About 155 miles northwest of Nihoa lies Mokumanamana, or Necker
Island, a small basalt island that is 1/6 square kilometers, or 46 acres, in size. Although
the island is the second smallest of the NWHI, it has the second largest surrounding marine
habitat (almost 385,000 acres). Large offshore areas include Shark Bay on the north side,
West Cove and Northwest Cape as well as miles of shallow reef to the southeast.
Mokumanamana is known for its numerous wahi pana (storied places) and mea makamae
(cultural objects). Fifty-five cultural places are known, of which 33 are religious, 17 are
shelter caves, and 2 sites are of unknown function. These cultural sites are thought to date
primarily before the habitation sites on Nihoa Island were abandoned in the eighteenth
century.
Because the island is small, dry, and has little soil suitable for agriculture, Hawaiians
probably traveled to Mokumanamana from Nihoa and other Hawaiian Islands primarily for
religious purposes. In addition to constructing religious structures, Hawaiians made ki'i
pöhaku or stone human images while on Mokumanamana. More than 11 of these stone ki'i are
known. Other activities that took place on the island are indicated by the production and
use of stone adzes, grindstones, stone bowls, and fishing tools.
In 1786 Compte de La Pérouse visited Mokumanamana and named it "Necker Island" after
Jacques Necker, the finance minister under Louis XVI. In 1857, Kamehameha IV sent Captain
John Paty to claim Mokumanamana for the Kingdom of Hawai`i. His claim was contested until
1894, when the island was annexed by Hawai`i's Provisional Government. The Tanager
Expedition visited Mokumanamana in 1923-24 to conduct biological and cultural research.
Members of the Native Hawaiian organization Hui Malama I Na Kupuna O Hawai`i Nei visited
Mokumanamana in 1997 to rebury ancestral human bones that were removed from the island in
the 1920s.
Terrestrial animal life on Mokumanamana includes the blue gray noddy, land snails, wolf
spiders, bird ticks, and 15 endemic insects. Marine life includes gray reef sharks and manta
rays. Hawaiian monk seals are seen on the island's rocky shores. A great abundance and
diversity of sea cucumbers, sea urchins, and lobsters are found in Shark Bay. Little coral
life exists in the shallow areas due to the constant wave action that scours the underwater
basalt. Most reef life is found in holes and elevated areas protected from the currents.
Below the shallow reef are extensive deeper "shelves" that extend many miles from the
island, especially to the southeast. These broad offshore areas are used for commercial
fishing.
Visiting Mokumanamana is permitted only for scientific, educational and cultural purposes
in order to protect its significant natural and cultural resources. Approval must be given
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and is mostly granted to those doing cultural and
scientific activities.
Close this window
|