Guam - Gardening

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Guam

The Territory of Guam
Guahan
グアム準州
Flag of Guam
(In Detail) (In Detail)
Territorial motto: Where America's Day Begins
Image:LocationGuam.png
Official languagesEnglish, Chamorro
Unofficial languagesJapanese (used in business transactions), Tagalog (used in conversation)
CapitalHagåtņa
Chief of stateGeorge W. Bush
GovernorFelix Perez Camacho
Area
 - Total
 - % water
Ranked 202nd
549 kmē
Negligible
Population
 - Total (2003)
 - Density
Ranked N/A
163,941 (July 2003 est.)
299/kmē
Independence none (territory of the USA)
CurrencyUS dollar (USD)
Time zoneUTC+10 (no DST)
Territorial anthem Fanoghe Chamorro
Internet TLD.gu
Calling Code1-671

The Territory of Guam (Guahan in Chamorro) is an island in the Western Pacific Ocean and is an organized unincorporated territory of the United States. Its indigenous people are the Chamorros, who first inhabited the island approximately 3,500 years ago. The capital is Hagåtņa, formerly Agana (pronounced Agaņa). Guam's economy is mainly supported by tourism (particularly from Japan) and its United States armed forces base. The latter takes up one-third of the entire land mass of the island.

Contents

History of Guam

Guam's history of colonialism is the longest along the Pacific islands, starting with Ferdinand Magellan's visit in 1521 during his around the world voyage. The island became an important resting stop on the Spanish trade route between the Philippines and Mexico.

The United States took control of the island in 1898 after the Battle of Guam of 1898 in the Spanish-American War. Guam came to serve as a way station for American ships traveling to and from the Philippines.

During World War II, Guam was attacked and invaded by the Japanese armed forces in 1941. The United States came back in the Battle of Guam in 1944 to liberate the island from Japanese military occupation.

In the early 1960s, the United States eventually granted U.S. citizenship to the Chamorro people and gradually the island obtained semi-autonomous status through the Organic Act.

Politics of Guam

Main article: Politics of Guam

While there is a movement for Guam's complete independence from the United States and a competing but limited movement for statehood, most people on Guam favor a modified version of the current territorial status, involving greater autonomy from Washington, D.C. and the mainland.

See: List of Guam Governors

Transportation and Communications in Guam

Main articles: Communications in Guam, Transportation in Guam

Guam is served by Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport.

As travel restrictions eased and the Japanese economy grew, Guam became a favorite destination for Japanese tourists. Guam is a relatively short flight from Japan compared to Hawaii, and a series of tourist hotels and golf courses were built to cater to the tourists. Today, about 90 percent of tourists to Guam are Japanese. Tourism is such a major part of the island's economy that prettiest beach has been covered with hotels in an area that locals call hotel row. The reef was also dredged to remove the Seaweed that frequently washed ashore, thereby killing much the wildlife along Tumon Beach. Now the beach has pretty white sands, and there are much fewer tropical fish and coral to despoil the beach. The once beautiful public beach has been mostly privatized, limiting access to mostly to paying tourists. The road leading to hotel is heavily congested.

Apra Harbor from the air
Apra Harbor from the air
Map of Guam
Enlarge
Map of Guam

See also

From the CIA World Factbook 2000:

Miscellaneous

The island is also known as a prominent example for the disastrous effects of bioinvasion: A stowaway on U.S. military transport at the end of World War II, the slightly venomous, but rather harmless, brown tree snake (Boiga irregularis) came north to Guam and killed almost the entire native bird population on the previously snake-free island. This snake has no natural predators on the island; nowadays, Guam is one of the areas with the highest snake density in the world (an estimated 2,000 snakes/kmē). Even so, residents rarely see these snakes. They curl up and hide during the day, and move about on trees and fences at night. As prodigious tree climbers, the snakes caused frequent blackouts in neigborhoods across the Island. Now all power poles have a slick metal sheath that prevent the snakes from climbing up. Occasionally, they still manage to break into a substation and knock out power for hours.



Guam lies along the Marianas Trench, a deep subduction zone at the edge of the Pacific plate. The Challenger Deep, the deepest point on earth, is just southwest of Guam at 35,838 ft (10,923 meters) deep.

See also Challenger Deep

External links

  • ChamorroBible.org - Full text for Chamorro and English Scriptures (the rare 1908 Chamorro Bible), Chamorro language resources, maps, and related material.
  • The Brown Tree Snake on Guam How the arrival of one invasive species damaged the ecology, commerce, electrical systems, and human health on Guam: A comprehensive information source.

08-19-2006 11:17:08

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