Chuuk State#Municipalities
{{Short description|State in the Federated States of Micronesia}}
{{other uses|Chuuk (disambiguation)}}
{{More citations needed|date=February 2019}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2021}}
{{Infobox settlement
| name = Chuuk State
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| settlement_type = State
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| image_flag = Flag of Chuuk.svg
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| image_map = Chuuk.png
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| map_caption = Map of Chuuk State
| image_map1 = Chuuk in Federated States of Micronesia.svg
| map_caption1 = Chuuk in the Federated States of Micronesia
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| coordinates = {{coord|7|25|N|151|47|E|region:FM_dim:500000|display=inline,title}}
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| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = {{flag|Federated States of Micronesia}}
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| leader_title = Governor
| leader_name = Alexander R. Narruhn (since 2021)
| unit_pref = Metric
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| area_total_km2 = 121.5
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| seat_type = Capital
| seat = Weno
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| population_total = 48654
| population_as_of = 2010
| population_density_km2 = auto
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| utc_offset1 = +10
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| postal_code = 96942
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| iso_code = FM-TRK
| website = {{URL|http://www.fm/chuuk.htm}}
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File:FEMA - 9332 - Photograph by Marty Bahamonde taken on 04-03-1998 in Guam.jpg
Chuuk State ({{IPAc-en|'|ch|u:|k}}; also known as Truk){{Cite book |last=Chappell |first=David A. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FntyfsjsaScC&dq=Alvaro+de+Saavedra+chuuk&pg=PA24 |title=Double Ghosts: Oceanian Voyagers on Euroamerican Ships |date=1997-03-12 |publisher=M.E. Sharpe |isbn=978-0-7656-3695-9 |language=en}} is one of the four states of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). It consists of several island groups: Nomoneas, Faichuuk, the Hall Islands, Namonuito Atoll (Magur Islands), Pattiw (Western Islands), and the Mortlock Islands. Chuuk is by far the FSM's most populous state, with 50,000 inhabitants on {{convert|120|km2|lk=on|abbr=off|sp=us}}. Chuuk Lagoon is where most people live. Weno island, in the lagoon, is Chuuk's state capital and the country's biggest city. It may hold a referendum on independence in the near future, although this referendum has been repeatedly postponed.
History
=Indigenous settlement=
File:Catholic Church in Tonowas island, Truck (from a book published in 1932).png
Chuuk was first settled by Austronesians, believed to be from the Lapita culture of Island Melanesia.{{cite journal |last1=Bellwood |first1=Peter |title=The Austronesian Dispersal and the Origin of Languages |journal=Scientific American |date=1991 |volume=265 |issue=1 |pages=88–93 |jstor=24936983|bibcode=1991SciAm.265a..88B |doi=10.1038/scientificamerican0791-88 }} Archaeological evidence indicates that islands of Feefen and Wééné Islands had human settlements in the second and first century BCE. Later evidence indicates that widespread human settlements appeared in Chuuk during the 14th century CE, as the Chuukese culture was formed.{{cite book |last=Goodenough |first=Ward Hunt |title=Under Heaven's Brow: Pre-Christian Religious Tradition in Chuuk |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iOktNiIoMHAC&pg=PA17 |date=1 January 2002 |publisher=American Philosophical Society |isbn=978-0-87169-246-7 |pages=17–18}}
= Spanish colonization =
The first sighting recorded by Europeans was made by the Spanish navigator Alvaro de Saavedra{{Cite book |last1=Hinz |first1=Earl R. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CjIg5FgUUW8C&dq=Alvaro+de+Saavedra+chuuk&pg=PA318 |title=Landfalls of Paradise: Cruising Guide to the Pacific Islands |last2=Howard |first2=Jim |date=2006-04-30 |publisher=University of Hawaii Press |isbn=978-0-8248-3037-3 |language=en}}{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Okx0AAAAMAAJ&q=Alvaro+de+Saavedra+chuuk |title=Micronesia: A Guide Through the Centuries |date=2000 |publisher=Close Up Foundation |isbn=978-0-932765-94-9 |language=en}} on board the Florida during August or September 1528. They were later visited by the Spaniard Alonso de Arellano{{Cite book |last=Hanlon |first=David L. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=S1gEEAAAQBAJ&dq=Alonso+de+Arellano+chuuk&pg=PA30 |title=Making Micronesia: A Political Biography of Tosiwo Nakayama |date=2014-04-30 |publisher=University of Hawaii Press |isbn=978-0-8248-3847-8 |language=en}}{{Cite book |last=Rainbird |first=Paul |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jtMKeFTO9ZYC&dq=Alonso+de+Arellano+chuuk&pg=PA177 |title=The Archaeology of Micronesia |date=2004-06-03 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-65630-6 |language=en}} on 15 January 1565 on board the galleon patache San Lucas.
