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Pat Barker's Booker-winning novel 'The Ghost Road' (1995) contains powerful passages detailing Rivers' memories of his time on this island.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": -8.3, "longitude": 156.5}, "name": "Simbo"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [156.5, -8.3]}, "id": "simbo"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "5484", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7530, "valueset_pk": 7530, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7530, "jsondata": {}, "id": "trobriand-islands-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 96, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 96, "glottocode": "kili1267", "ethonyms": "", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": []}, "id": "trobriand-islands", "name": "Trobriand Islands", "description": "The Trobriands are a group of islands off the southeast coast of New Guinea. 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As the island's soil is poor, the people of Manam depend heavily on trade with the mainland. The people of Manam believe (and possibly still believe) that the volcano on their island is inhabited by a culture heroine called Zaria.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": -4.1, "longitude": 145.0}, "name": "Manam"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [145.0, -4.1]}, "id": "manam"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "3759", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7539, "valueset_pk": 7539, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7539, "jsondata": {}, "id": "bontok-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 89, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 89, "glottocode": "cent2292", "ethonyms": "Bontoc Igorot", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": ["Bontoc Igorot"]}, "id": "bontok", "name": "Bontok", "description": "The Bontok (also known as Bontoc Igorots) live in and around the town of Bontoc in the Cordillera of Luzon, and speak several closely related languages. 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The Lau economy centred around resources from the sea, but the Lau also practiced agriculture on land they owned on the mainland. Lau religion centred around on the worship of ancestral beings, some of whom took the form of sharks. In the 1980s, the Lau were the subject of a documentary involving the decline of their indigenous religion due to Christianity and forces of modernity.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": -8.3, "longitude": 160.8}, "name": "Lau"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [160.8, -8.3]}, "id": "lau"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "7223", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7553, "valueset_pk": 7553, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7553, "jsondata": {}, "id": "sama-dilaut-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 94, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 94, "glottocode": "cent2092", "ethonyms": "Bajau Laut; Bajau; Badjaw; Sama; Sea Gypsies", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": ["Bajau Laut", "Bajau", "Badjaw", "Sama", "Sea Gypsies"]}, "id": "sama-dilaut", "name": "Sama Dilaut (Tawi-Tawi)", "description": "The Sama Dilaut (more often known as the Bajau or Bajau Laut) are one of the ethnic groups of Southeast Asia known as the 'Sea Gypsies'. Linguistically, they are a subset of the Sama ethnic group of the Southern Philippines, most of which are settled and heavily Islamised. Historically, the Sama Dilaut ('Sama of the Sea') have been distinguishable from other Sama on the basis of their maritime mode of life and lesser degree of Islamisation. Today, virtually all Sama Dilaut are mainstream Muslims, and most are settled. However, the Sama Dilaut of the Tawi-Tawi islands maintained their traditional religion and lifestyle until the 1970s. \r\n\r\nRe: Ethonyms applied to this group:\r\n\r\n\"From the time the Sama Dilaut first appeared into the literature, confusion has reigned regarding their name. Their autonym is 'Sama' and if they need to distinguish themselves from the shore-dwelling Sama people, they call themselves 'Sama Dilaut' ('Sama of the Sea'). In eastern Borneo, other people call all Sama people 'Bajau' and the Sama Dilaut are called 'Bajau Laut' (\"Bajau of the sea\"). 'Bajau' is apparently an Indonesian name name for boat-dwelling people that was transferred to the Sama people in Borneo, both land-dwelling and boat-dwelling. In the Sulu Archipelago, 'Bajau' is commonly used by outsiders for the Sama Dilaut, but not for other Sama people.  The earliest visitors to Sulu referred to the Sama Dilaut as 'Bajau' and that name became established in the ethnographic literature for the full-time and part-time boat-dwelling Samal of Sulu. I followed that tradition and referred to the Sama Dilaut as 'Bajau' in previous publications. I was always uncomfortable about doing so and in recent years have become increasingly so ... It is time for 'Sama Dilaut' to become established in the ethnographic literature as the name for the sea-dwelling Sama people of the Sulu archipelago and eastern Borneo.