List of divided islands
Sea islands
Island | Area (km2/sq mi) |
Population | Countries/Dependencies (Provinces/States/Sovereign) | Area | Population | Population per km2/per sq mi |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Guinea[1] | 785,753/303,381 [2] |
11,306,940 | Papua New Guinea | 59% | 68% | 17/44 |
Indonesia (Central Papua, Highland Papua, Papua, South Papua, and West Papua) | 41% | 32% | 11/28 | |||
Borneo[3] | 748,168/288,869 [2] |
21,258,000 | Indonesia (Central, East, North, South, and West Kalimantan) | 73% | 70% | 27/70 |
Malaysia (Sabah and Sarawak) | 26% | 28% | 31/80 | |||
Brunei | 1% | 2% | 78/200 | |||
Ireland | 84,421/32,595 [4] |
6,806,900 | Ireland | 83% | 72% | 70/180 |
United Kingdom (Northern Ireland) | 17% | 28% | (*)275/710 | |||
Hispaniola[5] | 76,192/29,418 [6][7] |
21,396,000 | Dominican Republic | 64% | 50% | 221/570 |
Haiti | 36% | 50% | 391/1,010 | |||
Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego |
47,992/18,530 [2] |
133,861 | Chile (Antártica Chilena, Tierra del Fuego) | 61% | 5% | (*)0.6/1.6 |
Argentina ( Tierra del Fuego) | 39% | 95% | 6.9/18 | |||
Timor | 28,418/10,972 [2] |
3,182,693 | Indonesia ( East Nusa Tenggara) | 51% | 63% | 128/330 |
East Timor | 49% | 37% | 78/200 | |||
Cyprus | 9,234/3,565 [2] |
1,133,803 | De jure | |||
Cyprus | 97% | 98% | 86/220 | |||
Akrotiri and Dhekelia ( United Kingdom) | 3% | 2% | 62/160 | |||
De facto | ||||||
Cyprus | 58% | 56% | 81/210 | |||
Northern Cyprus | 35% | 41% | 100/260 | |||
United Nations (UN Buffer Zone in Cyprus) | 4% | 1% | (*)88/230 | |||
Akrotiri and Dhekelia ( United Kingdom) | 3% | 2% | 62/160 | |||
Dall Island [8][9][10][11][12] |
655.2/253.0 [2] |
~20 | United States ( Alaska) | <100% | 100% | ~0.03/0.078 |
Canada ( British Columbia) | >0% | none | none | |||
Sebatik Island | 452.2/174.6 [2] |
105,000 | Indonesia ( North Kalimantan) | 55% | 76% | 320/830 |
Malaysia ( Sabah) | 45% | 34% | 120/310 | |||
Usedom[13] | 445/172 |
85,047 | Germany ( Mecklenburg-Vorpommern) | 84% | 41% | 84/220 |
Poland ( West Pomeranian Voivodeship) | 16% | 59% | 625/1,620 | |||
Saint Martin | 91.9/35.5 [2] |
77,741 | Saint-Martin ( France) | 59% | 51% | 682/1,770 |
Sint Maarten ( Kingdom of the Netherlands) | 41% | 49% | 1,110/2,900 | |||
Hans Island | 1.2/0.46 |
0 | Greenland ( Kingdom of Denmark) | 60% | none | none |
Canada ( Nunavut) | 40% | none | none | |||
Kataja (including Inakari[14]) |
0.71/0.27 | 0 | Sweden (Norrbotten County) | ~85% | none | none |
Finland (Lapland) | ~15% | none | none | |||
Passport Island[15] | 0.66/0.25 | ~10 | Bahrain (Northern Governorate) | ~50% | ~50% | ~8/21 |
Saudi Arabia (Eastern Province) | ~50% | ~50% | ~8/21 | |||
K Island[16][17] | 0.56/0.22 | 0 | Ukraine ( Odesa Oblast) | ~60% | none | none |
Romania (Tulcea County) | ~40% | none | none | |||
Koiluoto[18] | 0.03/0.012 | 0 | Finland (Kymenlaakso) | ~60% | none | none |
Russia (Leningrad Oblast) | ~40% | none | none | |||
Vanhasaari/Maly Pogranichny)[19][20] | Finland (Kymenlaakso) | |||||
Russia (Leningrad Oblast) | ||||||
Jähi[21] | 0 | Finland (Kymenlaakso) | none | none | ||
Russia (Leningrad Oblast) | none | none | ||||
island southeast of Peräluoto[22] | 0 | Finland (Kymenlaakso) | none | none | ||
Russia (Leningrad Oblast) | none | none | ||||
Märket | 0.03/0.012 | 0 | Åland ( Finland) | ~55% | none | none |
Sweden (Stockholm County and Uppsala County) | ~45% | none | none | |||
Zhongshan Island | China (Zhongshan, Zhuhai) | |||||
Macau ( China) (Macau) | 54,226/140,440 |
Lake islands
- De facto between Russia (Crimea) (disputed) and Ukraine[23][24][25]
- Rotten Sea islands
- Among Finland, Norway, and Sweden:
- Three-Country Cairn, the boundary cairn at the tripoint, is 10 metres from the shore of Lake Goldajärvi/Koltajauri, and hence arguably a tiny artificial island. Around 14 m2. The lower limit for artificial islands is a matter of definition, because near Haparanda there are boundary poles of less than 0.1 m2.