As part of the Caroline Islands,{{Cite book |last=Europa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FqwZUsK2Yn8C&q=Alvaro+de+Saavedra+chuuk+Caroline+Islands |title=The Europa World Year Book 2002 |date=2002 |publisher=Taylor & Francis Group |isbn=978-1-85743-129-2 |language=en}} Truk was claimed by the Spanish Empire, which struggled to control the islands in the late 19th century. The Chuuk Lagoon was then inhabited by Chuukese people (an Austronesian group) that participated in intermittent wars, as well as a small population of foreign merchants and missionaries, mostly linked to the Catholic Church. Spanish control over the islands was in part nominal. The Spanish stopped to raise a flag over Chuuk in 1886, and returned in 1895 as part of an attempt to assert control and negotiate peace between the tribes of Chuuk. No major Spanish settlement was established and traditional life continued until the German colonial era.
= German and Japanese rule =
The Caroline Islands were sold to the German Empire in 1899,{{Cite book |last=Fischer |first=Steven Roger |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0xEzEAAAQBAJ&dq=german+empire+1899+chuuk&pg=PA125 |title=Oceanic Voices – European Quills: The Early Documents on and in Chamorro and Rapanui |date=2015-03-03 |publisher=Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |isbn=978-3-05-006411-6 |language=en}} after Spain withdrew from the Pacific after the Spanish–American War in which it lost its main colony in Asia, the Philippines. Germany incorporated the territory into its domain in the German New Guinea.{{Cite book |last=Rainbird |first=Paul |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jtMKeFTO9ZYC&dq=german+new+guinea+chuuk&pg=PA23 |title=The Archaeology of Micronesia |date=2004-06-03 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-65630-6 |language=en}}
During World War I, the Imperial Japanese navy was tasked with pursuing and destroying the German East Asian Squadron and protecting the shipping lanes of Allied trade in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. During the course of this operation, the Japanese Navy seized German possessions in the Mariana Islands, the Carolinas, the Marshall Islands and Palau groups by October 1914. Chuuk then became a possession of the Empire of Japan under the mandate of the League of Nations after the defeat of Germany in World War I.
= United States rule =
Chuuk was one of six districts of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (TTPI) which were administered by the United States under charter from the United Nations from the end of the Second World War to the mid-1980s. The termination of U.S. administration of the Chuuk, Yap, Kosrae, Pohnpei, and Mariana Islands districts of the TTPI occurred on 3 November 1986.
= Independence =
The Federated States of Micronesia, including Chuuk, Yap, Kosrae, and Pohnpei, was established in 1979 and signed a Compact of Free Association with the U.S. (effective 3 November 1986).
As of recent times, Chuuk has been pushing harder for independence. An independence referendum was originally scheduled to coincide with federal elections on 3 March 2015, but was pushed back to 5 March 2019. The independence referendum was further pushed back to March 2022, with a date to be announced, while the constitutional legality of the proposed secession is determined.{{cite news |last1=Graue |first1=Catherine |title=Chuuk independence vote was to be today but citizens now have another year |url=https://www.abc.net.au/radio-australia/programs/pacificbeat/chuuk-independence-vote-pushed-back-another-year/10870644 |work=ABC Radio Australia |date=5 March 2019 |access-date=12 August 2019}}
Geography
File:Beach on Weno island (Chuuk, Micronesia).jpg
To the west is Yap State. To the east are Pohnpei State and Kosrae State is further east.
