s climate is basically subtropical, with mean monthly temperatures ranging from about 63 °F (17 °C) to 90 °F (32 °C). Precipitation is highest from December to March; on the east coast, which is subject to the trade winds, it reaches about 120 inches (3,000 mm) annually, while the west coast receives less than 40 inches (1,000 mm). Forests grow along the east coast and in some valleys, and the west coast has savannas. The niaouli, or cajeput tree, and more than 10 species of the genus Araucaria (pinelike coniferous trees) are characteristic. Natural fauna is sparse, except for fishes and birds.
The island is believed to have been settled by Melanesian peoples from Southeast Asia by about 3000 bce. The first European to visit the island was Capt. James Cook, who arrived in 1774 and gave it the Roman name for Scotland: Caledonia. Bruni d’Entrecasteaux, a Frenchman, visited the island in 1793. A French Roman Catholic mission was established in 1840, and the island was annexed by France in 1853. It served as a penal colony from 1864 to 1897, during which time (and beyond) local indigenous people organized multiple uprisings against French colonial rule. When the French overseas territory of New Caledonia was formed in 1946, the island became part of it.
The capital, as well as the chief town and port, is Nouméa, on the southwest coast. The island has significant ore deposits (nickel, iron, chromium, cobalt, manganese) and exports coffee and copra. Industries include the processing of nickel ore, the leading export; meatpacking, supplied by the large herds of cattle grazing on the southwestern slopes; and the milling of the local kauri pine for timber. Airlines make domestic connections and link the island to Australia, New Zealand, and other points in the Pacific; ferry service also connects Nouméa with several of the other islands of the territory. There is an extensive road network.
Nearly half of the island’s population is Melanesian. There are also many Europeans and people of European descent living on New Caledonia. The island has communities of Wallisians, ni-Vanuatu (indigenous people of Vanuatu), Indonesians, Tahitians, and Vietnamese; some members of these communities are descendants of people who arrived on New Caledonia as a result of systems of indentured labor. Area 6,321 square miles (16,372 square km).