All Object Lessons
Knowledge & Navigation

The Stick Chart: A Map Made of Sticks and Shells

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 geography, science, history, ethics, art
Core question How did people sail thousands of kilometres across the Pacific Ocean using a map made of sticks — and what does this object teach us about the many ways humans have learned to read the sea?
A Marshallese stick chart. The curves and crossings of the sticks show how ocean waves bend and meet around the islands of the western Pacific. The shells mark the islands themselves. Photo: Sterilgutassistentin / Wikimedia Commons / GPL
Introduction

In the central Pacific Ocean, scattered across hundreds of thousands of square kilometres of open sea, lie the 1,200 islands of the Marshall Islands. Most of them are tiny — flat rings of coral, often less than a metre above sea level. From a boat, you can sail past one and never see it. To the east, west, north, and south, there is mostly open ocean for thousands of kilometres. To live on these islands, you have to be able to find them. The Marshallese learned to do this by reading the waves. Ocean waves do not move randomly. They bend around islands, even islands too small to see, in patterns that a trained navigator can read with their body, lying in the bottom of a canoe, feeling the water move beneath them. Marshallese navigators, called ri-meto, learned this skill by lying in canoes for many hours, with master teachers, until their bodies could tell which direction land lay. To teach this skill, they made objects called stick charts. A stick chart is not a map you read with your eyes only. It is a model of how waves behave around islands. The curves and crossings of the sticks show where waves bend, meet, and pass each other. Small shells mark the positions of real islands. Once a navigator has learned the patterns from the chart, they can read the same patterns in the real ocean. This lesson asks how this works, who made it, and what we lose when one way of knowing the sea is replaced by another.

The object
Origin
The Marshall Islands, in the central Pacific Ocean, made by Marshallese navigators (ri-meto). There are three main types: mattang (a teaching chart showing wave patterns), meddo (showing one part of the islands), and rebbelib (showing all the islands).
Period
Used for at least several hundred years and probably much longer. Rarely made today as working tools, but the knowledge is still being preserved.
Made of
Thin sticks, often from the central spine of coconut palm leaves, lashed together with coconut fibre cord. Small cowrie shells are tied at points to mark islands.
Size
Most are 30 to 100 cm across. The largest rebbelib charts can be larger, showing all 1,200 islands of the Marshalls.
Number of objects
Only a small number of historical stick charts survive — perhaps a few hundred — most in museums. New charts are sometimes made as teaching objects or art pieces today.
Where it is now
Major collections are at the Library of Congress in Washington, the British Museum, the Ethnological Museum in Berlin, the Peabody Museum at Harvard, and the Alele Museum in the Marshall Islands.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Most students think a 'map' looks like a printed piece of paper with lines and labels. The stick chart is something different. How will you stretch their idea of what a map can be?
  2. The Marshall Islands today face serious challenges from climate change — many of the islands may be underwater within decades. How will you connect the past tradition to this present reality?
  3. Pacific Indigenous knowledge has often been ignored by Western science. How will you treat the Marshallese tradition with the respect it deserves?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine you are sailing in a small canoe in the open Pacific. You cannot see any land. You have no compass. You have no map you can read with your eyes — just one you have memorised. You need to find a small island somewhere ahead. You lie down in the bottom of the canoe. You let your body feel the movement of the water. The waves are not random. There is a pattern — long swells coming from one direction, smaller waves crossing them. Where they meet, the boat moves a particular way. You have spent years learning to feel these patterns. What are you doing?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

You are reading the sea with your body. This is the heart of Marshallese navigation. Ocean waves come from many directions, generated by storms thousands of kilometres away. They travel through the deep ocean in patterns. When they hit an island — even a low coral island that you cannot see from a few kilometres away — they bend around it. They reflect off it. They meet and cross. The pattern of waves where you are sailing is shaped by every island and reef around you, even islands beyond the horizon. A trained navigator can feel this pattern in their boat — the slight tilt, the rhythm of motion, the cross-currents — and know which direction the nearest island lies. This is real, learnable, scientifically documented skill. Modern researchers have confirmed that wave patterns do bend around islands in exactly the ways Marshallese navigators describe. Students should see that 'reading the sea' is not poetic language. It is precise science, learned with the body, taught by master navigators to apprentices, refined over many generations.

