Classroom lesson · Coral Atolls · 🇲🇭 Marshall Islands

Coral Atolls

Ring-shaped islands built entirely by tiny living creatures

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Marshall Islands are made of 29 coral atolls and 5 islands. An atoll is a ring of low land made from coral reef that grew around an old underwater volcano. Inside the ring is a calm, sheltered lagoon; outside is the wide open ocean. Nearly everything in the Marshall Islands was built by tiny sea creatures called coral polyps.

Tell me more

Coral polyps are animals about the size of your little fingernail. They live in huge groups and build hard limestone cases around themselves. Over thousands of years, millions of polyps build up layer upon layer of reef. When a reef grows up to the surface of the sea, sand collects on top, seeds blow in on the wind, and a new island is born.

Because atolls are formed by coral, they are usually very flat and low – most land in the Marshall Islands is only one or two metres above sea level. But what they lack in height they make up for in colour. The lagoon inside an atoll is often a brilliant turquoise blue, and the reef is full of fish, turtles and rays.

The Marshall Islands has 29 atolls, each one a necklace of small islands around a lagoon. Majuro is the capital atoll and the most populated. Arno Atoll, just south of Majuro, is known for its beautiful beaches and gentle lagoon. Mili Atoll in the south-east has one of the largest lagoons in the whole country.

The coral reef is also a food source, a nursery for young fish, and a natural barrier that protects the land from strong ocean waves. Marshallese people have always respected the reef as a living thing that gives the islands life.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Can you think of other things that are built up bit by bit over a very long time?
  2. 02Why might a calm lagoon inside an atoll be important for the people who live there?
  3. 03If your town or city was built on a low, flat island, what would be different about living there?
  4. 04Coral polyps are tiny but together they build something enormous. Can you think of another example where small things add up to something huge?
Try this

Classroom activity

Draw an atoll from above! Use a blue sheet of paper for the ocean. Draw a ring (circle with a hole) in the middle for the land – colour it green. Fill the inside of the ring with light blue to show the lagoon. Label the ocean, the land ring, and the lagoon. Now compare your drawing with a partner – whose atoll has the biggest lagoon?