Classroom lesson · East Rennell · 🇸🇧 Solomon Islands

East Rennell

The world's largest raised coral atoll - a UNESCO World Heritage Site

Lake Tegano on Rennell Island surrounded by dense forest

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

East Rennell is the southern part of Rennell Island, the world's largest raised coral atoll. An atoll is a ring-shaped island made of coral reef - but Rennell's is special because millions of years of geological movement have pushed the whole coral ring up above the sea, creating a flat island with a giant saltwater lake sitting right in the middle. UNESCO has declared it a World Heritage Site.

Tell me more

Rennell Island looks like a big flat table rising out of the Pacific Ocean. Around its edges are ancient coral cliffs, while the interior is covered in thick forest. In the eastern part of the island sits Lake Tegano, the largest lake in the whole Pacific Islands region. It is a saltwater lake - connected to the ocean underground - and home to many species found nowhere else on Earth.

Because Rennell is so remote and hard to reach, its forests have stayed almost untouched for thousands of years. Ancient trees tower over the canopy, and birds that have never had to fear humans are still quite tame. Scientists have discovered dozens of plant and animal species on Rennell that live nowhere else in the world.

The Rennellese people have a deep knowledge of every plant, bird, and fish on their island. They have traditional rules - called 'customary management' - about which areas of forest can be used and which must be left alone. This ancient wisdom has helped the island stay so healthy for so long.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How does an island made of coral end up high above the ocean? What forces could push it upward over millions of years?
  2. 02Why might animals on very remote islands be less afraid of people than animals that live near busy towns?
  3. 03The Rennellese people have their own rules about protecting their forest. Is that different from rules made by a government? Can both kinds of rules work together?
Try this

Classroom activity

Make a cross-section diagram showing: ocean floor, coral reef, and then the raised atoll above sea level with forest on top and a lake in the middle. Label each layer and explain in one sentence how the coral reef became an island.

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