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NEW CALEDONIA (Fr. Nouvelle-Caledonie)

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 470 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CALEDONIA (Fr. Nouvelle-Caledonie)  , an island in the western Pacific Ocean, belonging to France . (For map, see PACIFIC OCEAN.) It is about 250 M. long, and has an extreme breadth of 35 M. and an
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area including adjacent islets of 6450 sq. m.; is situated at the
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southern extremity of
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Melanesia, between 20 5' and 22° 16' S., and between 164° and 1670 30' E., and, like all the chief islands of that chain and the chain itself, lies north-west and south-east . An almost unbroken barrier
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reef skirts the west
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shore at about 5 m. distance, enclosing a navigable channel; on the east, which is more abrupt and precipitous, it is much interrupted . To the north the reefs continue, marking the former extension of the
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land, for about 16o m., ending with the Huon Islands . The Isle of Pines, so called from its araucarias (its native name is Kunie), geologically a continuation of New
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Caledonia, lies 30 M. from its south-east extremity . It formerly abounded in sandalwood, and consists of a central plateau surrounded by a belt of cultivation . At the two extremities of New Caledonia, parallel
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longitudinal ranges of mountains enclose valleys; for the rest the island consists essentially of confused masses and ranges of mountains, rising to an extreme
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elevation of 5387 ft., the plains being chiefly the deltas of rivers . The landscape is rich and beautiful, varied with
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grand rock scenery, the coast-
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line being broken by numerous small bays, into which flow streams rarely navigable even for short distances, but often skilfully utilized by the natives for irrigation; and sometimes flowing in subterranean channels . The larger rivers in the wet season form impassable morasses, especially in the S.E., where the mountains rise in isolated masses from flat plains . Geology.1--Speaking generally, New Caledonia may be described as a
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band of Palaeozoic and probably
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Lower Palaeozoic rocks, associated doubtless with some Archean beds; this band runs from north-west to south-east, through the whole length of the island . The second element in the composition of the island consists of Mesozoic beds, which occur in a broken band along most of the south-western coast . Most of the island is occupied by the band of the old rocks, which include
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mica, glaucophane and sericite-schists and slates; there are small intrusions of granite, and numerous dikes and masses of basic eruptive rocks .

The slates are inter-bedded with limestones containing fossil brachiopods, which have led to their determination as

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Silurian or Devonian; but L . Peletan classes all these limestones as Triassic . Triassic beds of the Pacific coastal type occur in a band along the south-western coast . They are covered by marine
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Jurassic beds and they in turn by Cretaceous
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coal-bearing, terrestrial deposits, resembling those of New Zealand . According to E . Glasser, the basic igneous rocks which are associated with the
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mineral deposits of New Caledonia were intrusive in Cainozoic times, at the severing of the connexion between New Caledonia and New Zealand . New Caledonia is
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part of the Australasian Festoon, and in its general characters resembles the geology of New Zealand . The main mineral deposits are the nickel ores, occurring as
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veins of garnierite, associated with
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peridotite dikes, in the ancient rocks of the eastern slope of the island . ' The basis of knowledge of the geology of New Caledonia was laid by Gander,
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Ann.
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des Mines,
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ser . 6, vol. xii . (1867) . Later accounts are by E .

Glasser, "

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Les Richesses minerales de la Nouvelle Caledonie," Ann. des Mines, ser. to, vol. iv. mem. pp . 299-392, pl. xi., and vol . V. mem. pp . 29-54, 503-701, pl. ii. and xii . (1904); and by L . Peletan, Les Richesses minerales des colonies frantaises (Paris, 1902),
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Climate,
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Flora,
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Fauna.—The hottest and wettest months are from December to March, but there is usually a fresh trade-wind blowing and the climate is healthy . There is much less moisture, and the flora is of a less tropical character than farther north; it has some Polynesian and New Zealand
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affinities, and on the west coast a partially Australian character; on the higher hills it is stunted; on the lower, however, there are
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fine grass lands, and a scattered growth of niaulis (Melaleuca viridiflora), useful for its
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timber, bark and cajeput oil . There is a
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great variety of fine timber trees . The
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bread-fruit,
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sago,
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banana,
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vanilla, ginger,
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arrowroot and curcuma grow wild . The
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cocoa nut, maize,
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sugar-
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cane, coffee, cotton, rice and
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tobacco (which last does not suffer like other crops from the locusts) do well . The orange, indigo, lucerne and
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European vegetables are grown . Mammals are very few; they include the rat and Pteropus and other bats .

