Geography of Papua New Guinea
Location:
Southeastern Asia, group of islands including the eastern half of the island of New Guinea between the Coral Sea and the South Pacific Ocean, east of Indonesia
Geographic coordinates:
6 00 S, 147 00 E
Map references:
Oceania
Area:
Area - comparative:
slightly larger than California
Land boundaries:
Coastline:
5,152 km
Maritime claims:
measured from claimed archipelagic baselines
Climate:
tropical; northwest monsoon (December to March), southeast monsoon (May to October); slight seasonal temperature variation
Terrain:
mostly mountains with coastal lowlands and rolling foothills
Elevation extremes:
Natural resources:
gold, copper, silver, natural gas, timber, oil, fisheries
Land use:
Irrigated land:
NA sq km
Natural hazards:
active volcanism; situated along the Pacific "Rim of Fire"; the country is subject to frequent and sometimes severe earthquakes; mud slides; tsunamis
Environment - current issues:
rain forest subject to deforestation as a result of growing commercial demand for tropical timber; pollution from mining projects; severe drought
Environment - international agreements:
Geography - note:
shares island of New Guinea with Indonesia; one of world's largest swamps along southwest coast
total:
462,840 sq km
land:
452,860 sq km
water:
9,980 sq km
total:
820 km
border countries:
Indonesia 820 km
continental shelf:
200-m depth or to the depth of exploitation
exclusive fishing zone:
200 nm
territorial sea:
12 nm
lowest point:
Pacific Ocean 0 m
highest point:
Mount Wilhelm 4,509 m
arable land:
0.1%
permanent crops:
1%
permanent pastures:
0%
forests and woodland:
92.9%
other:
6% (1993 est.)
party to:
Antarctic Treaty, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Marine Dumping, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Tropical Timber 83, Tropical Timber 94, Wetlands
signed, but not ratified:
Antarctic-Environmental Protocol, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol