Oceania

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Image:LocationOceania.png

Oceania is a geographical, often geopolitical, region consisting of numerous lands – mostly islands but often including Australia – in the Pacific Ocean and vicinity. The exact scope of Oceania is defined variously, with interpretations including Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, and East Timor.

For the oceans of the Earth, see Oceans.

Contents

Overview

The primary use of the term Oceania is to describe a macrogeographical region that lies between Asia and the Americas, with the Australian continent as the major landmass and consisting of some 10,000 islands in the Pacific. The name Oceania is used because, unlike the other regional groupings, it is the ocean and adjacent seas rather than a continent that link the lands together.

Extent

Image:Oceania-map.JPG Originally coined by the French explorer Dumont d'Urville in 1831, Oceania has been traditionally divided into Micronesia, Melanesia, Polynesia, and Australasia. As with any region, however, interpretations vary; increasingly, geographers and scientists divide Oceania into Near Oceania and Remote Oceania.

Most of Oceania consists of small island nations. Australia is the only continental country; by some definitions, East Timor and Papua New Guinea are the only countries with land borders, both with Indonesia.

Territories and regions

Name of territory,
with flagTemplate:Ref
Area
(km²)
Population
(1 July 2002 est.)
Population density
(per km²)
Capital
Template:Flagicon Australia 7,686,850 19,546,792 2.5 Canberra
Template:Flagicon Christmas Island (Australia)Template:Ref 135 474 3.5 The Settlement
Template:Flagicon Cocos (Keeling) Islands (Australia)Template:Ref 14 632 45.1 West Island
Template:Flagicon New Zealand 268,680 3,908,037 14.5 Wellington
Template:Flagicon Norfolk Island (Australia) 35 1,866 53.3 Kingston
Melanesia:Template:Ref
Template:Flagicon Fiji 18,270 856,346 46.9 Suva
Template:Flagicon New Caledonia (France) 19,060 207,858 10.9 Nouméa
Template:Flagicon Papua New Guinea 462,840 5,172,033 11.2 Port Moresby
Template:Flagicon Solomon Islands 28,450 494,786 17.4 Honiara
Template:Flagicon Vanuatu 12,200 196,178 16.1 Port Vila
Micronesia:
Template:Flagicon Federated States of Micronesia 702 135,869 193.5 Palikir
Template:Flagicon Guam (USA) 549 160,796 292.9 Hagåtña
Template:Flagicon Kiribati 811 96,335 118.8 Bairiki
Template:Flagicon Marshall Islands 181 73,630 406.8 Majuro
Template:Flagicon Nauru 21 12,329 587.1 Yaren
Template:Flagicon Northern Mariana Islands (USA) 477 77,311 162.1 Saipan
Template:Flagicon Palau 458 19,409 42.4 Koror
Polynesia:Template:Ref
Template:Flagicon American Samoa (USA) 199 68,688 345.2 Fagatogo, UtuleiTemplate:Ref
Template:Flagicon Cook Islands (NZ) 240 20,811 86.7 Avarua
Template:Flagicon French Polynesia (France) 4,167 257,847 61.9 Papeete
Template:Flagicon Niue (NZ) 260 2,134 8.2 Alofi
Template:Flagicon Pitcairn Islands (UK) 47 47 1.0 Adamstown
Template:Flagicon Samoa 2,944 178,631 60.7 Apia
Template:Flagicon Tokelau (NZ) 10 1,431 143.1 Template:Ref
Template:Flagicon Tonga 748 106,137 141.9 Nuku'alofa
Template:Flagicon Tuvalu 26 11,146 428.7 Vaiaku
Template:Flagicon Wallis and Futuna (France) 274 15,585 56.9 Mata-Utu
Total 8,508,648 31,623,138 3.7

Notes:

Other interpretations of Oceania

  • Australia is sometimes not included in Oceania, although a term like Pacific islands would normally be used to describe Oceania without Australia. The term "Australasia" invariably includes Australia along with parts of Oceania, but this term is sometimes controversial outside of Australia, as it may be seen as too greatly emphasising Australia.
  • Hawaii is correctly included in Oceania. Hawaiians are a Polynesian race and, although the Hawaiian Islands are some distance from most of the islands of Oceania, they are still physically as well as culturally much closer to the rest of Oceania than to North America - and they are no further from the rest of Oceania than from United States territories in the North Pacific.
  • The few U.S. territories in the North Pacific are invariably uninhabited except by itinerant service personnel, and are normally grouped with the mainland United States in North America. They are certainly no part of Oceania and, unlike Hawaii, they are closer to North America - most of them closer to North America than they are to Hawaii.
  • Easter Island is a Polynesian island in the eastern Pacific Ocean, part of the territory of Chile, and is correctly included in Oceania.
  • New Zealand is within the Polynesian triangle and in this sense is part of Polynesia - the Māori of New Zealand constitute one of the major cultures of Polynesia.
  • On very rare occasions the term may be stretched even further to include other Pacific island groups such as the Aleutian Islands, but these are obviously islands off the coast of North America. It would be just as logical to include the Pacific islands of Russia, all of Japan and the Philippines, insular Malyasia, and all of Indonesia as part of Oceania, as to include the Aleutians.

Ecogeography

Oceania is one of eight terrestrial ecozones, which constitute the major ecological regions of the planet. The Oceania ecozone includes all of Micronesia, Fiji, and all of Polynesia except New Zealand. New Zealand, along with New Guinea and nearby islands, Australia, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, and New Caledonia, constitute the separate Australasia ecozone.

Sport

The Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) is one of six football confederations under the auspices of FIFA, the international governing body of football (soccer). The OFC is the only confederation without an automatic qualification to the World Cup Finals. Currently the winner of the OFC must play-off against a South American confederation side.

Oceania has only been represented at three World Cup Finals - Australia in 1974, New Zealand in 1982 and Australia in 2006. However, Australia is now no longer a member of the Oceania Football Confederation, having joined the Asian Football Confederation in 2006.

See also

External links

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