- Between Canada and the United States:
- A lake island at 62.649677°N 141°W, north of the Yukon–Alaska Highway border crossing
- A lake island at 62.641158°N 141°W, north of the Yukon–Alaska Highway border crossing
- A lake island at 62.637174°N 141°W, just north of the Yukon–Alaska Highway border crossing
- Two islands in a small lake at 62.538443°N 141°W, 8.2 km south of the Yukon–Alaska Highway border crossing
- Several rocky islets in a small lake on the Okanogan County, Washington/British Columbia border at 49°N 120.177376°W
- An island in a small lake on the Okanogan County, Washington/British Columbia border at 49°N 120.172980°W
- An island in a small lake adjacent to the Milk River at 49°N 110.546975°W in Montana/Alberta
- An island in Salt Lake (Alkali Lake) 49°N 104.311173°W in Montana/Saskatchewan
- An island[26][27] in Brush Lake at 49°N 103.981638°W in North Dakota/Saskatchewan
- Two islands[28][29] in Boundary Lake at 49°N 100.217095°W, in North Dakota/Manitoba
- An island[30][31] in Lake Metigoshe at 49°N 100.353901°W in North Dakota/Manitoba
- An islet[32][33] east of Ross Lake at 49°N 100.298939°W in North Dakota/Manitoba
- An island[34][35] in a small lake on the Rolette County, North Dakota/Manitoba border at 49°N 100.013149°W
- An island[36][37] in a small lake on the Towner County, North Dakota/Manitoba border at 49°N 99.218163°W
- An island[38][39] in a small lake on the Cavalier County, North Dakota/Manitoba border at 49°N 98.541357°W
- An islet[40] in a small reservoir (when filled) just east of the Maida port of entry on North Dakota Highway 1 at 49.000253°N 98.356943°W, North Dakota/Manitoba
- Pine and Curry Island[41] in Lake of the Woods on the Minnesota/Ontario border at 48.876967°N 94.683964°W
- Seaway Island in Lake St. Clair on the Michigan/Ontario border at 42.523639°N 82.677582°W
- An island in a small lake on the border of Maine/New Brunswick at 46.004988°N 67.7810°W, southeast of Hodgdon, Maine
- Province Island in Lake Memphremagog, between Quebec (91%) and Vermont (9%)[42]
- Between Norway and Russia:
- Between Finland and Russia:
- Äikkäänniemi in Nuijamaanjärvi[45]
- Suursaari and a smaller island in Ylä-Tyrjä[46]
- Tarraassiinsaari, Härkäsaari, and Kiteensaari in Melaselänjärvi[47][48]
- Island in Virmajärvi
- Rajasaari in Kokkojärvi[49]
- Kalmasaari in Vuokkijärvi[50]
- Varposaari in Hietajärvi[51]
- Parvajärvensaari in Parvajärvi[52]
- Keuhkosaari in Pukarijärvi / Ozero Pyukharin[53][54]
- Siiheojansuusaari and Tossensaari in Onkamojärvi / Ozero Onkamo[55][56]
- Between Finland and Norway:
- Between Sweden and Norway:[59]
- Island in Sör Vammsjön/Vammen Søndre (≈2000 m2)[60]
- Hisön/Hisøya in Norra Kornsjön/Nordre Kornsjø (≈0,09 km2)[61]
- Kulleholmen/Kalholmen (≈5500 m2) and Tagholm/Tåkeholmen (≈600 m2) in Södra Boksjön/Søndre Boksjø[62]
- Salholmen (≈4000 m2), Mosvikøya (≈0.17 km2) and Trollön/Trolløya (≈0.18 km2) in Stora Le/Store Le[63]
- Tannsjöröset (≈50 m2) in Tannsjøen/Tannsjön[64]
- Linneholmene (≈2000 m2) in Helgesjøen/Helgesjön[65]
- Jensøya in Holmsjøen (≈0,04 km2)[66]
- Storøya in Utgardsjøen (≈0,04 km2)[67]
- Fallsjøholmen in Fallsjøen (Nordre Røgden) (≈4000 m2)[68]
- Island in Kroksjøen[69]
- Island in Vonsjøen (≈9000 m2)[70]
- Island in Skurdalssjøen/Kruehkiejaevrie[71]
- Island in a lake at altitude 710m on the Gihcijoka/Gihtsejåhkå river[72]
- Three islands in Čoarvejávri[73]
- Between Belarus and Latvia:
- Unnamed island in Lake Rychy
- Between Lithuania and Belarus:
- Sosnovec and another nameless island in Lake Drūkšiai[74][75][76][77]
- Between the United Kingdom and Ireland:
- Pollatawny in Lough Vearty.[78]
- Between Argentina and Chile:
- Isla Dos Hitos in Lago General Carrera/Lago Buenos Aires[79]
- Between Ethiopia and Djibouti:
- The border between Austria and Hungary cuts across the Neusiedler See/Fertő tó, where the water level fluctuates, sometimes exposing island flats which straddle the border.