The commonest birds are pigeons (the large notou and other varieties), doves, parrots, kingfishers and ducks . The kagu (Rhinochetus jubatus), a

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peculiar " wingless "
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bird, is found here only . Turtle abound on the coast, and fish, of which some kinds, as the tetrodons (globe-fish), are poisonous, especially at certain seasons . Land and marine molluscs are numerous, and include various edible kinds . Population.—At the census of 1901 the population of New Caledonia numbered 51,415, consisting of 12,253
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free Europeans (colonists, soldiers, officials), 29,106 natives, 1o,o56 convicts . In 1898, however, the introduction of convicts into the island ceased . The centres of population are Noumea (Numea), the capital, on a fine harbour of the west coast near the southern extremity of the island, with 7000 inhabitants; Bourail, an agricultural penitentiary (1800); La Foa, in the centre of the coffee plantations; Moindu, St Louis and St Vincent . The natives, whom the French call Kanakas (Canaques, a word meaning " man," applied indiscriminately to many Pacific peoples), live on reservations . They are Melanesians of mixed
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blood, of two fairly distinct types, one sub-Papuan and the other Polynesian . Of the first the
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physical characteristics are a small, thin-limbed
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body, hair black, short and woolly, projecting jaws, rounded, narrow, retreating forehead, long and narrow head, enormous eyebrow ridges, flat nose and dark skin . The second type is characterized by a lighter skin, some-times of a reddish-yellow, longer, less woolly hair, body taller with better-proportioned limbs, and head broader . This is the prevailing type in the east and south of the island .

There is nowhere a real defining line between the two (many New Caledonians having black skins and woolly hair with Polynesian superiority of

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limb), but the Polynesian type is generally found among the chiefs and their kindred . Both sexes among the natives pierce the lobes of the ear for ornaments . Tattooing is almost entirely confined to the
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women . Both sexes go naked, or with the scantiest loin-
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cloth . Their huts are usually beehive-shaped, with a single apartment, low narrow door, and no chimney . There are various degrees of hereditary chiefships, and a supreme chief recognized by all . As in some other Pacific islands, when a son is born the chiefship passes to him, but the
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father continues to govern as regent . All
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property descends to the eldest son by birth or adoption, though custom demands that the younger members of the
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family should have a share . The
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people have to
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work on the chief's plantations and
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fisheries, and also work in parties for each other, breaking up new land, &c . This often ends in feasting and in dances (pilu pilu), which include allegorical representations of events or ideas . The supreme chief's authority is limited by the advice of a council of elders, whom he is obliged to summon in certain emergencies . The standard of morality is low; women are practically slaves, and
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infanticide was formerly
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common .

The Kanakas are excellent agriculturists, being accounted

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superior in this
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matter to every other
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race of the Pacific . About the
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middle of the 19th century the indigenous population was 60,000 . Returns for 1904 showed that this had fallen to rather less than
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half . The
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languages of the different tribes are mutually unintelligible . They express abstract ideas imperfectly . Thus there are several words for eating, each applied to a particular article of food . Their reckoning shows the same peculiarity . The numbers go up to five, and for living
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objects the word bird is added, for inanimate
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yam, for large objects
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ship.' There are other terms for bundles of sugar-canes, rows (planted) of yams, &c . ; and sometimes things are counted by threes . Ten is two
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fives, 15 three fives, 20 is a " man " (ten fingers and ten toes), 10o is " five men," and so on . Administration and
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Industries.—The colony is administered by a governor, who exercises military power through a marine
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infantry colonel, and
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civil power with the assistance of a privy ' A similar usage exists in
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Malay; see paper by Yule in Jour . A nthrop .