The main population center of Chuuk State is the Chuuk Lagoon, a large archipelago with mountainous islands surrounded by a string of islets on a barrier reef.{{citation needed|date=September 2011}} The two major geographical and dialectic divisions of the Chuuk Lagoon are Faichuuk, the western islands, and Namoneas, the eastern islands.
Chuuk State also includes several more sparsely populated "outer island" groups, including the Mortlock Islands to the southeast, the Hall Islands (Pafeng) to the north, Namonuito Atoll to the northwest, and the Pattiw Region to west. The Pattiw Region is of particular interest in that it has some of the most traditional islands in the Pacific and is culturally related to outer islands of Yap. This group includes the islands of Pollap, Tamatam, Poluwat, and Houk. There are still traditional master navigators—Poluwat and Pollap are considered to have some of the best navigators and ocean-going outrigger canoes in the Pacific. In the islands of the Pattiw Region, and some of the Islands of Yap, are the last two remaining schools of navigation, Weriyeng and Faaluush. Visiting the Pattiw Region in the west, however, is difficult due to the lack of reliable transportation. Houk probably has the most accessible airstrip in the Pattiw Region, with planes landing every one or two weeks.
The state shares its longitude with Sydney, Australia, namely the eastern portion of the city including the CBD.
=Climate=
{{Weather box
|location = Weno, Chuuk
|metric first = yes
|single line = yes
|Jan record high F = 91
|Feb record high F = 90
|Mar record high F = 90
|Apr record high F = 92
|May record high F = 91
|Jun record high F = 92
|Jul record high F = 92
|Aug record high F = 92
|Sep record high F = 93
|Oct record high F = 92
|Nov record high F = 91
|Dec record high F = 91
|year record high F = 93
|Jan high C = 29.9
|Feb high C = 29.9
|Mar high C = 30.2
|Apr high C = 30.4
|May high C = 30.7
|Jun high C = 30.7
|Jul high C = 30.6
|Aug high C = 30.7
|Sep high C = 30.7
|Oct high C = 30.7
|Nov high C = 30.7
|Dec high C = 30.2
|year high C = 30.4
|Jan mean C = 27.4
|Feb mean C = 27.5
|Mar mean C = 27.6
|Apr mean C = 27.7
|May mean C = 27.8
|Jun mean C = 27.7
|Jul mean C = 27.4
|Aug mean C = 27.4
|Sep mean C = 27.5
|Oct mean C = 27.6
|Nov mean C = 27.7
|Dec mean C = 27.6
|year mean C = 27.6
|Jan low C = 24.9
|Feb low C = 25.0
|Mar low C = 25.1
|Apr low C = 25.0
|May low C = 24.9
|Jun low C = 24.6
|Jul low C = 24.2
|Aug low C = 24.2
|Sep low C = 24.2
|Oct low C = 24.3
|Nov low C = 24.6
|Dec low C = 25.0
|year low C = 24.7
|Jan record low F = 69
|Feb record low F = 70
|Mar record low F = 71
|Apr record low F = 71
|May record low F = 70
|Jun record low F = 70
|Jul record low F = 70
|Aug record low F = 70
|Sep record low F = 68
|Oct record low F = 66
|Nov record low F = 70
|Dec record low F = 70
|year record low F = 66
|precipitation colour = green
|Jan precipitation inch = 8.98
|Feb precipitation inch = 6.42
|Mar precipitation inch = 9.05
|Apr precipitation inch = 11.46
|May precipitation inch = 13.94
|Jun precipitation inch = 11.84
|Jul precipitation inch = 14.37
|Aug precipitation inch = 13.77
|Sep precipitation inch = 12.07
|Oct precipitation inch = 14.23
|Nov precipitation inch = 11.10
|Dec precipitation inch = 11.55
|year precipitation inch = 138.78
|Jan humidity = 78.7
|Feb humidity = 77.7
|Mar humidity = 78.7
|Apr humidity = 81.0
|May humidity = 82.6
|Jun humidity = 82.9
