If you're referring to the new Hawaiian Monument, it's a 1200 mile stretch of ocean located to the northwest of the Hawaiian Islands and was established by President Bush in 2006. I believe it's official name is Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Marine National Monument.
Monk seals are native to the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and the main Hawaiian Islands in the United States as well as certain regions of the Mediterranean Sea. They are endemic to these areas, meaning they are found exclusively in these locations. Additionally, monk seals are critically endangered, with their populations facing numerous threats such as habitat loss, entanglement in fishing gear, and disease.
There is no native Hawaiian word for monkey, but in Modern Hawaiian, you could use the word keko.
Ulili E' is a Hawaiian song about a little bird. The English translation is: The voice of the sandpiper is soft and sweet/Little bird who lives by the sea/ Ever watchful on the beaches/Where the sea is calm. The sandpiper/The sandpiper returns/Sandpiper runs along the beach/Where the sea is peaceful and calm. The voice of the 'Ulili is soft and sweet/How are you, stranger? Very well/You grace our land/Where the sea is always calm.
There is no Hawaiian word for kangaroo, just as there is no English word for Kangaroo.
the hawaiian name for crouching lion is Papale Pake
Hawaiian sea-moth fish was created in 1905.
Hawaiian Green Sea Turtle is one... Hawaiian Monk seal, Hawaiian Owl, Hawaiian Horay Bat are also endangered.
maika [my-ka]
The Sea, Sun and Surf.
The Hawaiian green sea turtle.
Undying steadfast loyalty to the sea
Hoku ke Kai
To sing of the beauty of the sea
Hawaiian Eye - 1959 Sea Fire 2-4 was released on: USA: 5 October 1960
Mauka is Hawaiian for "mountain-side" or "toward the mountains". Its opposite is makai, which means "seaward" or "toward the sea".
Kaelani is of Hawaiian origin and means: sky, sea
Yes, it's the way the Hawaiian Islands were formed.