NASA picture of Wotho Atoll | |
Wotho Atoll (Marshall Islands) | |
| Geography | |
|---|---|
| Location | North Pacific |
| Coordinates | 10°05′00″N165°50′00″E / 10.08333°N 165.83333°E /10.08333; 165.83333 |
| Archipelago | Ralik |
| Total islands | 13 |
| Area | 4.33 km2 (1.67 sq mi) |
| Highest elevation | 3 m (10 ft) |
| Administration | |
| Demographics | |
| Population | 88 (2021) |
| Ethnic groups | Marshallese |
Wotho Atoll (Marshallese:Wōtto,[wʌttˠɔ])[1] is acoral atoll of 13 islands in the Pacific Ocean, and forms a legislative district of theRalik Chain of theMarshall Islands. Its total land area is only 4.33 square kilometers (1.67 sq mi), but it encloses a lagoon of 94.92 square kilometers (36.65 sq mi). The name "Wotho" means either "entrance through the reef", or "island far away" according to different sources.
The population of Wotho Atoll was 88 at the 2021 census.[2]
First recorded sighting of Wotho Atoll by Europeans was by the Spanish expedition ofMiguel López de Legazpi on 12 January 1565. They were charted asLas Hermanas (The Sisters in Spanish). It is likely that it had been visited earlier, in between December 1542 and January 1543, by the Spanish expedition ofRuy López de Villalobos.[3][4] The atoll was later also known asSchantz Islands afterJohan Eberhard von Schantz, who rediscovered the islands on his circumnavigation of the globe on theImperial Russian Navy shipAmerica in 1835.[5] Wotho Atoll was claimed by theGerman Empire along with the rest of the Marshall Islands in 1885.[6] After World War I, the island came under theSouth Seas Mandate of theEmpire of Japan. At the end of World War II, it came under the control of the United States as part of theTrust Territory of the Pacific Islands until the independence of the Marshall Islands in 1986.


Marshall Islands Public School System operates Wotho Elementary School.[7]Kwajalein Atoll High School onKwajalein serves the community.[8]