\" (Nimmo, 2001, pp 1-2)", "markup_description": null, "latitude": 5.1, "longitude": 119.8}, "name": "Sama Dilaut (Tawi-Tawi)"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [119.8, 5.1]}, "id": "sama-dilaut"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "7390", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7554, "valueset_pk": 7554, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7554, "jsondata": {}, "id": "toabaita-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 6, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 6, "glottocode": "toab1237", "ethonyms": "", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": []}, "id": "toabaita", "name": "To'abaita", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "latitude": -8.4, "longitude": 160.6}, "name": "To'abaita"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [160.6, -8.4]}, "id": "toabaita"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "2124", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7558, "valueset_pk": 7558, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7558, "jsondata": {}, "id": "motu-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 11, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 11, "glottocode": "motu1246", "ethonyms": "", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": []}, "id": "motu", "name": "Motu", "description": "The Motu are an Austronesian-speaking people who historically lived in the area that now Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea. 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Yap is famous for its 'stone money' - enormous stone disks that served as signs of wealth and as a medium of exchange.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": 9.5, "longitude": 138.1}, "name": "Yap"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [138.1, 9.5]}, "id": "yap"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "8183", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7563, "valueset_pk": 7563, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7563, "jsondata": {}, "id": "tinguian-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 98, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 98, "glottocode": "bino1237", "ethonyms": "Itneg; Tinggian", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": ["Itneg", "Tinggian"]}, "id": "tinguian", "name": "Tinguian", "description": "The Tinguian or Itneg live in the western Cordillera of Luzon, the largest island of the Philippines. 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Like the other peoples of the Cordillera, the Tinguian converted to Christianity in the course of the twentieth century.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": 17.6, "longitude": 120.8}, "name": "Tinguian"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [120.8, 17.6]}, "id": "tinguian"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "7977", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7564, "valueset_pk": 7564, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7564, "jsondata": {}, "id": "ngaju-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 84, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 84, "glottocode": "ngaj1237", "ethonyms": "Dayak; Dayak Ngaju; Ngadju; Ngaju Dayak", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": ["Dayak", "Dayak Ngaju", "Ngadju", "Ngaju Dayak"]}, "id": "ngaju", "name": "Ngaju", "description": "Ngaju (meaning 'upstream') is the name given to a group of linguistically and culturally similar peoples inhabiting the upper reaches of several south-flowing rivers in the south of Borneo. 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Although most Ngaju have converted to Christianity, the traditional religion survives to an extent in the form of the syncretic religion Kaharingan.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": -1.7, "longitude": 114.0}, "name": "Ngaju"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [114.0, -1.7]}, "id": "ngaju"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "8374", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7566, "valueset_pk": 7566, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7566, "jsondata": {}, "id": "ulithi-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 28, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 28, "glottocode": "ulit1238", "ethonyms": "Ulithian", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": ["Ulithian"]}, "id": "ulithi", "name": "Ulithi", "description": "Ulithi is a large atoll in western Micronesia. The indigenous religion of Ulithi included a pantheon of sky gods, including a supreme god called I'aluep, the 'Big Spirit' or 'Great Spirit'. However, these gods were considered remote, and deified spirits of the dead were ritually more important. Most of the population of Ulithi converted to Roman Catholicism in the 1930s and 1940s.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": 10.1, "longitude": 139.7}, "name": "Ulithi"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [139.7, 10.1]}, "id": "ulithi"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"values": [{"jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "17895", "name": "3", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "pk": 7573, "valueset_pk": 7573, "domainelement_pk": 195, "frequency": null, "confidence": null, "domainelement": {"pk": 195, "jsondata": {"color": "#b0867f"}, "id": "31-3", "name": "3", "description": "Major", "markup_description": null, "parameter_pk": 65, "number": null, "abbr": null}, "valueset": {"pk": 7573, "jsondata": {}, "id": "visayans-65", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "language_pk": 111, "parameter_pk": 65, "contribution_pk": 1, "source": null}}], "label": "3", "icon": "data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyAgeG1sbnM9Imh0dHA6Ly93d3cudzMub3JnLzIwMDAvc3ZnIgogICAgICB4bWxuczp4bGluaz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMTk5OS94bGluayIgaGVpZ2h0PSI0MCIgd2lkdGg9IjQwIj4KICA8Y2lyY2xlIGN4PSIyMCIgY3k9IjIwIiByPSIxNCIgc3R5bGU9ImZpbGw6I0IwODY3RjtzdHJva2U6YmxhY2s7c3Ryb2tlLXdpZHRoOjFweDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWNhcDpyb3VuZDtzdHJva2UtbGluZWpvaW46cm91bmQ7Ii8+Cjwvc3ZnPg==", "language": {"pk": 111, "glottocode": "butu1244", "ethonyms": "Bisaya; Cebuano; Boholano; Ibabao, Samareno", "jsondata": {"ethonyms": ["Bisaya", "Cebuano", "Boholano", "Ibabao, Samareno"]}, "id": "visayans", "name": "Visayans", "description": "Visayans or Bisayans are the indigenous people of the Visayan Islands. 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