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MOLUCCAS, or SPICE ISLANDS

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 681 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MOLUCCAS, or SPICE ISLANDS  , a name which in its wider sense includes all the islands of the
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Malay
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Archipelago between
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Celebes on the W., New
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Guinea on the E., Timor on the S., and the open Pacific Ocean on the N . They are thus distributed over an
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area between 20 43' N. and 8° 23' S. and 124 22' and 135° E., and include: (I) the Moluccas proper or
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Ternate
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group, of which Halmahera is the largest and Ternate the capital; (2) the Bachian, Obi, and Xulla groups; (3) the Amboyna group, of which Ceram (Serang) and
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Buru are the largest; (4) the
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Banda Islands (the spice or nutmeg islands par excellence); (5) the south-eastern islands, comprising Timor-
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Laut or Tenimber, Larat, &c.; (6) the Kei Islands and the Aru Islands, of which the former are sometimes attached to the south-eastern group; and (7) the south-western islands or the Babar, Sermata, Leti, Damar,
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Roma and Wetar groups . At the close of the 16th century this
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part of the archipelago was divided among four rulers settled at Ternate,
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Tidore, Halmahera and Bachian . The
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northern portion belongs to the Dutch residency of Ternate, the
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southern portion to that of Amboyna . The name Moluccas is said to be derived from the Arabic for " king." Argensola (1609) uses the forms islas Malucas, Maluco, and el Maluco; Coronel (1623), isles del Moluco; and Camoens, Maluco . Since 1867, when the
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political unity, under a governor, was dissolved, the Moluccas are often named by the Dutch the "
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Great East " (Groote Oost) . Most of the islands are mountainous, with still active volcanoes . As they lie near or under the equator, the monsoons blowing over them are less
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regular, and the rainfall, of large
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volume throughout the .
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year, is dependent on the height and direction of the chains . The vegetation of the small and narrow islands, all encompassed by the sea, is very luxuriant, and the products, principally nutmegs, mace, and other spices, include also rice and
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sago . The inhabitants are of mixed descent . In some islands are
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people of obvious Papuan
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blood, while in others are Polynesian or Malayan tribes . With these three main races have crossed traders and colonists, Macassars, Buginese, Javanese and Europeans .

The

geology of the Moluccas is very imperfectly known . The great chain of volcanoes which runs through
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Sumatra and
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Java is continued eastwards into the Moluccas, and terminates in a hook-like curve which passes through the Damar Islands to the Banda group . Outside this hook lies a concentric arc of. non-volcanic islands, including Tenimber, the Lesser Kei Islands, Ceram and Buru; and beyond is still a third concentric arc extending from Taliabu to the Greater Kei Islands . The islands of these
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outer arcs consist chiefly of crystalline schists and limestones, overlaid by
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Jurassic, Cretaceous and
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Tertiary deposits . On the whole it appears that the older rocks are found more particularly towards the interior of the curve, and the newer rocks towards the exterior . Eruptive rocks of supposed Cretaceous age are met with in these outer islands, but Tertiary and
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recent volcanic lavas are confined to the innermost arc . Halmahera lies outside these arcs . It appears to consist chiefly of
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gabbro,
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peridotite,
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serpentine and other very basic eruptive rocks, which are believed to be of Cretaceous age . Nummulitic
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limestone occurs in the south-east . Upon the floor of older rock rise a number of volcanoes, some of which are now
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extinct while others are still active . Most of them lie near the west coast or on the islands off this coast; and they are arranged in lines which run approximately from north to south, with, generally, a slight .convexity towards the west . See further MALAY ARCHIPELAGO, and
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separate articles on the
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principal islands and groups .

End of Article: MOLUCCAS, or SPICE ISLANDS
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