River islands
- Island (Staustufe Apach) in the Moselle River near Schengen: mostly in France, the tip is in the Moselle condominium shared by Luxembourg and Germany[81]
- Bolshoy Ussuriyskiy (Heixiazi) at the confluence of the Ussuri and Amur rivers, between China and Russia.[82]
- Bolshoy (Abagaitu) at the Argun River, between China and Russia.[82]
- An island in the Šešupė River divided between Lithuania and the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia
- Corocoro Island in the delta of the Barima River: split between Venezuela and Guyana[83]
- San Jose Island, Río Negro: between Colombia and Brazil.[84]
- The island complex Martín García–Timoteo Domínguez in the Río de la Plata between Argentina and Uruguay.[85]
- The lower reaches of the Ganges,[86] Teesta,[87] and Brahmaputra[88] Rivers, approaching the Ganges Delta, are braided and contain numerous sand islands called chars.[89] These can be large and inhabited but are impermanent. At any given time, several are likely to straddle the border between India (Assam and West Bengal) and Bangladesh, though this border is not fully specified.
- An island labelled 'Q' in the Maritsa River, between Greece and Turkey.[90]
- An islet in the Uutuanjoki, between Finland and Norway, at 69.579665°N 29.231701°E.
- An islet in the Vadet near Tunnsjø, between Norway and Sweden, at 64.644443°N 13.71056°E.
- An islet on the western side of the golf course that straddles the municipalities of Tornio in Finland, and Haparanda in Sweden, at 65.861513°N 24.129624°E.
- An islet in the Euphrates River on the border of Iraq and Syria.
- Nokiel and another unnamed islet in the Dunajec river, between Slovakia and Poland, at 49.3984°N 20.359726°E.[91]
- Nicaragua and Honduras share four islands along a straight-line border in the delta of the Río Negro at the Gulf of Fonseca.
- Argentina and Chile share an island formed by branches of the Río Mayer.[92]
- Bolivia and Chile share an island formed by the Putani River and its branch, Quebrado Coipacoipani.[93]
- Canada/United States:
- 9 islands serially located in the Clarence River on the Alaska North Slope near Demarcation Bay; northernmost at 69.616789°N 141°W, southernmost at 69.557094°N 141°W
- One or more islands in Trail Creek at 68.881754°N 141°W, northeast of Arctic Village, Alaska
- An island in Mancha Creek at 68.663957°N 141°W, northeast of Arctic Village, Alaska
- 6 (or more) islands in bifurcated flow in the Firth River at 68.641781°N 141°W, northeast of Arctic Village, Alaska
- An island in Sunaghun Creek at 67.426117°N 141°W, near its mouth at the Porcupine River, downstream of Old Crow, Yukon
- An island in the watershed of the Bluefish River at 66.838155°N 141°W, east of Chalkyitsik, Alaska and 15 km WWSW of Bluefish Lake, Yukon
- An island in Fort Creek at 66.759004°N 141°W, east of Chalkyitsik, Alaska
- An island in the Black River (Salmon Fork) at 66.543661°N 141°W, east of Chalkyitsik, Alaska
- An island in Beaver Creek at 62.227460°N 141°W, southwest of Beaver Creek, Yukon
- Two islands in Klehini River at 59.448142°N 136.365213°W, near Klukwan, Alaska
- 11 (or more) islands in bifurcated river flow on Whiting River at 58.184862°N 133.221034°W, upstream of Gilbert Bay, which empties into Stephens Passage
- Two islands in Stikine River at 56.658546°N 131.848698°W, downstream of Great Glacier, Yukon
- An island in Columbia River at Waneta border crossing at 49.000766°N 117.6335648°W in Washington/British Columbia
- An island in Belly River at 49°N 113.683294°W in Montana/Alberta
- An island in a branch of Lee Creek at 49°N 113.600862°W in Montana/Alberta
- An islet in Boundary Creek at 49°N 113.357300°W in Montana/Alberta
- An island in St. Mary River 49°N 113.326222°W in Montana/Alberta
- An islet in Milk River at 48.998739°N 112.555541°W in Montana/Alberta
- An island in Mundell Creek at 49°N 109.089222°W in Montana/Saskatchewan
- An island in McEachern Creek at 49°N 106.938504°W in Montana/Saskatchewan
- An island[94] in the Pembina River at 49.000288°N 98.206118°W in North Dakota/Manitoba
- An island in tributary of Northwest Branch Saint John River at 46.687062°N 69.998996°W in Maine/Quebec
- Two islands on the Maine/New Brunswick border southeast of Monticello, Maine (46.272890°N 67.782°W and 46.272293°N 67.782°W) that are formed by the forks of a stream that rises from Gentle Lake in Maine, then flows into the North Branch–Meduxnekeag River.
