Native name: 火山列島 | |
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Location in the Pacific | |
Geography | |
Location | Pacific Ocean |
Coordinates | 24°46′N 141°18′E / 24.767°N 141.300°ECoordinates: 24°46′N 141°18′E / 24.767°N 141.300°E |
Total islands | 3 |
Area | 32.55 km2 (12.57 sq mi) |
Administration | |
Municipality | Ogasawara |
Demographics | |
Population | 380 (January 2008) |
The Volcano Islands or Ioretto (火山列島 Kazan Rettō?) is a group of three Japanese islands south of the Bonin Islands that belong to the municipality of Ogasawara. The islands are all active volcanoes lying atop an island arc that stretches south to the Marianas. They have an area of 32.55 square kilometres (12.57 sq mi) and a population of 380.
The Volcano Islands are:
Farther north but in the same volcanic arc is:
There is a Japan Self-Defense Forces air base on Iwo Jima with a staff of 380. It is located in the village of Minami (Iwo Jima village). Other than that, the islands are uninhabited.
The first recorded sighting by Europeans was in October 1543 by Spanish navigator Bernardo de la Torre on board of carrack San Juan de Letrán when trying to return from Sarangani to New Spain. Iwo Jima was charted as Sufre, the old Spanish term for sulphur.
The islands were uninhabited until 1889, when the two northern islands were settled by Japanese settlers from the Izu Islands. They were annexed by Japan in 1891.
The population was about 1,100 in 1939, distributed among five settlements: Higashi, Minami, Nishi, Kita and Motoyama (meaning "East", "South", "West", "North" and "Mountain of Origin", or central mountain) on Iwo Jima; and two settlements on Kita Iwo Jima: Ishino-mura ("Ishino village"; Ishino is a surname) and Nishi-mura ("West village"). The municipal administration office was located in Higashi until 1940, when the municipality was integrated into the administration of Ogasawara, Tokyo.