|Jul humidity = 83.9
|Aug humidity = 83.2
|Sep humidity = 83.0
|Oct humidity = 83.1
|Nov humidity = 81.9
|Dec humidity = 80.8
|year humidity = 81.6
|unit precipitation days = 1.0 mm
|Jan precipitation days = 14.8
|Feb precipitation days = 12.2
|Mar precipitation days = 14.9
|Apr precipitation days = 16.2
|May precipitation days = 21.2
|Jun precipitation days = 20.3
|Jul precipitation days = 20.8
|Aug precipitation days = 21.0
|Sep precipitation days = 18.6
|Oct precipitation days = 20.0
|Nov precipitation days = 20.0
|Dec precipitation days = 18.8
|Jan sun = 195.3
|Feb sun = 197.8
|Mar sun = 217.0
|Apr sun = 195.0
|May sun = 192.2
|Jun sun = 180.0
|Jul sun = 195.3
|Aug sun = 195.3
|Sep sun = 177.0
|Oct sun = 161.2
|Nov sun = 162.0
|Dec sun = 167.4
|source 1 = Hong Kong Observatory (sun 1961–1990){{cite web
|url = http://www.weather.gov.hk/wxinfo/climat/world/eng/australia/pacific/truk_e.htm
|title = Climatological Information for Truk, Pacific Islands, United States
|publisher = Hong Kong Observatory
|access-date = 13 December 2012
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160304113410/http://www.weather.gov.hk/wxinfo/climat/world/eng/australia/pacific/truk_e.htm
|archive-date = 4 March 2016
|url-status = dead
}}
|source 2 = NOAA {{Cite FTP |url = ftp://dossier.ogp.noaa.gov/GCOS/WMO-Normals/RA-V/U1/91334.TXT
|server = National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
|url-status = dead
|title = TRUK ISLAND/CAROLINE ISLANDS PI Climate Normals 1961–1990
|access-date = 13 December 2012}}
|date=August 2010
}}
=Typhoon Chataan=
On 2 July 2002, heavy rains from Tropical Storm Chataan caused more than thirty landslides that killed forty-seven people and injured dozens of others, in the state's deadliest weather disaster. The landslides occurred throughout the day, some within just minutes of each other.
Demographics
Chuuk is the most populous of the FSM's states. At the census held on 1 April 2000, it had 53,595 inhabitants, compared with 34,486 for Pohnpei, 11,241 for Yap and 7,686 for Kosrae; at the census held on 4 April 2010, it had 48,654 inhabitants, compared with 36,196 for Pohnpei, 11,377 for Yap and 6,616 for Kosrae.Office of Statistics, Budget and Economic Management, Overseas Development Assistance and Compact Management.
= Religion =
The majority of the state's population is affiliated with Christianity as a result of the activity of missionary groups first from Spain and then from Germany and the United States. Catholicism was introduced during the Spanish colonization period, followed by the arrival of various Protestant groups. The main religious building in the state is the Immaculate Heart of Mary Cathedral{{Cite web|title=Immaculate Heart of Mary Cathedral|url=http://www.gcatholic.org/churches/oceania/1547.htm|access-date=13 September 2021|website=GCatholic}} in Tunnuk, Weno, which is under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of the Caroline Islands (Diocese Carolinensium) suffragan of the ecclesiastical province of Agaña in Guam. Other churches in the state include Sacred Heart Church on Lekinioch Island, Christ the King Church in Neiwe, Houk Catholic Church, Holy Family Church in Weno, St. Ignatius Church{{Cite web|title=Saint Ignatius Catholic Church church, Chuuk, Micronesia|url=https://fm.geoview.info/saint_ignatius_catholic_church,7669149|access-date=13 September 2021|website=fm.geoview.info}} in Fonoton, among others.
