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  1. An uninhabited island, desert island, or deserted island, is an island, islet or atoll which lacks permanent human population. Uninhabited islands are often depicted in films or stories about shipwrecked people, and are also used as stereotypes for the idea of "paradise".

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    • Ōkunoshima Island, Japan. Three kilometers off the coast of Japan, Ōkunoshima Island is overrun with rabbits, which are not native to the land. But there are no human residents on Ōkunoshima Island.
    • Antipodes Islands, New Zealand. In Māori, this group of subantarctic volcanic islets is called Moutere Mahue—“abandoned islands.” The cold climate and harsh winds make the Antipodes too inhospitable for permanent human settlement.
    • Jaco Island, East Timor. Jaco Island in East Timor has no permanent inhabitants because local people consider it sacred land. However, that does not mean they won’t accommodate tourists.
    • Clipperton Island, France. Clipperton Island is a coral atoll south of Mexico and west of Guatemala in the eastern Pacific. It was claimed first by France, then the U.S., where workers mined it for guano.
    • Clipperton Island. This is one of the most famous biggest uninhabited islands. It is located in the Pacific Ocean. Its area is about six square kilometers.
    • The Antipodes. The Antipodes are a group of volcanic islands in New Zealand. The cold climate and harsh winds are their characteristics, which render the island uninhabited.
    • Okunoshima Island. This is also another well-known island in Japan that is uninhabited. Okunoshima Island is also famous for its other characteristic of being scary.
    • Jaco Island. In Southeast Asia, there lies an uninhabited island by the name of Jaco Island. The island is still unclaimed. It lies adjacent to the island of Timor.
    • Rock Islands. The Rock Islands are ancient relics of coral reefs that surfaced to form the 250 to 300 islands in Palau’s Southern Lagoon. The islands are for the most part uninhabited, and are famous for their beaches, blue lagoons and the peculiar shapes of many of the islands.
    • Aldabra. Aldabra, is one of the Outer Islands of the Seychelles more than 1,100 kilometers (700 miles) from Mahé, the largest island of the Seychelles and is closer to the coast of Africa.
    • Maldives Desert Islands. The Maldives are an archipelago of 1,190 coral islands grouped into 26 coral atolls. Only 200 islands are inhabited by local Maldivian people while only 5 islands have a population of more than 3,000.
    • Tetepare Island. Part of the Solomon Islands, Tetepare is the largest uninhabited island in the South Pacific. The long rugged island is covered with pristine lowland rainforest and fringed with coral reefs.
    • Parts of the Maldives. Sitting in the Indian Ocean, the Maldives is made up of an archipelago of more than 1,000 islands. Only a fraction of these landforms are inhabited, and only a handful of these have populations in the thousands.
    • Henderson Island. Located in the South Pacific, tiny Henderson Island is virtually uninhabitable by humans — it has steep sea cliffs and no freshwater source.
    • Ang Thong Islands. This group of islands in Southern Thailand, not far from the popular beach resorts of Koh Samui, Ang Thong offers a different kind of tropical experience.
    • Jaco Island. Situated one half-mile from the mainland, this uninhabited island is part of East Timor. Jaco's fine sand beaches, bright turquoise waters, and coral reefs draw tourists seeking untouched paradise in this southern corner of Asia.
  2. Bouvet Island (/ ˈ b uː v eɪ / BOO-vay; Norwegian: Bouvetøya [3] [bʉˈvèːœʏɑ]) [4] is an uninhabited island and dependency of Norway. It is a protected nature reserve. It is a subantarctic volcanic island, situated in the South Atlantic Ocean at the southern end of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and is the world's most remote island.

  3. Oct 1, 2023 · Uninhabited islands are islands with no permanent human habitations. They are sometimes used for agricultural and industrial purposes. Likewise, some of these islands are useful breeding grounds for various wildlife species. The big question is – Why is no one living on them?