2
To teach this skill on land, the Marshallese made stick charts. A chart is a flat object — sticks tied together with cord, with small cowrie shells at certain points. The shells are the islands. The sticks are the wave patterns. There are three kinds. A mattang is a small teaching chart that shows the basic wave patterns — how swells from each direction look, how they cross, what happens when they hit an island. A meddo shows the wave patterns around one part of the Marshalls. A rebbelib shows the wave patterns around all of the Marshalls — over 1,200 islands. Why might one tradition need three kinds of charts?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

For teaching, training, and serious work. The mattang is a beginner's chart — like an alphabet for waves. The student learns: this curve is a swell from the east; this crossing is where two swells meet; this knot is where a wave reflects off a reef. With the mattang, the student can recognise basic patterns. The meddo is the next level — a real area of the ocean, with the sticks showing exactly how waves bend around the islands of that area. A student studying the meddo learns the specific signatures of each island in that region. The rebbelib is the master chart — the whole archipelago, with every island and every wave pattern. Only an experienced navigator could read a rebbelib. Importantly, the charts were not taken to sea. They were tools for memorising the patterns on land. Once the patterns were in the navigator's mind and body, the chart was no longer needed. The actual navigation happened in the canoe, with the body, in real water. Students should see that 'map' is a wider category than they probably thought. A map can be paper. It can be cord and shell. It can be in the body. The Marshallese tradition uses all three.

3
The knowledge of wave navigation was kept by a small number of master navigators in each Marshallese community. The training took many years. A student would lie in canoes with the master, sometimes blindfolded, learning to feel the waves. The master would tell stories of past voyages, naming each pattern. When Europeans arrived in the Pacific from the 1500s onward, they were astonished that Marshallese sailors could find tiny islands across hundreds of kilometres of open sea, while European ships often got lost. But over the next centuries, European maps and instruments slowly replaced the traditional skills. By the mid-1900s, very few Marshallese could still read the sea this way. What happens when one way of knowing replaces another?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Sometimes both are kept. Sometimes the older one is lost. In the Marshall Islands, much of the wave-reading skill has been lost, though some teachers and researchers are working hard to recover it. The reasons for the loss are complicated: colonisation, missionary schools that did not value traditional knowledge, the spread of motorised boats that did not need the same skills, the displacement of communities by US nuclear testing in the 1940s and 1950s. The result is that a 2,000-year-old tradition that supported life across the Pacific has been mostly forgotten in two or three generations. Some of it is being relearned now, with the help of stick charts in museums and the memories of a few elders. Modern science has helped — researchers have shown that the wave patterns the navigators felt are real and measurable. But you cannot bring back a master navigator. Each one carried decades of practice that no chart can fully capture. Students should see that knowledge can be lost in two generations even when the things that carry it — the charts, the canoes — survive in museums. The objects are not the knowledge. The people are.

4
Today, the Marshall Islands face a different kind of crisis. Climate change is raising sea levels. Most Marshallese islands are less than a metre above the sea. Some scientists predict that much of the country may be underwater by the end of this century. The Marshallese government is one of the loudest voices on the world stage calling for climate action. What does this mean for the stick chart tradition?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A great deal, in ways both literal and symbolic. Literally: many of the islands the stick charts describe may not exist much longer. The wave patterns that Marshallese navigators learned to read have been shaped by millennia of geography that is now changing. Symbolically: the Marshallese spent thousands of years learning the sea so they could live with it. The world is now confronted with the fact that we do not know our seas as well as the Marshallese did, and the seas are rising because of choices made far from the Marshall Islands. Some Marshallese leaders have used the stick chart in speeches and art to make a point: we have known these waters for ages. Now you are flooding them. Marshallese poet Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner has written powerful poems about her daughter's future on islands that may sink before she grows up. The stick chart, in this context, is not just a museum object. It is a reminder of a relationship with the sea that has lasted longer than most modern nations have existed. End the discovery here. The Marshall Islands are real. The people are real. The crisis is real. The chart is one small object that holds all of this together.

