TRAVEL.com ® ... Regional:Oceania:Cook Islands Top regional Oceania cook islands cook islands The Heart of ck Thecomplete guide, it covers geography, history, culture, investment, http://www.travel.com/Regional/Oceania/Cook_Islands/
Cook Islands Government Online According to the oral traditions of both the cook islands and New Zealand a broadening of its membership in regional and international organisations and http://www.cook-islands.gov.ck/history.php
Extractions: Settlement and First European Contact The 15 islands that make up the Cook Islands were settled by migrants from nearby islands in what is now French Polynesia and from Samoa in the 13th century. According to the oral traditions of both the Cook Islands and New Zealand Maori people, who share very similar languages, New Zealand was originally settled by canoe voyagers from Rarotonga. Hundreds of ocean-going vaka [canoes] are thought to have landed in New Zealand from about 1000AD - both from Rarotonga and from other islands around the Pacific region. Rarotonga is the last Pacific Island on the sailing route to New Zealand and the island would have been where the canoes replenished their supplies before making the final leg of their epic voyages. Given the well-documented navigational and sailing skills of the early ocean-going voyagers and the strength and agility of their double-hulled craft, it is quite likely that there were also some return journeys, according to some anthropologists. The most legendary migration from Rarotonga took place in 1350 when seven vakas are reputed to have set sail from Avana Harbour to make the arduous voyage to New Zealand.
Extractions: note: estimates for this country explicitly take into account the effects of excess mortality due to AIDS; this can result in lower life expectancy, higher infant mortality and death rates, lower population and growth rates, and changes in the distribution of population by age and sex than would otherwise be expected (July 2000 est.)
Weather Underground: Rarotonga, Cook Islands Forecast Features, Wunder Photos NEXRAD Radar regional Radar Zoom Satellite Maps Observed at Rarotonga, cook islands (history) Elevation 23 ft / 7 m http://www.wunderground.com/global/stations/91843.html
Extractions: GoToMeeting: Free Unlimited Trial Unlimited Web Conferencing College/University Degrees Get Bachelors Degree Online Rarotonga Singles Find a Real Date Tonight Over 40 and need a date? Hosting Companies Website Hosting Services WebSite Hosting Directory Cheap Web Hosting Web Hosting By iPowerWeb ... Web Hosting Reviews Online deals! Weight Loss Cortislim Vitamins Liquid vitamins Body Balance Life force International Internet Mall Caribbean Vacation Rarotonga DSL Broadband Service Providers Leather Jackets ... Rarotonga Payday Loans Internet Shopping Rarotonga Timeshares Rarotonga Medical Malpractice Attorney Wheelchair Lift Liposuction ... Cruise Travel Canadian Pharmacy Canada Pharmacy Canada Drugs Web Hosting Host Department Bannerless Free Web Hosting Real Estate Tracker Real Estate Trackers Board123.com Internet Directory
History Of Cook Islands - MavicaNET regional Australia and Oceania cook islands Path to the top history ofthe cook islands. From the ancient cook islandsans to the present day. http://www.mavicanet.com/directory/eng/24122.html
Extractions: Belarusian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Irish Italian Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian (cyr.) Serbian (lat.) Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Ukrainian Regional Australia and Oceania Cook Islands Culture ... History of Pacific Region History of Cook Islands Sister categories ... History of American Samoa History of East Timor History of Easter Island History of Fiji History of Guam History of Hawaii History of Kiribati History of New Zealand History of Norfolk Island History of Papua New Guinea History of Samoa History of Solomon Islands History of Tonga History of Vanuatu Sites No filters selected ... Web Resources News Job Education Personalia Organizations References and Indices Humor and entertainment Publications Chats and Forums Shopping History of Cook Islands Sites total: 5
World Telephone Numbering Guide history history regional Services regional Services Special Services SpecialServices What s New What s New ck , cook islands, +682 http://www.wtng.info/wtng-682-ck.html
Extractions: Cook Islands Area Code: none Subscriber Number: 5 digits Trunk Prefix: n/a International Prefix: 00 Cook Islands mobile subscriber numbers are of the form 55xxx (or +682 55xxx in international format). Reference: Telecom Cook Islands announcement (via ITU) See Cook Islands telecom carrier website Return to Top
AnthroGlobe Bibliography: The Cook Islands The Journal of Pacific history 297111. 1979 cook islands Politics The Inside regional Meeting of the Pacific islands Women tm)s Non-Governmental http://coombs.anu.edu.au/Biblio/biblio_cooks.html