Inst. ix . 290.council, a director of the interior, a judicial head, and a director of the penitentiary administration . There is also an elective general council . Noumea is the seat of a superior tribunal, a tribunal of first instance, and a tribunal of

commerce . The island and its dependencies are divided into five arrondissements . Noumea alone has (since 1879) a
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municipality, other localities being administered by commissions . There are about 1600 sq. m. of cultivable lands in the alluvial valleys, where coffee, maize, tobacco, sugar-cane, the
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vine, vegetables, potatoes, and some of the cereals are grown with success . Coffee was introduced about 187o, and has prospered well . Cheap agricultural labour is supplied by the convicts, by the liberated convicts, the Kanakas, and (to some extent) labourers from the New Hebrides . The
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soil is in three domains: that of the state, for the working of which concessions may be granted; that of the penitentiary administration; and that of the native reserve . Many horses, cattle and sheep have been imported, and the
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meat-preserving industry is prosecuted . Gold is found in the valley of the Diahot, as well as lead and copper at Balade: Iron is found everywhere .

The yearly output of nickel and chrome is considerable, and these minerals, with

cobalt, constitute the characteristic
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wealth of the island . Coal has been worked near Noumea, and
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kaolin is found in places .
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Gypsum and marble also deserve mention . The chief
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industrial establishments are smelting furnaces for cobalt, meat-preserving
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works at Ouaco, sugar-works and distilleries at Noumea and La Foa, tobacco, oil and
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soap factories at Noumea . The commerce in 1888 amounted to £480,000, of which £200,000 represented the trade with France . In 19oo the
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total had risen to £8zo,000, of which £480,000 was for imports and £340,000 for exports, the share of France in that
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year having been 45% of imports and 47 % of exports . The island imports wines,
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spirits, tissues, clothing and ironmongery; and exports ores, nickel, cobalt and chrome (which represent over three-quarters of the total exports in value), preserved meats and hides, coffee, copra and other colonial produce . There are about 150 M. of
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carriage roads, and in' the mountainous regions there are many footpaths . A railway
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running north-westward from Noumea to Dumbea, &c., is designed to connect the capital with Bourail . The islands annexed to the colony of New Caledonia are the Isle of Pines, used as a place of detention for habitual criminals; the
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Loyalty Islands (q.v.), E. of New Caledonia; the Huon Islands, a practically barren
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group; the Wallis
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Archipelago (q.v.); and Futuna and Alof a, S. of the Wallis group .
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History.—New Caledonia was discovered by Captain Cook in 1774 . He touched at the haven of Balade (the
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original name of the island) near the north-western extremity, as did d'
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Entrecasteaux in 1793, who closely explored the coast and surrounding seas .

They subsequently became known to sealers and traders in sandalwood, who, however, established no friendly relations with the natives . In 1843 French missionaries arrived at the island, and it was claimed for France, but on

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British representations the claim was renounced . In 1851 a landing party from a French vessel lying at Balade was attacked by the natives, and massacred with the exception of a single member . France was now determined on the annexation, and the flag was raised at the same spot in 1853, but simultaneously the
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commander of a British vessel was in negotiation with the native chief of the Isle of Pines, and the British flag was hoisted there . The chief, however, subsequently sided with the French, and the British claim was finally withdrawn . The capital, Noumea, was founded in 1854 (it was then called
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Port de France); in 186o New Caledonia became a colony distinct from the French possessions in the Pacific at large; in 1864 the first penal settlement was made on Nou Island, off Noumea . In 1878 there was a serious native insurrection, and another in 1881 was only put down after much bloodshed . See H . Riviere, Souvenirs de la Nouvelle-Caledonie: l'insurrection canaque (Paris, 1881); Gallet, La Nouvelle-Caledonie (Noumea, 1884); Cordeil, Origines et progres de la Nouvelle-Caledonie (Noumea, 1885) ; C . Lemire, La Colonisation ... en Nouvelle-Caledonie (Paris, 1878) ; Ibid . (Noumea, 1893) ; Voyage a pied en Nouvelle-Caledonie (Paris, 1884); M . A .

Legrand, Au pays des Canaques (Paris, 1893) ; Moncelon, Le Bagne et la colonisation pe'nale a la Nouvelle-Caledonie (Paris, 1886) ; A .

Bernard, L'Archipel de la Nouvelle-Caledonie (Paris, 1895) ; Nouvelle-Caledonie, ses richesses, son avenir (Paris
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Exhibition, 1900) ; G . Griffith, In an unknown Prison Land (
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London, 1901); Carol, La Nouvelle-Caledonie miniere et agricole (Paris, 1900) ; Vallet, La Colonisation francaise en Nouvelle-Calidonie (Paris, 1905) .

End of Article: NEW CALEDONIA (Fr. Nouvelle-Caledonie)
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