Historically divided islands
Other islands have been divided by international borders in the past but they are now unified.
The definite borders of modern nation states do not apply in other forms of societal organisation, where "divided" islands may consequently be less noteworthy. For example, in Ancient Greece, the island of Euboea was divided among several city-states, including Chalcis and Eretria; and before its settlement by Europeans, the Island of Tasmania was divided among nine indigenous tribes.
Islands in wartime may be divided between an invading and defending power, as with Crete in 1645–1669 between the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Venice.
Examples of formerly divided islands include:
- Boundary Islet – divided between the colonies of Victoria (part of New South Wales until 1851) and Tasmania (known as Van Diemen's Land until 1856); remained separated between two Australian states
- Corsica – was divided between the Republic of Pisa and the Republic of Genoa by a ruling by Pope Innocent II in 1132, and it remained so until the Battle of Meloria of 1284. Subsequently Corsica became part of Genoa, Aragon, Genoa again, the Corsican Republic, France, Anglo-Corsican Kingdom, and finally France again.
- Sardinia – was divided into indigenous giudicati since before the year 900 through the extinction of the Giudicato of Arborea in 1420. Since then, Sardinia has successively been a part of Aragon, the Spanish Empire, Piedmont–Sardinia, the Kingdom of Italy, and the Republic of Italy.
- Saaremaa (1237–1570) and Hiiumaa (1254–1563) – Divided between the Livonian Order and the Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek (the Kingdom of Denmark after 1560). Thereafter these were part of Denmark (Saaremaa only), the Kingdom of Sweden, Imperial Russia, Estonia, the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany (1941–1944), the Soviet Union again, and finally Estonia after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.
- Piirissaar in Lake Peipus – literally "Border Island" in Estonian, it was first divided in the 13th or 14th century and remained divided between the Bishopric of Dorpat and the later Polish Livonia and Swedish Livonia on one side and the Novgorod Republic and the later Principality of Pskov, Pskov Republic and the Tsardom of Russia on the other side until the annexation of Swedish Livonia into Russia in 1721.
- Saint Croix – Dutch, English and French colonists in different settlements from the early 17th century until 1645.[95]
- Tobago – from 1654 through 1659, this island had colonies from both the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia and the Dutch Republic. Both of these colonies failed economically and were abandoned.[96] Later, Tobago became part of the French Empire, then the Kingdom of Great Britain (1706), the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the present United Kingdom, and the independent country of Trinidad and Tobago.
- Ternate – divided between the Spanish Empire allied with Tidore, and the Dutch Republic allied with the Sultan of Ternate from 1607 through 1663. Later, Ternate has successive been owned by the Netherlands, the Japanese Empire (1942–1945), Netherlands again, and the independent country of Indonesia, beginning in 1949.
- Long Island, New York – divided between the Dutch Republic and the Kingdom of England beginning in 1640 (de facto, by the founding of the Southold), or in 1650 (de jure, by the Treaty of Hartford), through to the surrender of New Netherland to the British Army in 1664. Thereafter, Long Island has been owned by Kingdom of England, the Kingdom of Great Britain, and the United States from 1781 through the present. Long Island has been part of the State of New York since 1781, and it is the largest island in the Contiguous United States (48 states).
- Great Britain – Earlier divided into three or more kingdoms, including England, Wales, and Scotland, and sometimes ruled in part by the Roman Empire and the Danish Empire. These parts were reduced to just two before 1707, when the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland enacted the Acts of Union of 1707, establishing just one monarchy and one parliament. Since 1707, England, Scotland, and Wales have been part of (successively) the Kingdom of Great Britain, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, often called the United Kingdom for short.
- Sri Lanka – In the 1000s, the island was ruled in part by the Chola Empire, the Tamil Kingdoms in the North, and the Sinhalese Kingdoms in the south. The island was later divided into three or more kingdoms, including the Jaffna Kingdom, the Vanni Nadu, the Kingdom of Kandy, and the Kingdom of Kotte. After waves of Portuguese, Dutch and British colonization, the island was united as a single entity under the British. The country then known as Ceylon attained independence in 1948, and in 1972, the current Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka was established.