Extractions: Kristen Corey kcorey@smu.edu Last updated: 07 Feb 2005 This document is a part of a larger collection of the AnthroGlobe specialist bibliographies. It forms a subsection of the Asian Studies WWW VL and Pacific Studies WWW VL Do you have any corrections or addenda to this bibliography? If so, contact the Editor at the email address listed above. Your input will be gratefully received and acknowledged. Bibliography of the Cook Islands A B C D ... P Q R S T U ... W X Y Z A Return to Top of this page B Return to Top of this page C Return to Top of this page D Return to Top of this page Davis, T. and L. Davis 1954 Doctor to the Islands. London: Michael Joseph. 1960 Makutu. London: Michael Joseph. Davis, T.R.A. 1947 Rarotonga Today. Journal of the Polynesian Society 56:197-218. 1992 Island Boy. Suva: Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific. Dixon, R. and T. Parima 1993 Mangaia and the Mission. Suva: Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific. Douglas, Norman and Ngaire Douglas 1990 Cook Islands: A Guide. Alstonville, NSW, Australia: Pacific Profiles. Duerner, Frederick C. 1994 Television and Transition: The Cook Islands Experience, 1986-1993. Doctoral Dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara. Dumbrell, Susan, Richard Taylor, George Koteka, and Koekoe Mokoputu 1984 Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Disease: Present Activities in the Cook Islands: Report No. 2. Noumea: South Pacific Commission.
South Pacific Travel - Pacific Islands Books South Pacific islands South Pacific islands This regional map from the German An opinionated anthropological history of cook s three voyages and their http://www.southpacific.org/books.html
New Zealand (British Empire & Commonwealth Land Forces) history of the cook islands (Government of cook islands) regional. ColonialPeriod, 18001907. New Zealand Defence Forces, 1860-1883, by BL Murray. http://www.regiments.org/nations/oceania/nzealand.htm
Extractions: Military History ... French Revolutionary Wars Treaty of Amiens, ending French Revolutionary wars Napoleonic Wars Treaty of Paris, ending Napoleonic wars European settlement of New Zealand begins with first immigrants sponsored by the New Zealand Company Treaty of Waitingi North Island becomes a Crown Colony, separated from New South Wales Cook Islands become a British Protectorate Cook Islands become a New Zealand Protectorate New Zealand becomes a Dominion First World War Second World War New Zealand Independence Cook Islands granted internal self-government.
Extractions: SPREP Members News Publications ... Home Find out about: SPREP Natural resources Nature conservation Coastal management ... Legal Documents Search powered by Google Home Topic The Pacific islands region is the largest continuous marine habitat on the planet, the Pacific ocean. It is home to a wide range of large marine animals including mammals like whales, dolphins, porpoise and dugongs and marine turtles. Maintaining healthy populations is essential to maintaining oceanic productivity. Despite efforts in certain areas and on certain species e.g. humpback whales, detailed knowledge of marine mammals is at best extremely limited. This is in part due to limited resources and expertise to undertake research in the region, the vastness of the region itself and the diversity of its marine mammals in it. Blue Fin Sei Humpback recovery uncertain, currently under investigation through an integrated research programme - total population of Oceania probably of the order of 2000 animals
The History Of Radio New Zealand International There are some Pacific islands like the Northern cook islands that can t hear If RNZI were to fold, the only major regional international broadcast http://radiodx.com/spdxr/RNZI2.htm
Extractions: RNZI's home 'Broadcasting House'. (Photo credit: David Ricquish) International broadcasting using the shortwave band has been in full force since 1927 when Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States began broadcasting overseas using high powered transmitters. Several years later the Soviet Union began a new trend when it began to broadcast programs in different languages. (Wood, 1994, p. 36) When World War II broke out, New Zealand, like other countries around the world, began to consider the need for an international broadcasting service. This service would be used to let the world know how New Zealand stood ideologically, and as a means for New Zealanders living abroad to maintain some limited contact with their country. Another determining factor was the issue of regional dominance. The major international broadcasters like the BBC, Voice of America, and Radio Australia had strong signals in the region and failure to establish a shortwave service may have been seen as handing the Pacific region over to Australia. New Zealand had strong ties with many Pacific Islands, and this service would be a way of strengthening those ties. Bryan Clark of the New Zealand Radio DX League says the original transmission consisted of a daily 2 hour broadcast of specially prepared programs. These included "Pacific Playground" a tourism show produced in conjunction with the tourism board and detailing New Zealand's appeal as a tourist destination; a weekly "Mailbox" session in which listener queries about New Zealand were answered; as well as specialist programs on Maori music and folklore, New Zealand musicians, sporting results, achievements, etc. (1985)
Regional: Oceania: New Zealand - Open Site Tokelau is governed by New Zealand, while the cook islands and Niue are history. The first Polynesian settlers to the country arrived around the tenth http://open-site.org/Regional/Oceania/New_Zealand/
Extractions: The country consists of two main islands appropriately named the North Island and South Island. In addition to two main islands, there are also several smaller islands spread over a large area of the Pacific. Tokelau is governed by New Zealand, while the Cook Islands and Niue are dependent territories. Geography It is an isolated Pacific nation 2000 km from Australia, its nearest neighbour. To the south is Antartica, while the Pacific Island nations of New Caledonia, Fiji, and Tonga are situated to the North. The size of New Zealand can reasonably be compared to Japan, the British Isles or Colorado in the United States.
