The three divisions of the Pacific Islands are Micronesia (small islands), Melanesia (black islands), and Polynesia (many islands). These divisions are based on geographic, cultural, and historical differences among the islands.
The islands that make up the tail-like figure off the coast of Alaska are the Aleutian Islands. They are a chain of more than 300 islands stretching over 1,200 miles across the northern Pacific Ocean.
Some of the main islands in the Mariana Islands include Guam, Saipan, Tinian, and Rota. There are also smaller islands and islets in the archipelago.
The Danish islands northeast of the Shetland Island are the Faroe Islands.
Islands can have unusual names due to their unique geography, history, or local culture. Some may be named after a feature of the island, a historical event, a local legend, or even a wildlife species found there. These factors can contribute to the diversity and sometimes eccentricity of island names.
Bahrain and Cyprus are two islands in the Middle East region.
raiders
Tainui
One is Hawaii
The major Pacific Islands include the islands of Fiji, Australia, Hawaii, New Zealand, and Indonesia
The North American and Pacific plates meet at the Aleutian Islands (convergent).
how i know if there is no answer to this question ....what ever..........lol
Breadfruits
Timor, Java, Sumatra, Indonesia, with many smaller islands scattered round the area.
Puerto Rico (found in the northeastern Caribbean Sea), American Samoa (South Pacific Ocean), Guam (Western Pacific Ocean), The American Virgin Islands (Caribbean Sea), and the Northern Mariana Islands (Western Pacific Ocean) are the current (November 2014) five inhabited US island "territories".
I think you meant the hemispheres instead of divisions, which are the northern and southern hemispheres.
There are no islands
Barbados