- Newfoundland Island – Earlier divided between Great Britain and the French Empire until the enactment of the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. Following this treaty, Newfoundland was part of the British Empire. Then it became the partially independent Dominion of Newfoundland, which next became a Province of Canada in 1949.
- Saint Kitts – Divided between Great Britain and the French Empire in 1628. "The island fell to the French in April 1666, but by the Treaty of Utrecht, April 11, 1713, it was yielded entirely to the British crown."[97] Then it became part of the British Empire for about 250 years, and finally part of the independent country of Saint Kitts and Nevis. At various times of war in the Caribbean Sea, either France or Great Britain occupied all of Saint Kitts both before and after 1713.
- Elba – divided from 1548 through 1802. Portoferraio belonged to the Duke of Florence (later the Grand Duchy of Tuscany) from 1548 until this was ceded to France in 1802 under the Treaty of Amiens. Porto Longone belonged to the State of Presidi, a client of first the Spanish Empire and then the Kingdom of Naples, from 1557 until ceded to France in 1801 by the Treaty of Florence. The rest of this island belonged to the Principality of Piombino until conquered by the French Empire, and then in 1802 Napoleon made Elba into the Kingdom of Etruria. This island was successively part of the French Empire, the Principality of Piombino under Elisa Baciocchi, under the sovereignty of Napoleon by the terms of the Treaty of Fontainebleau (1814), part of Tuscany again, part of the Kingdom of Italy, Italian Social Republic (1943–44), and finally a part of the Republic of Italy.[98][99]
- Efate – Divided for several months during 1889 between Franceville and the New Hebrides, then under an Anglo-French joint naval commission.
- Sakhalin Island – Divided between the Russian Empire, then the Soviet Union, and the Japanese Empire along the 50th parallel north by the terms of the Treaty of Portsmouth of 1905 through the final Surrender of the Japanese Empire in 1945. Henceforth, all of Sakhalin became part of the Soviet Union, and then the Russian Federation, de facto. The Japanese Empire still considers the ownership of Sakhalin to be undetermined, and Sakhalin is shown on many Japanese maps as a "no man's land".
- Killiniq Island – divided between Canada and the Colony of Newfoundland and then the Dominion of Newfoundland beginning with the cession of the Rupert's Land to the Dominion of Canada in 1870 as the North-West Territories and the province of Manitoba through 1949 with the confederation of Newfoundland as a Canadian province.
- Ankoko Island in the Cuyuni River on the border between Venezuela and British Guiana (now Guyana).
- Zhongshan Dao in the Pearl River Delta was divided between China and Macau from ratification of the Treaty of Tientsin in 1862 through the handover of Macao to China in 1999.
- Frijoles Island within Gatun Lake in the former Panama Canal Zone was split between the United States and Panama on 1 October 1979, the date that the 1977 Panama Canal Treaty took effect. Much of the former Canal Zone area was transferred to Panama on that day. The Panama Railroad served as the new border in an area where it crosses Gatun Lake via a causeway, with the railroad bisecting Frijoles Island. The entire island transferred to exclusive Panamanian jurisdiction on 31 December 1999.[100][101]
- The small middle island of Las Tres Hermanas ("The Three Sisters") off the Pacific coast of Panama City was split between the U.S. Panama Canal Zone and Panama by the Taft Agreement on 12 December 1904. The entire island was placed in the Canal Zone on 11 February 1915. Today the Cinta Costera lies on top of it.
- Popes Folly Island in Passamaquoddy Bay between the United States (Maine) and Canada (New Brunswick) had been divided prior to the 1908 border treaty between the U.S. and Great Britain.[102][103]
- Taiwan, historically known as Formosa and Tywan, was in the 17th century colonised by the Dutch and the Spaniards, along with the indigenous Kingdom of Middag.
A few former islands have disappeared because of changes in water levels:
- Vozrozhdeniya Island in the Aral Sea was split between the Soviet Republics of Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. This border became an international one in 1991 when the Soviet Union was dissolved. By the year 2002, this island had become a peninsula of the mainland because of the falling water level of the Aral Sea.
- The small Bogomerom Archipelago of islets in Lake Chad was formerly divided between Chad and Nigeria.[104] The water level of Lake Chad has historically varied a lot, but this level has fallen so low that these islets are now part of the mainland of Africa.
Subnational divided islands
There are islands that lie across different provinces or states of the same country.
Killiniq Island of Canada, which is divided between Newfoundland and Labrador and Nunavut, whereas Melville Island and Victoria Island are divided between Nunavut and the Northwest Territories. In Australia, the Boundary Islet is divided between Tasmania and Victoria.
Smith Island in Chesapeake Bay and Assateague Island, a barrier island on the Atlantic coast of the United States, are divided between the states of Maryland and Virginia. Ellis Island contains a true exclave of the state of New York, which is largely the area of the original natural island, while all land reclamation extensions from 1890-1935 are in New Jersey. The states also share Shooters Island in Newark Bay. Owing only to accretion of silt, an island has arisen spontaneously in the Mississippi River at the location of the boundary trijunction of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi, and is thus divided among the three states.
Pag, in Croatia, is divided between Zadar County and Lika-Senj County.
Ishima, in Japan, is divided between Kagawa Prefecture in the South and Okayama Prefecture in the north. Chek Lap Kok in Hong Kong is divided between Islands and Tuen Mun districts, and Lantau is divided between Islands and Tsuen Wan districts.
See also
- List of enclaves and exclaves – a subcategory of pene-enclaves/exclaves
- Condominium (international law) – land jointly administered by two states, rather than divided between them (e. g., Pheasant Island, administered by France and Spain during alternating periods of six months).
- Category:Disputed islands and list of territorial disputes – includes many islands claimed by multiple countries, but administered by one.
- Guantanamo Bay Naval Base – leased indefinitely by the United States but with sovereignty retained by Cuba
- Korean Demilitarized Zone – includes several small islands
- Lake island
References
- New Guinea is the second most extensive sea island and the highest sea island with the summit of Puncak Jaya at 4,884 metres (16,024 ft).
- "Islands by land area". UN system-wide Earthwatch. United Nations Environment Programme. 1998-02-18. Archived from the original on 2018-02-20. Retrieved 2009-09-27.
- Borneo is the third most extensive sea island and the third highest sea island with the summit of Mount Kinabalu at 4,095 metres (13,435 ft).
- Nolan, William. "Geography of Ireland". Government of Ireland. Archived from the original on 24 November 2009. Retrieved 11 November 2009.
- Lago Enriquillo on Hispaniola is the lowest point on any sea island at -46 metres (151 ft).
- Central America and Caribbean: Haiti, CIA World Factbook
- Central America and Caribbean: Dominican Republic, CIA World Factbook
- The tip of Cape Muzon was established as the "point of commencement" of the international boundary with Alaska in the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1825. A Court of Arbitration in 1903 ruled that Point "A" (54°39′43.993″N 132°41′3.093″W) was the initial point of this boundary. Canada has accepted this as a demarcated boundary; however, the U.S. disputes that Point "A" is a boundary point.
- Davidson, George (1903). The Alaska Boundary. San Francisco: Alaska Packers Association. pp. 79–81, 129–134, 177–179, 229.
- "International Boundary Commission definition of the Canada/US boundary in the NAD83 CSRS reference frame". Archived from the original on 2021-08-01. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
- White, James (1914). Boundary Disputes and Treaties. Toronto: Glasgow, Brook & Company. pp. 936–958.
- Gray, David H. (Autumn 1997). "Canada's Unresolved Maritime Boundaries" (PDF). IBRU Boundary and Security Bulletin. p. 61. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
- Margedant, Udo; Thomas Ellerbeck (1991). Politische Landeskunde Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (in German). Mecklenburg-Vorpommern: Landeszentrale für politische Bildung. p. 89.
- Map of Inakari, the Finnish part of Kataja 65.699644°N 24.168781°E
- Passport Island is an artificial island approximately in the middle of the King Fahd Causeway.
- Nova Zemlia Island or K Island is a barrier island formed in Danube River Delta in 1988.
- Giosan, Liviu; Donenelly, Jeffrey P.; Vespremeanu, Emil; Bhattacharya, Janok P.; Olariu, Cornel; Buonaiuto, Frank S. (2005). "River Delta Morphodynamics: Examples from the Danube Delta" (PDF). River Deltas—Concepts, Models, and Examples (Special Publication No. 83). Society for Sedimentary Geology: 403–405. ISBN 1-56576-113-8.
- Map of Koiluoto 60.50575°N 27.772472°E
- Map of Vanhasaari 60.472069°N 27.766914°E
- Map of Vanhasaari/Maly Pogranichny
- Map of Jähi 60.325211°N 27.616037°E
- Map of divided island southeast of Peräluoto 60.535716°N 27.778154°E
- Google Map 45.96558°N 34.53372°E
- Google Map 45.96910°N 34.53740°E
- Google Map 45.761179°N 34.964817°E
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 Bing Maps
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 Bing Maps
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 Bing Maps
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 Bing Maps
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 Bing Maps
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 Bing Maps
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 Bing Maps
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- Retrieved 19 June 2013 North Dakota Hub Explorer Archived 2013-05-08 at the Wayback Machine
- "Pine and Curry Island SNA". Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 2021-04-27.