What this object teaches

A Marshallese stick chart is a flat object made of thin sticks lashed together with coconut fibre cord, with small cowrie shells tied at certain points. It is a model of how ocean waves behave around the islands of the Marshall Islands, in the central Pacific. The sticks show wave patterns; the shells show islands. There are three kinds: the mattang (a teaching chart of basic wave patterns), the meddo (one region of the islands), and the rebbelib (all 1,200 islands). Marshallese navigators, called ri-meto, used these charts on land to teach the wave patterns to apprentices. Once the patterns were memorised, the navigators went to sea and read the actual waves with their bodies, lying in the bottom of canoes, feeling how the water moved. They could find tiny coral islands across hundreds of kilometres of open ocean. The skill was lost in most communities during the 20th century, after colonisation, US nuclear testing, and the spread of motorised boats. Some of it is being relearned today. The Marshall Islands now face a new crisis: most of the islands may be underwater within decades because of climate change. The stick chart is a reminder of one of the world's oldest and most sophisticated relationships with the sea.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
What does a stick chart show?Coastlines and roadsWave patterns. Sticks are how waves bend around islands; shells are the islands themselves.
Was the chart taken to sea?YesNo — it was a teaching object used on land. Real navigation happened with the body, in the canoe.
Could navigators really read the sea?It sounds like magicIt is real, measurable science. Modern researchers have confirmed that wave patterns bend around islands as the navigators describe.
Are Marshallese navigators still working?Yes, plenty of themVery few. Most of the traditional skill was lost in the 20th century. Some is being relearned now.
Are the Marshall Islands safe?YesNo — most are less than a metre above sea level. Climate change may make much of the country uninhabitable within decades.
Key words
Stick chart
A flat model of ocean wave patterns and island positions, made of thin sticks tied with cord and shells. Used by Marshallese navigators to teach apprentices.
Example: A typical stick chart is the size of a large dinner plate. The curves of the sticks show exactly how waves bend around real islands.
Ri-meto
A Marshallese master navigator. The word means 'a person of the sea'. Ri-meto trained for many years to read ocean waves with their bodies.
Example: A ri-meto could find a tiny coral island hundreds of kilometres away by lying in a canoe and feeling the wave patterns.
Atoll
A ring-shaped coral island with a lagoon in the middle. Most Marshallese islands are atolls, formed where coral has grown around the rim of a sunken volcano.
Example: The Marshall Islands include 29 major atolls and over 1,000 individual islands. Most are flat rings of land less than 2 metres above sea level.
Mattang, meddo, rebbelib
The three main kinds of Marshallese stick chart. A mattang is a basic teaching chart of wave patterns. A meddo shows one region of the islands. A rebbelib shows all 1,200 islands of the Marshalls.
Example: A student would learn first from a mattang, then a meddo for their home region, and only after years of training would they be able to read a full rebbelib.
Wave bending
The way ocean waves curve around obstacles, including islands. The pattern of wave bending is unique to each landscape and can be felt by a trained navigator.
Example: Waves bending around an island can be felt up to 30 kilometres away by an experienced ri-meto, even when the island is far below the horizon.
Republic of the Marshall Islands
An independent country in the central Pacific Ocean, made up of 29 atolls and over 1,000 islands. Independent since 1986. About 60,000 people live there today.
Example: The Marshall Islands are one of the smallest countries in the world by population, and one of the most threatened by sea level rise.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a world map, find the Marshall Islands. They are in the central Pacific, between Hawaii (about 3,500 km to the northeast) and the Philippines (about 4,500 km to the west). Discuss how a country of 60,000 people on tiny islands could develop one of the world's most sophisticated navigation traditions.
  • Science: Discuss waves and how they bend around obstacles. Drop a small object in a tray of water and watch the waves curve around it. The same physics — at much larger scale — is what Marshallese navigators learned to read. Try the experiment with two objects close together; the waves cross and form patterns where they meet.
  • History: Build a class timeline: Pacific settlement (humans reached the Marshall Islands by about 2,000 years ago), European arrival (Spanish ships in the 1500s), German colonial rule (1885-1914), Japanese rule (1914-1944), US administration (1945-1986), independence (1986). The wave-reading tradition runs through most of this; the loss happened mostly in the last 100 years.
  • Citizenship: The Marshall Islands government has been one of the loudest voices in international climate negotiations. Discuss why a small country with limited power has played such a big role. Strong answers will see that being directly threatened often makes a country a clear voice.
  • Mathematics: The Marshalls have over 1,200 islands spread across about 2 million square kilometres of ocean. That is one island per 1,700 square kilometres on average. Most islands are less than 1 square kilometre. Discuss what these numbers mean — finding one island in this much sea is genuinely hard.
  • Art: Each student designs a 'map' of something they know well — their walk to school, their home, a familiar park — using only thin sticks (or pencil lines), curves, and small markers. The map should show wave-like flows of attention, not roads. Discuss: how does a different kind of map see different things? The Marshallese chart sees waves where European maps see coastlines.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

A stick chart is a basic kind of map for finding land.

Right

It is a model of wave patterns. The sticks show how ocean swells bend around islands; the shells mark the islands. The chart was a teaching tool, not a guide taken to sea.

Why

'Map' is the closest English word, but it does not capture what the chart actually does. The chart and the printed map are different kinds of objects.

Wrong

Marshallese navigators used charts at sea.

Right

They used charts on land, to learn the patterns. The actual navigation happened with the body, in the canoe, by feeling real waves. The chart helped you memorise; the sea taught you the rest.

Why

This matters because it explains the chart's purpose. It is for training, not for use during a voyage.

Wrong

Wave-reading is mystical or magical.

Right

It is real, measurable science. Modern researchers have confirmed that ocean waves bend around islands in exactly the ways Marshallese navigators describe. The skill is learned, not magical.

Why

'Mystical' is what we say about other people's careful skills when we do not understand them. Wave-reading is precise, trainable knowledge.

Wrong

The skill is still common in the Marshall Islands.

Right

Most of the traditional wave-reading skill has been lost. There may be only a handful of people alive today who can still navigate this way. Some is being relearned. The lesson should be honest about this loss.

Why

'Still alive' and 'mostly lost' are very different. Honest teaching shows what is at stake.

Teaching this with care

Treat the Marshallese tradition with the respect of any major scientific tradition. Use the Marshallese terms — ri-meto (master navigator), mattang, meddo, rebbelib — and pronounce them as best you can. The Marshall Islands are a real country today, with about 60,000 people, and they have been deeply harmed by 20th-century events that the rest of the world is still slow to acknowledge. Be honest about the US nuclear weapons tests in the Marshalls (1946-1958, including the Castle Bravo test on Bikini Atoll, the largest US nuclear test ever) — many Marshallese were displaced, exposed to radiation, and never fully compensated. Some islands remain uninhabitable. This is part of the present-day Marshallese story. Be honest about climate change and what it means for Marshallese existence. Many Marshallese leaders speak about this in serious, urgent terms; do not soften their words to make students comfortable. At the same time, do not present the Marshallese only as victims — they are also poets, scientists, navigators, and statespeople, with real influence on the world stage. The wave-reading tradition is something the world should know about not as an exotic curiosity but as a great human achievement that has been mostly lost. Some of it is being recovered. Honour both the loss and the recovery. If you have Pacific Islander students, give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Finally, do not romanticise traditional knowledge as somehow more pure than science. The Marshallese themselves describe wave-reading as careful, learnable, scientific work. Both modern science and Marshallese knowledge are ways of understanding the world. They can be partners.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about Marshallese stick charts.

  1. What is a Marshallese stick chart, and what does it show?

    It is a flat object made of thin sticks tied with cord, with small shells at certain points. The sticks show how ocean waves bend around the islands of the Marshall Islands; the shells mark the islands themselves. It is a model of wave patterns, not a map of coastlines.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the materials (sticks and shells) and what they represent (waves and islands).
  2. How was the chart actually used by navigators?

    It was used on land, to teach apprentices the wave patterns. Navigators memorised the patterns from the chart, then went to sea and read the real waves with their bodies, lying in canoes. The chart itself was not taken on voyages.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the teaching use and the bodily reading at sea. Either is enough for partial credit.
  3. Why is wave-reading not 'magic' but real science?

    Ocean waves bend around islands in patterns that can be measured and explained by physics. Marshallese navigators learned these patterns through years of careful training. Modern scientists have confirmed that the patterns the navigators felt are real.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that distinguishes wave-reading from magic and shows that it is learnable, measurable knowledge.
  4. What were the three kinds of stick chart, and how were they different?