= Language =
The people of the country speak the Chuukese language, a Micronesian language.
Culture
=Jesuit mission at Weno=
The New York Province of the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) maintains a mission school on the island of Weno in Chuuk. Xavier High School is housed at the former Japanese communications center. It is a coeducational institution, drawing students from all the island groups of the Federated States of Micronesia, as well as Palau and the Marshall Islands. Teachers are both Jesuit and lay and come from Micronesia, the U.S., Indonesia, Japan, and Australia.{{Citation needed|date=May 2021}}
=Spirit possession=
Although Chuuk is an overwhelmingly Christian society, traditional beliefs in spirit possession by the dead still exist. Allegedly, these spirits overwhelmingly possess women, and spirit possession is usually brought on by family conflicts. The spirits, speaking through the women, typically admonish family members to treat each other better.Hezel, Francis X. 1993 [http://www.micsem.org/pubs/counselor/spirpos.htm Spirit Possession in Chuuk: Socio-Cultural Interpretation]. Micronesian Counselor 11
= Cultural references =
There are some references on the Chuukese language, treating guests, and on beliefs in the sci-fi book "Reefsong" from Carol Severance.{{Citation needed|date=May 2021}}
Municipalities
Of the 40 municipalities of the state, 16 fall within the Chuuk Lagoon and 24 in the Outer Islands.
In the table below, each is followed by its population at the 2010 Census:{{Cite web |url=https://www.fsmstatistics.fm/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/PopHseC_details.xlsx |title=2010 Census Basic Table - Chuuk |access-date=8 October 2021 |archive-date=28 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230128220310/https://www.fsmstatistics.fm/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/PopHseC_details.xlsx |url-status=dead }}
- Chuuk Lagoon (36,158)
- Faichuk (11,305)
- Eot (266)
- Fanapanges (672)
- Paata (1,107)
- Polle (1,498)
- Romanum (865)
- Tol (4,579)
- Udot (1,680)
- Wonei (638)
- Northern Namoneas (14,620)
- Fono (388)
- Piis-Penau (376)
- Weno (13,856)
- Southern Namoneas (10,233)
- Fefan (3,471)
- Param (342)
- Tonowas (3,517)
- Tsis (349)
- Uman (2,554)
- Outer Islands (12,496)
- Mortlocks (5,677)
- Etal (672)
- Kutu (323)
- Losap (248)
- Lukunor (848)
- Moch (932)
- Nama (676)
- Namoluk (355)
- Oneop (400)
- Pis-Losap (258)
- Satawan (692)
- Ta (273)
- Northwest (6,819)
- Fananu (580)
- Magur (159)
- Murilo (329)
- Nomwin (763)
- Onari (193)
- Ono (172)
- Pisaras (227)
- Poluwat (745)
- Pulap (1,168)
- Houk (formerly known as 'Pulusuk')(1,116)
- Ruo (241)
- Tamatam (493)
- Ulul (633)
Politics and government
The State of Chuuk is one of the four federal states of the Federated States of Micronesia. As a democratic federation, each state has the ability to retain large number of power within the state as well as a certain level of sovereignty typical of federal states. The chief executive of Chuuk is the governor. Chuuk has a bicameral legislature.{{cite web |title=Chuuk State – Legal Information System of the Federated States of Micronesia |url=http://fsmlaw.org/chuuk/index.htm |website=fsmlaw.org}}
Education
Chuuk State Department of Education operates public schools.
- Chuuk High School – Weno
- Faichuk High School
- Moch High School
- Mortlock High School
- Northwest High School (formerly known as 'Weipat'- Onoun Island)
- Southern Namoneas High School (SNHS)"[http://www.fsmembassydc.org/schools.html Higher Education in the Federated States of Micronesia] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171014070540/http://www.fsmembassydc.org/schools.html |date=2017-10-14 }}." Embassy of the Federated States of Micronesia Washington, D.C.. Retrieved on 23 February 2018.