- Jacques Boisvert. "Province Island". Retrieved 2006-11-04.
It is the largest island in Lake Memphremagog, being 77 acres, of which 7 acres, are in the United States.
- "Norway-Russia Boundary Map: Boundary markers 167–177: Sandneset-Klistervatn" (in Norwegian and Russian). Norwegian Boundary Commission for the Norway-Russia border. Archived from the original on 2007-08-14. Retrieved 2007-09-25. — boundary markers #169–172
- "Norway-Russia Boundary Map: Boundary markers 7–14: Grenseberg-Ødevasselva" (in Norwegian and Russian). Norwegian Boundary Commission for the Norway-Russia border. Archived from the original on 2007-08-14. Retrieved 2007-09-25. — boundary markers #12–13 (Korkeasaari) & #14 (unnamed islet)
- Portion of Nuijamaanjärvi with Äikkäänniemi marked from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Portion of Yla-Tirja with divided islands at markers 93 (Suursaari) and 94 (smaller island) from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Portion of Melaselänjärvi showing Tarraassiinsaari and Härkäsaari from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Portion of Melaselänjärvi showing Kiteensaari from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Portion of Kokkojärvi showing Rajasaari from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Portion of Vuokkijärvi showing Kalmasaari from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Portion of Hietajärvi showing Varposaari from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Portion of Parvajärvi showing Parvajärvensaari from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- Office of the Geographer, Bureau of Intelligence and Research (1967-02-01). International Boundary Study No. 74: Finland–U.S.S.R. boundary (PDF). United States Department of State. p. 21. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-09-16.
Hence the frontier runs...to a point on a small unnamed island in Lake Pukarinjarvi between the cape west of the village of Laitela and the Niittysaaryi island.
- Portion of Pukarijärvi with Keuhkosaari marked from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland.
- International Boundary Study No. 74, page 22. ""The frontier follows the creek down to Lake Onkamojarvi, intersects the small island of Siiheojansuusaai and proceeds in a straight line to the small island of Tossensaari."
- Portion of Onkamojärvi from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland (Siiheojansuusaari is IV/179; Tossonsaari is IV/180)
- Portion of Kivisarijärvi with divided island marked from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland. 69.735926°N 28.88235°E
- Neighborhood of boundary marker 347A, with divided island marked from Citizen's Mapsite of Finland. 69.89°N 28.3°E
- Verified at Norwegian state cartographic agency website (in English, Norwegian, and Northern Sami)
- 58.88843°N 11.45739°E
- Hisøya: 58°54′22.8″N 11°39′7.1″E
- Søndre Boksjø: 59.03°N 11.7°E
- Salholmen: 59°14′15.96″N 11°49′32.24″E; Mosvikøya 59°15′55″N 11°49′32″E; Trollön : 59°15′17.76406″N 11°49′13.45279″E
- Tannsjøen Island ("Nr 54" on Norwegian map): 59°52′21.67″N 11°54′59.31″E
- Linneholmene: 59°53′20.98″N 12°1′59.96″E
- Jensøya: 59°53′35.77″N 12°6′47.88″E
- Storøya: 60°0′55.9″N 12°23′42.5″E
- Fallsjøholmen: 60°33′2.9″N 12°34′54.76″E
- Kroksjøen's island: 60.733895°N 12.395381°E
- Vonsjøen's island: 62.260625°N 12.296161°E
- Skurdalssjøen's island: 63.357646°N 12.085973°E
- Gihcijoka island: 67.665396°N 16.569616°E
- Čoarvejávri's islands: largest:68.029364°N 17.963228°E; middle:68.0262611°N 17.9620527°E; southern:68.0247914°N 17.9604023°E
- Krogh, Jan S. "Lake Druksiai". Retrieved 2006-12-10. The international border is marked on the map.
- "World Lakes Database: LAKE DRUKSIAI". International lakes environment committee. Archived from the original on 2007-03-12. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
Number of main islands (name and area): Zamok (0.26 km²), Sosnovec (0.048 km²), Utovec (0.0088 km²) and 5 nameless islands.
- "Bathymetric map of Lake Drūkšiai". International lakes environment committee. Archived from the original (GIF) on 8 January 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-10. Sosnovec is named on this map.
- Coordinates of Lake Drūkšiai:55°37′N 26°38′E
- Verified against Ordnance Survey of Ireland 6-inch map of the townland of Tober, County Donegal; surveyed 1905-05-05. Coordinates: 54.5441°N 8.0084°W Irish national grid reference system: G996663 Archived 2013-11-09 at the Wayback Machine
- "Visor cartográfico de Chile". Retrieved 2020-07-07.
- Office of the Geographer, Bureau of Intelligence and Research (1976-02-20). International Boundary Study No. No. 154 – Djibouti – Ethiopia Boundary (PDF). United States Department of State. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-11-09.
