Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Bikini Atoll Nuclear Test Site' has mentioned 'Island' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Two craters from Operation Castle can be seen on the northwest cape of the atoll, adjacent to Namu island.
Three families were resettled on Bikini island in 1970, totaling about 100 residents.
The island's English name is derived from the German colonial name Bikini given to the atoll when it was part of German New Guinea.
The German name is transliterated from the Marshallese name for the island, Pikinni, ([pxcaxb2ixc9xa1innxcaxb2i]) "Pik" meaning "surface" and "Ni" meaning "coconut", or surface of coconuts.
A woman named Liijabor from Likiep Island, Likiep Atoll in the Marshall Islands, wears a traditional nieded or clothing mat, c. 1918
The dress is called wau ([wxc9x91xcbx90u]), from the name of the Hawaiian island of Oahu.
Marshall island women swim in muxcaxbbumuxcaxbbus which are made of a fine polyester that quickly dries.
Payments made in the 20th century as reparations for damage to the Bikini Atoll and the islanders' way of life have elevated their income relative to other Marshall Island residents.
They could not return home, so they were relocated to Kwajalein Atoll for six months before choosing to live on Kili Island, a small island one-sixth the size of their home island.
Some were able to return to Bikini Island in 1970; however, further testing revealed dangerous levels of strontium-90.
The primary home of the islanders was the most northeast and largest islet, Bikini Island, totaling 586 acres (237xc2xa0ha) and 2.5 miles (4.0xc2xa0km) long.
They remained for about 10 years until scientists found an 11-fold increase in the caesium-137 body burdens and determined that the island wasn't safe after all.
Maddison has lived on Bikini Island since 1985.
Council members are elected from two wards on Ejit Island (three seats) and Kili Island (12 seats).
Other discoveries on Bikini and Eneu island were carbon-dated to between 1000 BC and 1 BC, and others between AD 400 and 1400 [29]
The Japanese administered the island under the South Seas Mandate, but mostly left local affairs in the hands of traditional local leaders until the start of World War II.
They built and manned a watchtower on the island, an outpost for the Japanese headquarters on Kwajalein Atoll, to guard against an American invasion of the islands.
7 March 1946, 161 residents of Bikini Island board LST 1108 as they depart from Bikini Atoll
[39] No one lived on Rongerik because it had an inadequate water and food supply and due to deep-rooted traditional beliefs that the island was haunted by the Demon Girls of Ujae.
The Wilson cloud from test Baker, situated just offshore from Bikini Island at top of the picture.
[36] The extremely small, 200 acres (81xc2xa0ha) (.36 square miles (0.93xc2xa0km2)) island was uninhabited and wasn't ruled by a paramount iroij, or king due to its size.
In November 1948, the residents, now totaling 184 individuals, moved to Kili Island,[36] at 0.36 square miles (0.93xc2xa0km2), one of the smallest islands in the Marshall Island chain.
Kili is a small island without a lagoon, and most of the year it is exposed to 10 to 20xc2xa0ft (3.0 to 6.1xc2xa0m) waves that make fishing and putting canoes out difficult.
During 1955 and 1956, ships dispatched by the U.S. Trust Territory continually experienced problems unloading food because of the rough seas around the island, leading to additional food shortages.
The Atomic Energy Commission cleared radioactive debris from the island, and the U.S. Trust Territory was in charge of rebuilding structures and replanting crops on the atoll.
The Bikini Council voted to delay a return to the island as a result.
Three extended families, eventually totaling about 100 people, moved back to their home island in 1972 despite the risk.
But 10 years later, a team of French scientists performed additional tests on the island and its inhabitants.
[43] In June, the Department of Energy stated that "All living patterns involving Bikini Island exceed Federal [radiation] guidelines for thirty-year population doses."
In 1987, a few Bikini elders traveled to Eneu Island to reestablish old property lines.
A packed coral and sand runway still exists on Eneu Island.
As a result of the military use of the island and the failed resettlement, the islands are littered with abandoned concrete bunkers and tons of heavy equipment, vehicles, supplies, machines, and buildings.
Ocean waves have covered portions of the island at least five times from 2011 to 2015, contaminating the wells on the island.
The runway servicing the island is unusable during and after rains and ocean flooding because it becomes extremely muddy.
When the islanders were removed from the island in 1978, the U.S. added $3 million to the fund.
The United States provided $150 million in compensation for damage caused by the nuclear testing program and their displacement from their home island.
The Bikini Council hired dive guide Edward Maddison who had lived on Bikini Island since 1985 and Fabio Amaral, a Brazilian citizen at the time, as head divemaster and resort manager.
A half dozen divers and a journalist were stranded for a week on Bikini Island.
Visitors are still able to land on the island for brief stays.
Dive visitors receive a history lesson along with the dive experience, including movies and complete briefings about each of the ships, their respective histories, and a tour of the island and the atoll.
Bikini Island authorities opened sport fishing to visitors along with diving.
In 1998 an IAEA advisory group, formed in response to a request by the Government of the Marshall Islands for an independent international review of the radiological conditions at Bikini Atoll, recommended that Bikini Island should not be permanently resettled under the present radiological conditions.
The potential to make the island habitable has substantially improved since then.
Bikini Island is currently visited by a few scientists and inhabited by 4xe2x80x936 caretakers.
The opportunity for some Bikini islanders to potentially relocate back to their home island creates a dilemma.
While the island may be habitable in the near term, virtually all of the islanders alive today have never lived there.
After the islanders were relocated in 1946, while the Bikini islanders were experiencing starvation on Rongerik Atoll, Lore Kessibuki wrote an anthem for the island:[21]
No longer can I stay, itxe2x80x99s true No longer can I live in peace and harmony No longer can I rest on my sleeping mat and pillow Because of my island and the life I once knew there The thought is overwhelming Rendering me helpless and in great despair.
in Godzilla vs King Ghidorah, the fictional Lagos Island is the former home and birthplace of Godzilla.
[6] Marshall Island women swim in their muumuus, which are made of a fine polyester that dries quickly.
American bunker located in the island Rear of bunker The island seen from above Entrance sign to the island View of the coast from above