    The mattang was a basic teaching chart showing wave patterns. The meddo showed one region of the Marshall Islands. The rebbelib showed all 1,200 islands. Students started with the mattang and worked up to the rebbelib.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name all three or at least describe a hierarchy from beginner to expert. Specific names are a bonus.
  5. Why is the wave-reading tradition mostly lost today?

    Several reasons: colonisation by Germany, Japan, and the United States; missionary schools that did not value the tradition; the spread of motorised boats; US nuclear testing that displaced communities. Most of the skill has been lost in the last 100 years, though some is being relearned.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions at least two reasons for the loss. The point is that this happened recently and was caused by specific events.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Marshallese learned to read the sea over thousands of years. Now climate change is changing the sea faster than ever. What might be lost when we change a world that took so long to learn?

    Push students past quick answers. Some will say 'the knowledge is no longer needed if the islands are gone'. Others will see deeper loss — that knowing a place takes lifetimes, and remaking that knowledge for a new place takes more time than we may have. Strong answers will see that traditional knowledge is part of what we lose when we change ecosystems quickly. The Marshallese case is dramatic; many other communities face similar issues at smaller scales.
  2. In your own life, is there a skill that you have been taught with one's body — not by reading or watching, but by doing for a long time?

    This is a personal question. Students may suggest sport, music, dance, cooking, knitting, riding a bike, swimming. Push them to think about how their body learned, and what they could not have learned from a book alone. The deeper point is that bodily knowledge is real, but often invisible. The Marshallese ri-meto trained for years in the same way — except for navigating the open Pacific. The principle is the same. The stakes were higher.
  3. Most maps in the world today are made the same way — printed on paper or shown on screens, with coastlines, roads, and labels. The Marshallese stick chart is completely different. What might we miss when one way of mapping replaces all the others?