- Weno High School
- Berea Christian High School – Weno
- Saramen Chuuk Academy
- Xavier High School – Weno
- Mizpah Christian High School
- File:US Navy 080831-N-8878B-345 An MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter flies over the waters of Micronesia.jpg Seventh Day Adventist Mission School
- Pentecostal Light House Academy
- Saint Cecilia School
- Seventh Day Adventist Mission School
Tourism
Chuuk State received the largest number of visitors of any of the Federated States of Micronesia. However, tourism is relatively under-developed. In the FSM's Development Plan for Chuuk, published in 2016, factors which disadvantaged the development of tourism in Chuuk included a lack of infrastructure, in particular irregular ferries between islands and a lack of regular electricity supplies on all islands apart from Weno. The report recognized that it is primarily Chuuk's underwater assets that would bring tourism, including its marine diversity and the Second World War shipwrecks around the coast.{{Cite book|url=https://www.spc.int/CoastalFisheries/CFM/Document/ShowDocument/7aca5721-a9db-4610-8726-03b607e985ab?attachment=False|title=Chuuk State Regional Development Plan|publisher=Chuck State Economic Development Commission|year=2016}} Where tourism does exist, it is reliant on the diving industry, which was established in the islands by Kimiuo Aisek.{{Cite web|title=Kimio Aisek – Submerged|url=https://www.submerged.co.uk/aisek/|access-date=14 May 2021|language=en-US}} A legacy of his work to make Chuuk a dive destination was the establishment of the Kimiuo Aisek Memorial Museum.{{Cite web|author=Dianne Strong|title=Internationally known, Chuukese-owned dive shop going strong past 45 years|url=https://www.postguam.com/news/local/internationally-known-chuukese-owned-dive-shop-going-strong-past-45-years/article_9c8de22c-fa05-11e8-950f-7b72f51eb768.html|access-date=14 May 2021|website=The Guam Daily Post|date=27 January 2019 |language=en}}
The American attacks on the Japanese fleet in 1944 were such that today Truk lagoon is the largest underwater military cemetery in the world (60 ships and 400 aircraft scattered over several kilometers), which attracts divers from all over the world. The diving conditions are very good (visibility 15–40 meters, variations in depth, minor currents, 700 varieties of fish, generous coral). However, this source of income is jeopardized by preservation issues, from rapidly disintegrating carcasses to dynamite fishing that rapidly destroys whole sections of the graveyard.{{Cite web|last=à 13h58|first=Par Ludivine Trichot Le 17 juillet 2017|date=17 July 2017|title=Le plus grand cimetière sous marin du monde en Micronésie|url=https://www.leparisien.fr/societe/le-plus-grand-cimetiere-sous-marin-du-monde-en-micronesie-17-07-2017-7138326.php|access-date=13 September 2021|website=leparisien.fr|language=fr-FR}}
See also
- Chuuk Women's Council, a non-governmental women's rights organization based in Weno.
- Habele, a South Carolina-based charity providing private economic educational assistance in Chuuk.
- Chuukese independence referendum, a vote for Chuuk to become independent from Micronesia, which was due to take place in 2022 and has been delayed three times. It has become embroiled in China-USA relations over its proximity to the US military base at Guam.
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Wikivoyage|Chuuk}}
{{commons category|Chuuk}}
- [https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20090326012613/http://www.visit-fsm.org/chuuk/ Chuuk (Truk) Visitors Center]
- [http://www.prh.noaa.gov/chuuk/ NOAA's National Weather Service – Chuuk, FSM]
- [http://www.fsmlaw.org/chuuk/ Chuuk State Government System]
- [https://www.spc.int/CoastalFisheries/CFM/Document/ShowDocument/7aca5721-a9db-4610-8726-03b607e985ab?attachment Chuuk State Strategic Development Plan 2018 to 2023]
{{Federated States of Micronesia topics}}
{{Authority control}}