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Ha'apai

Haʻapai
Haʻapai.gif
Map of Haʻapai
Geography
Location Pacific Ocean
Coordinates 20°0′S 174°40′W / 20.000°S 174.667°W / -20.000; -174.667
Archipelago Tonga Islands
Total islands 51
Major islands 17
Area 109.30 km2 (42.20 sq mi)
Highest elevation 1,046 m (3,432 ft)
Highest point Kao
Administration
Tonga
Largest settlement Pangai, Lifuka Island
Demographics
Population 6616 (2011)
Pop. density 60.53 /km2 (156.77 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups Tongan (majority), European, Chinese, Pacific Islanders

Haʻapai is a group of islands, islets, reefs and shoals with an area of 109.30 square kilometres (42.20 sq mi) in the central part of the Kingdom of Tonga, with the Tongatapu group to the south and the Vavaʻu group to the north. Seventeen of the Haʻapai islands are populated with altogether 6,616 people. Its highest point is Kao at almost 1,050 metres (3,440 ft).

Pangai is the administrative capital village of the Haʻapai Group and is located on Lifuka.

Haʻapai consists of 51 islands directly west of the Tonga Trench, constituting a chain of volcanic islands including Kao, the highest point in the kingdom standing at 1,046 metres (3,432 ft). Further to the west are the coral islands which are inhabited. The archipelago lies 204 kilometres (127 mi) north of Tongatapu and 130 kilometres (81 mi) south of Vavaʻu. Seventeen of the islands are inhabited, including the main islands of Lifuka and Foa. The two main villages in the archipelago are Pangai on Lifuka (where Salote Pilolevu Airport is located) and Ha'ano. A total of 7570 people live on the Ha'apai islands (Census 2006).

All the larger islands are in the eastern Lifuka group. The two larger islands are Lifuka and Foa which have 2,968 and 1,485 people respectively as of 2006. After the two larger islands are Nomuka and Haʻano which have four villages with a population of 951. To the south of these islands is ʻUiha, which has two villages with a population of 638, ancient burial grounds and an ancient monument.

The large islands of Tofua (active volcano) and Kao (dormant volcano) are in the far west. The islands of the Kotu group, locally known as Lulunga, are in the southwest of the archipelago. The islands of the Nomuka group, locally known as ʻOtu Muʻomuʻa, are further south.


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