    This is a question about the costs of standardisation. Students may say: different maps see different things; the stick chart shows wave patterns that printed maps cannot; standardisation makes maps interchangeable but maybe less rich. Strong answers will see that 'replaced' often means 'forgotten'. The world has known many ways of mapping. The stick chart is one of the most beautiful — and one of the most quietly lost.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'You are in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. You cannot see any land. You have no compass, no GPS, no paper map. You need to find a small island. How would you do it?' Take guesses. Then say: 'About 2,000 years ago, the Marshallese learned to do this — by reading the waves with their bodies. We are going to find out how.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the stick chart: a flat object made of thin sticks tied with cord, with small shells at certain points. The sticks show wave patterns; the shells show islands. Used by Marshallese navigators on land to teach apprentices. The actual navigation at sea was done with the body, in the canoe. Pause and ask: 'How could a person feel the difference between water with an island ahead and water without one?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the science of wave bending.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) The stick chart is a basic kind of map. (2) Wave-reading is magic. (3) The skill is still common in the Marshall Islands. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — the chart shows wave patterns, not coastlines; wave-reading is precise science learned by careful training; most of the tradition has been lost in the last 100 years. End by asking: 'How does a tradition disappear in two or three generations?'
  4. THE WAVE BENDING DEMONSTRATION (10 min)
    In a tray or shallow basin of water, drop one small object near the centre. Make small waves at one end of the tray and watch how they bend around the object. Now try with two objects close together — the waves cross. Now try with three objects — the patterns become more complex. Discuss: this is exactly what happens around the islands of the Marshalls, but in real ocean. The Marshallese learned to feel these patterns with their bodies in canoes. Real science, learned by feel.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'If a tradition that took 2,000 years to develop can be lost in 100 years, what does that mean for things we know today?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'The Marshallese stick chart is a small flat object made of sticks and shells. Behind it is one of the world's greatest pieces of traditional science. Most of it has been lost. Some is being recovered. The Marshall Islands themselves are now threatened by a sea that the Marshallese once read better than anyone. The chart is a reminder of how much there is to know, and how easily knowledge can disappear.'
Classroom materials
Wave Bending in a Tray
Instructions: Fill a shallow tray or large bowl with water about 3 cm deep. Place one or two small objects (small stones, plastic figures) in the water as 'islands'. Make small waves at one edge by tapping rhythmically. Watch how the waves bend around the objects. Try different positions, different numbers of objects, different wave directions. Discuss: what would change if you closed your eyes and just felt the water? This is the science Marshallese navigators read with their bodies.
Example: In Mr Anjain's class, students used a baking tray and two small stones. The teacher said: 'Look at how the waves curve around the stones. Now imagine these stones are islands many kilometres away from where you are floating. The waves still bend around them, even at that distance. The Marshallese spent years learning to feel that bend with their bodies. The same physics that makes the waves curve in this tray, makes them curve in the open Pacific. They are the same waves. Just bigger.'
Make a Stick Chart
Instructions: Each student makes a simple stick chart of their own home or school. Materials: thin sticks (skewers, dried plant stems, even pencils), string or thread, small shells or beads. The chart should show flows — paths people take, where they meet, where they part — not buildings or roads. The shells mark important spots: their bedroom, the front door, a friend's house. Display the charts and discuss: how does this kind of map see something different from a normal map?
Example: In Mrs Lokeijak's class, students made charts of their walks to school. One student showed the curves of paths, the crossings near the bus stop, the places where friends joined or left. Another student showed the wind patterns around her house. The teacher said: 'You have just made something the Marshallese would recognise. Your chart shows flows, not buildings. It is a real map of your life. The Marshallese chart is a real map of the sea. Both see something a printed map misses.'
Skills From the Body
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'What is one skill you have that lives in your body more than in your head — riding a bike, swimming, playing an instrument, dancing, cooking?' Each student names one skill and tries to explain it in words. Most will find this hard. Discuss: bodily skills are real, but they are hard to write down. This is why losing them is so serious. Once a master ri-meto dies without teaching, much of what they knew is gone, even if the stick chart survives.
Example: In one class, students named cycling, swimming, and playing the piano. The teacher asked: 'Try to write down how to ride a bike, in enough detail that someone could learn from your words alone.' Most students laughed — it is nearly impossible. The teacher said: 'You cannot. Some skills cannot be put into words. They have to be passed from body to body, from teacher to learner. The ri-meto knew this. They taught with the canoe and the sea, not just with the chart. Without them, the chart is a beautiful object whose meaning is hard to recover.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Inuit kayak for another remarkable Indigenous boat technology, with similar themes of careful design and knowledge passed across generations.
  • Try a lesson on the Polynesian voyaging canoe (if you choose to add it) for related Pacific Islander navigation traditions.
  • Try a lesson on the Quipu for another non-paper recording system that holds knowledge differently from Western writing.
  • Connect this lesson to science class with a longer project on wave physics, ocean dynamics, and how science is learning from traditional knowledge.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a discussion of climate change and Pacific Island nations. The Marshall Islands are at the leading edge of this conversation.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on alternative ways of mapping — body maps, sound maps, smell maps, weather maps. The world has many maps that are not on paper.
Key takeaways
  • A Marshallese stick chart is a flat object made of thin sticks tied with cord, with small shells at certain points. The sticks show ocean wave patterns; the shells show islands.
  • Marshallese navigators (ri-meto) used these charts on land to teach apprentices. The actual navigation at sea was done by lying in canoes and feeling wave patterns with the body.
  • There are three kinds of chart: the mattang (basic teaching), the meddo (one region), and the rebbelib (all 1,200 islands of the Marshalls).
  • Wave-reading is real, measurable science. Ocean waves bend around islands in ways that can be felt by a trained navigator at distances of many kilometres.
  • Most of the wave-reading tradition has been lost during the 20th century, after colonisation, US nuclear testing, and the spread of motorised boats. Some of it is being recovered today.
  • The Marshall Islands are now one of the countries most threatened by climate change. The seas the Marshallese once read better than anyone are now rising over the islands themselves.
Sources
  • Wave Pilots — Kim Tingley, New York Times Magazine (2016) [news]
  • Stick Charts of Micronesia — Marshall Islands Story Project (2018) [institution]
  • East is a Big Bird: Navigation and Logic on Puluwat Atoll — Thomas Gladwin (1970) [academic]
  • Iep Jaltok: Poems from a Marshallese Daughter — Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner (2017) [book]
  • Alele Museum, Library and National Archives (Marshall Islands) — Republic of the Marshall Islands (2024) [museum]