Regional: Oceania: Vanuatu: Society And Culture: History - Open Site regional Oceania Vanuatu Society and Culture history Open Site. In 1774,Captain cook named the islands the New Hebrides, a name that lasted until http://open-site.org/Regional/Oceania/Vanuatu/Society_and_Culture/History/
Extractions: The first island in the Vanuatu group discovered by Europeans was Espiritu Santo, when in 1606 the Portuguese explorer, Pedro Fernandez De Quiros, spied what he thought was a southern continent. Europeans did not return until 1768, when Louis Antoine de Bougainville rediscovered the islands. In 1774, Captain Cook named the islands the New Hebrides, a name that lasted until independence. In 1825, trader Peter Dillon's discovery of sandalwood on the island of Erromango began a rush that ended in 1830 after a clash between immigrant Polynesian workers and indigenous Melanesians. During the 1860s, planters in Australia, Fiji, New Caledonia, and the Samoa Islands, in need of laborers, encouraged a long-term indentured labor trade called "blackbirding." At the height of the labor trade, more than one-half the adult male population of several of the Islands worked abroad. It was at this time that missionaries, both Catholic and Protestant, arrived on the islands. Settlers also came, looking for land on which to establish cotton plantations. When international cotton prices collapsed, they switched to coffee, cocoa, bananas, and, most successfully, coconuts. Initially, British subjects from Australia made up the majority, but the establishment of the Caledonian Company of the New Hebrides in 1882 soon tipped the balance in favor of French subjects. By the turn of the century, the French outnumbered the British two to one.
AEA Instructions N8 MicroBusiness history N9 regional and Urban history 719 Comoros islands720 Congo 809 cook islands 524 Corsica 212 Costa Rica 526 Crete 596 Croatia http://www.lbmchost.com/aea/instructions.htm
Extractions: American Economic Association Directory of Members If you do not wish to submit your biographical information online, you may complete the Download Membership Form form from your screen and print it. You should complete the form and fax all 3 pages to (615) 343-7590 or mail to American Economic Association, 2014 Broadway, Suite 305, Nashville, TN 37203.
LocalPin - Society And Culture In Cook Islands LocalPin regional search engine Find it where you are Art cook Islandsincludes a history of contemporary art and information about local artists. http://www.localpin.com/info/en/oceania/cook_islands/society_and_culture/
UNEP In Asia And The Pacific Fiji halted its use in 2000, while the cook islands and Niue are currently their history of strong regional cooperation, and the demands of other more http://www.roap.unep.org/html/nr/nr02-08.htm
Extractions: World's first regional strategy receives nearly US$ 1 Million Bangkok, May 17, 2002 - The Pacific Islands have been given a major boost in their efforts to phase ozone-depleting substances (ODS), required under the Montreal Protocol. A meeting in Nadi, Fiji next week will plan implementation of the first 'regional-scale' ODS phase out strategy to be approved by the Protocol's Multilateral Fund. The Fund's Executive Committee allocated US$880,000 million for the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) - managed project at its meeting in Canada in March. The project will enable the Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, Palau, the Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu to completely phase out the use of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) by the end of 2005. CFCs and hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), used in refrigeration and air-conditioning, and methyl bromide, a fumigant in quarantine and pre-shipment applications, deplete the ozone layer, a natural shield in the earth's upper atmosphere that filters out harmful UV rays from the sun. Pacific island countries currently consume about 50.6 tonnes of CFCs annually. Fiji halted its use in 2000, while the Cook Islands and Niue are currently preparing to ratify the Protocol, with assistance from New Zealand.