Komodo Islands is one of the 17,508 islands that comprise the Republic of Indonesia. The island is particularly notable as the habitat of the Komodo dragon, the largest lizard on Earth, which is named after the island. Komodo Island has a surface area of 390 square kilometres and a human population of over two thousand. The people of the island are descendants of former convicts who were exiled to the island and who have mixed with Bugis from Sulawesi. The people are primarily adherents of Islam but there are also Christian and Hindu congregations. Komodo is part of the Lesser Sunda chain of islands and forms part of the Komodo National Park. In addition, the island is a popular destination for diving. Administratively, it is part of the East Nusa Tenggara Indonesia.
It lies between the substantially larger neighboring islands Sumbawa to the west and Flores to the east. Komodo Island is home to the Komodo Dragon, the largest lizard on earth. The Pink Beach Komodo Island is located at the western end of the large island of Flores in the Nusa Tenggara region of East Indonesia.
The earliest stories (among Westerners) of a dragon-like animal existing in the region circulated widely and attracted considerable attention. But no Westerner visited the island to check the story until official interest was sparked in the early 1910s by stories from Dutch sailors based in Flores in East Nusa Tenggara about a mysterious creature. The creature was allegedly a dragon which inhabited a small island in the Lesser Sunda Islands.
The Dutch sailors reported that the creature measured up to seven metres (twenty-three feet) in length with a large body and mouth which constantly breathed fire. It burnt them and so they could not continue the investigation. It was believed then that the odd creature could fly. Hearing the reports, Lieutenant Steyn van Hensbroek, an official of the Dutch Colonial Administration in Flores, planned a trip to Komodo Island to continue the search himself. He armed himself, and accompanied by a team of soldiers, he landed on the island. After a few days, Hensbroek managed to kill one of the lizards to investigate.
Van Hensbroek took the dragon to headquarters where measurements were taken. It was approximately 2.1 metres (6.9 feet) long, with a shape very similar to that of a lizard. More samples were then photographed by Peter A. Ouwens, the Director of the Zoological Museum and Botanical Gardens in Bogor, Java. The records that Ouwens made are the first reliable documentation of details about what is now called the Komodo dragon (or Komodo monitor).
Ouwens was keen to obtain additional samples. He recruited hunters who killed two dragons measuring 3.1 metres and 3.35 metres as well as capturing two pups, each measuring less than one metre. Ouwens carried out studies on the samples and concluded that the Komodo dragon was not a flame-thrower but was a type of monitor lizard. Research results were published in 1912. Ouwens named the giant lizard Varanus komodoensis. Realizing the significance of the dragons on Komodo Island as an endangered species, the Dutch government issued a regulation on the protection of the lizards on Komodo Island in 1915.
In 1926, W. Douglas Burden, F.J. Defoisse, and Emmett
Reid Dunn collected specimens for the American Museum of Natural
History. Burden's chapter "The Komodo Dragon", in Look to the
Wilderness, describes the expedition, the dragon's habitat and its
behavior. The Komodo dragon became something of a living legend. In the
decades since the Komodo was discovered, various scientific expeditions
from a range of countries have carried out field research on the dragons
on Komodo Island.
Komodo has a human population of over two
thousand, spread out over the island and in the main Komodo village. The
native population of Komodo, the Komodo people, has been extinct since
the 1980s. The present day people of the island are descendants of
former convicts who were exiled to Komodo and who have mixed with Bugis
from Sulawesi. The population is primarily adherents of Islam but there
are also Christian and Hindu congregations.
Komodo is part of the Lesser Sundas deciduous forests ecoregion. The island is also a popular destination for diving and it has been included into the controversial New7Wonders of Nature list since November 11, 2011.
Komodo contains a beach with "pink" sand, one of only seven in the world. The sand appears pink because it is a mixture of white sand combined with red sand, formed from pieces of Foraminifera.
A Labuan Bajo is the jumping off point for trips into the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Komodo National Park, Komodo Island, Rinca Island and Komodo Island Pink Beach. Pink Beach Komodo Island can only be accessed by boat from the nearest town of Labuan Bajo.
Pink sand beaches, the sand gets is beautiful pink tint from thousands of pieces of broken red coral, shells and calcium carbonate left behind by tiny marine creatures, with red outer casings, known as foraminifera. The broken fragments all combined with the fine, white sand to produce a unique cotton-candy coloured beach.
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