Warir, or Waiji, is an island in the Raja Ampat Archipelago of Southwest Papua, Indonesia. Situated in the Sele Strait, it lies off the eastern coast of the larger island of Salawati. It has an area of 42.8 square kilometres (16.5 sq mi), its length north to south is about 9 kilometres (5.6 mi), and its east-west extent varies between 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) and 6 kilometres (3.7 mi). It is relatively low-lying, with no point exceeding an elevation of 80 metres (260 ft). Its interior is forested, with mangroves fringing the coastal areas, and some agricultural land in the north.[1] The small settlement of Wamega is situated on the north-west coast.
Geography | |
---|---|
Location | Sele Strait |
Coordinates | 1°02′S 131°07′E / 1.03°S 131.12°E |
Area | 42.8 km2 (16.5 sq mi) |
Length | 10 km (6 mi) |
Coastline | 48.3 km (30.01 mi) |
Administration | |
Province | Southwest Papua |
Regency | Raja Ampat |
Warir has long been used for cultivation, and it has been important for the people of Samate and Kalobo villages of Salawati. For about a year during World War II, the island was inhabited by the people of Samate who had fled the Japanese occupation of their village. After the establishment of Indonesian rule since the 1960s, immigrant Bugis people have settled on the island.[2]
The waters around Warir fall within the Dampier Strait Marine Protected Area.[3]
Surroundings
editTo the west of Warir is the narrow and long Lenna Strait (Selat Lenna, width ranging between 0.5 and 1.1 km), which separates it from the mainland of Salawati, where the village of Kalobo is located facing Warir across the strait. The small islands of Waif, Motop, Kalobo Peleh and Kalobo Wei are located in the Lenna Strait. At the south shore of Warir, narrow creeks separate it from the three smaller islands of Warir Manyanyim (with an area of 0.3 km2), Warir Takektol (0.8 km2), an unnamed island with an area of 0.45 km2.
To the south-east, similar narrow creeks separate the islands of Batimee (4.6 km2) and Winkle (0.8 km2). Batimee in turn is surrounded by the tiny islands of Batimee Lil, Sobrain Maralol, Sobrain Sawi, and Batimee Ket. Further up north along the coast of Warir can be found the tiny island of Wamasinketo. The island of Kasim, also known as Kasiem or Kasimraja (0.17 km2), lies off the northeastern tip of Warir.
A few kilometres to the south-east across the strait of Sangoilin Mon lie the Kabra Islands.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b The numerical data and land cover information is from the Penutupan Lahan 2011 dataset (available at WebGIS Kehutanan). For the names of the islands, see the various sources used in the description of File:Warir Island map.svg.
- ^ Van der Leeden, Lex (1995). "World War II in Samate". In Connie Baak; Mary Bakker; Dick van der Maij (eds.). Tales from a Concave World: Liber Amicorum Bert Voorhoeve. Department of Languages and Cultures of South-East Asia and Oceania, Leiden University. p. 383. ISBN 9073006066.
- ^ "Kawasan Konservasi Perairan Kepulauan Raja Ampat". Retrieved 2020-01-02.