Merritlis Trip Report

KI

111533

Christmas Island, August 1975
M.

L. Merritt,

1150, recently spent a week on Christmas Island

(Lat 2° N, Long 157° 30' W) together with Dr. John Malik, LASL,

and Dr. Allyn Seymour, University of Washington.

Our purpose

was to see how the island had changed since the DOMINIC tests
of 1962, since Christmas Island is at one of the corners of the
area of the Pacific Ocean contemplated for the Readiness Program,

and also to make a radiological survey to compare with similar

measurements being made at Bikini and Enewetak.

So far as the

Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony government was concerned, they
wanted a current radiological survey to be able to assure the
Japanese that the island is clean (more on this below).
When we were on Christmas Island in 1962, there was a group of
400 Gilbertese people (contract laborers for the copra plantation)
at the village of London, a recently abandoned village at a place
called Poland, contingents of British and American troops, and
of course we who were carrying on the tests. We test people

left the island before the end of the year.

The British and

American troops finally left in 1964 (with a dozen U.S.A.F.

people returning about 1970 for a purpose that my informant did
not know). The British Ministry of Defense had a "maintenance
contract" with the plantation after that to care for the buildings
and supplies, but this contract was discontinued in 1971.

There are at present about 700 Gilbertese and two Europeans on
Christmas Island, in three villages, London, Banana (near the
airport), and Poland.
The trip to the island was sponsored and

paid for by the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Development Authority
(GEIDA); development is all the emphasis now, in preparationfor
scheduled internal self-government of the Gilbert and Ellice
Islands by the end of 1976, and full independence by the end of
1977.

(At that time also, guano deposits in the Gilberts will

be exhausted, and it is hoped the coincidence will help in getting
some continued subsidy from the British government.)

Thus the

party that flew down to Christmas Istand from Honolulu included
ten Europeans in addition to us, and three Gilbertese, to look
at various aspects of the proposed development.

The development furthest along is raising brine shrimp (Artemia
sp.). These tiny shrimp (about 3 mm long, max) are used dried

by fish hobbyists, and their eggs are vacuum packed for use in
fish farms in Europe and elsewhere.
The saline lakes in the
middie of the island were seeded with brine shrimp in 19/1.
To

make raising them commercially profitable, lake salinity must

be controlled in the face of tidal changes and great variations
in rainfall.
This project is being carried on by a group called
Environmental Consultants, Inc., of Kaneohe, Oahu, Hawaii.

REPOSITORY LCE thotery Deviseon
COLLECTION 41337, ¢ chrad ~ Cs le
BOX No.
FOLDER

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