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South Pacific Islands:

Comprehensive south pacific islands travel guide with specific destination information for fiji, vanuatu, samoa, tonga, cook islands, tahiti, new caledonia and hawaii.


South Pacific Travel Guide

Samoa


Cook Islands


Tahiti


Hawaii



HOLIDAYS
Fiji
Cooks
Tahiti
Vanuatu
Tonga
Samoa
Beach Holidays the best superb average good good good
Overnight Cruise superb poor the best poor poor poor
Weddings the best superb superb good poor average
Honeymoons superb superb the best average good good
Family Holidays the best superb average average average average
Golf Holidays the best poor average average poor average


ACTIVITIES Fiji Cooks Tahiti Vanuatu Tonga Samoa
Scuba Diving the best average good superb good average
Surfing the best poor good superb average good
Game Fishing good superb average the best superb average
Sailing superb poor superb superb the best average
Kayaking the best average good superb superb good


ADVENTURE Fiji Cooks Tahiti Vanuatu Tonga Samoa
Backpacking the best good average superb superb superb
Eco-tourism good average superb the best good superb
Sightseeing Tours superb average good the best poor superb
Hiking superb good superb the best average superb
Whale Watching poor superb average good the best average



About the Region

The Pacific Ocean covers a third of the worlds surface - it is a massive 64,500,000 sq. miles which is more than the earths total land mass. Most of this is ocean - just 500,000 sq. miles is land. Over 90% of this land is on the relatively large islands of Papua New Guinea, New Zealand and Hawaii. There are literally thousands more islands, many of which are mere coral atolls less than 5 metres above sea level. Each island nation has a 200-nautical-mile Premium Economic Zone making most of the nations larger in size than European countries.

There are three types of islands in the Pacific - volcanic islands, coral atolls and limestone islands.

Volcanic islands are the base of all islands and are created as a result of continental drift. Submarine volcanoes are common in the Pacific Plate and even as you read, some of these erupting volcanoes near the surface of the sea create new islands (as with the hot spot south-east of American Samoa and also south-east of the Big island Hawaii). The larger the plutonic activity the larger the new island will be. In many areas there are visible mountain chains of these volcanic peaks. Samoa, Hawaii and New Zealand are stunning examples of this extreme volcanic landscape. Whilst the volcanic peaks are the visible islands, great chasms and massive marine mountains lie beneath the Pacific Ocean - the Mariana Trench in Micronesia is the deepest point in the world at just over 36,000 feet.

Over time, coral reefs and lagoons form around these new volcanic islands like those in the Mamanuca Group in Fiji and the Ha'apai Group in Tonga. Coral forms only between 35 degrees north and 32 degrees south of the Equator and thrives in clear salty waters where the temperature never falls below 18C and the depth does not exceed 50 metres.

Eventually the volcanic islands subside back into the sea, eroded over time by sea and wind. In the last stages of this erosion, a deep lagoon (being the crater) with a string of coral atolls (being the crater rim) remains. It is these lagoons - Bora Bora in Tahiti, Aitutaki in the Cook Island - that have become the archetypal South Pacific Island.

In subsequent upheavals, the coral reefs die to form limestone islands which have craggy coastlines, rocky interiors, caves and spectacular cliffs like those found in the Cook Island (Mangaia is believed to be the oldest island in the Pacific) and the Vava'u Group in Tonga.








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Pacific Travel Guides is an independent publisher specializing in the South Pacific providing free and unbiased tourist information on the Internet as well as coffee table photographic books to help travellers plan their holidays.

Please note that we are not a booking agent and are unable to offer personal advice, recommendations or a booking service; nor are we set up to answer email enquiries about the region.


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Last Updated
13 August 2008

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