From Monument No. 53 on the south bank of Lake Abbe, the border crosses the lake from south to north continuing in a straight line for 30 kilometers. It cuts across the islet of hill 255 off Cape Aleilou.
- "Map of Commune of Schengen" (PDF). Commune of Schengen. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-15. Retrieved 2006-12-10.. Coordinates: 49.46894°N 6.36812°E
- Дополнительное соглашение между Российской Федерацией и Китайской Народной Республикой о российско-китайской государственной границе на ее Восточной части Archived 2011-08-12 at the Wayback Machine от 14 октября 2004 года.
- The northern shore of Corocoro is on the open ocean, but it is not truly a sea island as the southern boundary is a freshwater channel. The island is claimed in its entirety by Venezuela. 8.517°N 60.083°W
- Office of the Geographer, Bureau of Intelligence and Research (1985-04-15). International Boundary Study No. 174: Brazil – Colombia boundary (PDF). United States Department of State. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-09-16.
The final report allocated all river islands on the basis of the thalweg with the exception of San Jose Island on the Rio Negro which was split between Brazil (southern half) and Colombia.
Co-ordinates:1.228401°N 66.854811°W - Barros, Vicente (Coordinator) Impact Of Global Change On The Coastal Areas Of The Rio De La Plata: Sea Level Rise And Meteorological Effects. Page 7
- See map of Nawabganj District, map of Rajshahi District, and map of Daulatpur upazila of Kushtia District, all in Bangladesh.
- See map of Dilma upazila in Nilphamari District, Bangladesh.
- See map of Kurigram district, Bangladesh.
- Chowdhury, Sifatul Quader; Chowdhury, Masud Hasan (2012). "Char". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
- Office of the Geographer, Bureau of Intelligence and Research (1964-11-23). International Boundary Study No. 41: Greece – Turkey boundary (PDF). United States Department of State. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-03-16.
Returning to the median of the Maritsa, [...] the boundary continues [...] to boundary marker No. 24 on the northern end of an island designated "Q". Thence, the boundary line extends a distance of 800.5 feet to marker No. 25 near the center, thence a distance of 1,804 feet to marker No. 26 on the southwestern extremity of island "Q".
- "Zmluva medzi Poľskou republikou a Slovenskou republikou o zmenách priebehu štátnej hranice a schválení hraničnej dokumentácie (AGREEMENT between the Polish Republic and the Slovak Republic on changes of the boundary line and the approval of border documentation, drawn up in the Old Ľubovňa on 29 July 2002.)". Dziennik Ustaw (in Slovak). Prime Minister of Poland (203): 1686. 2005. Archived from the original on 2013-11-09. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
- "Visor cartográfico de Chile". Retrieved 2020-07-07.
- "Visor cartográfico de Chile". Retrieved 2020-07-07.
- "NDGIS North Dakota Hub Explorer". Archived from the original on 8 May 2013. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
- Dookhan, Isaac (1994). A History of the Virgin Islands of the United States. Kingston, Jamaica: Canoe Press. ISBN 9789768125057., pp. 40-49
- Ramerini, Marco. "Dutch and Courlanders in Tobago: A history of the first settlements, 1628–1677". Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
- Ireland, Gordon (1941). Boundaries, possessions, and conflicts in Central and North America and the Caribbean. New York: Octagon Books. p. 344.
- Wolff, Sir Henry Drummond (1855). The island empire, or, Scenes of the first exile of the Emperor Napoleon I: together with a narrative of his residence on the island of Elba, taken from local information, the papers of the British resident, and other authentic sources. Bosworth. pp. 304–322. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
- Frey, Linda; Frey, Marsha (1995). The treaties of the War of the Spanish Succession: an historical and critical dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 421–2. ISBN 978-0-313-27884-6. Retrieved 27 August 2011.
- United States. Central Intelligence Agency. (1987). "Land and waters of the Panama Canal Treaty (map)". Washington, D.C. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
- "Carte IV. Aires de terre et d'eau mises à disposition du fonctionnement et de la défense du canal de Panama par le traité relatif au canal de Panama du 7 septembre 1977". Dirección ejecutiva para los asuntos del tratado (DEPAT). Ciudad de Panama. 1981. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
- A treaty between Great Britain and the United States providing for the more complete definition and demarcation of the international boundary between the Dominion of Canada and the United States. 1908. pp. 1–3. hdl:2027/hvd.32044086241809.
- "Eastport Quadrant 15x15 grid map". United States Geological Survey. 1907. Archived from the original on 2017-08-03. Retrieved 2016-02-07. (download)
- Office of the Geographer (June 1969). "Chad-Nigeria boundary". United States Department of State. Archived from the original (JPEG) on 2007-06-15. Retrieved 2006-12-06.