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4 unusual facts about Torres Islands


Torres Islands

Despite the fact that they belonged to a broader regional complex of human and material exchanges that extended well into present-day Temotu province (in the Solomons), the Torres Islands eventually became part of the Anglo-French Condominium of the New Hebrides in 1906, and were subsequently incorporated into the Republic of Vanuatu in 1980.

In 2004 the linguist Alexandre François undertook the first descriptive study of these two languages, which is currently in progress.

Like the rest of the country, the islands are in the Vanuatu rain forests ecoregion.

According to vaguely worded Mission records located at the Diocese of Banks and Torres headquarters on Sola (Vanua Lava), at some time in the early 1930s the total population of the Torres group numbered no more than 56 persons.



see also