Status Report

NASA MODIS Image of the Day: June 16, 2009 – Kiritimati (Christmas Island)

By SpaceRef Editor
June 16, 2009
Filed under , , ,
NASA MODIS Image of the Day: June 16, 2009 – Kiritimati (Christmas Island)
NASA MODIS Image of the Day: June 16, 2009 - Kiritimati (Christmas Island)

Images

Kiritimati Island, a Pacific Ocean atoll in the northern Line Islands, has a large infilled lagoon that gives it the largest land area (125 square miles, 321 square km) of any atoll in the world.

It is shown in this image captured by the MODIS on the Aqua satellite on June 9, 2009.

Captain Cook named the atoll Christmas Island when he arrived on Christmas Eve in 1777. The name “Kiritimati” is actually pronounced “Ki-ris-mas”, as it is a transliteration of the English word “Christmas” into Gilbertese, a Micronesian language. (In Gilbertese, the ‘ti’s’ in Kiritimati are pronounced as ‘s’.) Used for nuclear testing in the 1950s and 1960s, the island is now valued for its marine and wildlife resources. It is particularly important as a seabird nesting site – with an estimated 6 million birds using or breeding on the island, including several million Sooty Terns. Rainfall on Kiritimati is linked to El Niño patterns, with long droughts experienced between the wetter El Niño years.

SpaceRef staff editor.