Earth:Ōnohara Islands

From HandWiki
Short description: Island group in the Philippine Sea
Ōnohara-jima
Native name:
大野原島
Ohnoharajima01.jpg
Map of Izu Islands.png
Geography
LocationIzu Islands
Coordinates [ ⚑ ] 34°02′41″N 139°23′15″E / 34.04472°N 139.3875°E / 34.04472; 139.3875
ArchipelagoIzu Islands
Area0.2 km2 (0.077 sq mi)
Highest elevation114 m (374 ft)
Administration
Japan
PrefectureTokyo
SubprefectureMiyake Subprefecture
VillageMiyake
Demographics
Population0

The Ōnohara Islands (大野原島, Ōnohara-jima) are a group of volcanic deserted islands located in the Philippine Sea approximately 180 kilometres (110 mi) south of Tokyo and 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) west of Miyake-jima, in the northern portion of the Izu archipelago, Japan . The group is also known as Sanbon-dake (三本岳, lit. “Three Peaks”) from its profile.

Geography

Ōnohara-jima consists of nine main islets and several smaller rocks and stacks. The island is the remnant of an andesite lava dome with sheer sides, the only visible portion of a submarine volcanic caldera. The above sea-level portion has a surface area of approximately 0.2 square kilometers, with a summit height of 114 metres (374 ft) on the main islet of Koyasu-shima (小安島).

Located in the Kuroshio Current, the area has abundant sea life, and is popular with sports fishermen and scuba divers.

During the Korean War, aircraft of the United States Air Force used Ōnohara-jima as a bombing range, endangering the Japanese murrelet, a rare seabird. The bombing was stopped after Jack Moyer wrote a letter to an associate of then-US President Harry S. Truman.[1][2][3]

Map of Miyake-jima showing Ōnohara-jima to the southwest
Aerial photo of Ōnohara-jima. Made based on National Land Image Information (Color Aerial Photographs), Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism

See also

References

External links