Browny Wrote:
Quote:
This was a small (a dozen miles across) island just west of Biak in Irian Jaya, which hosted three airbases during the war. It was heavily utilised by the RAAF, USAF and Japanese and by all acounts has escaped the recent scap drives by the Indonesians (as happened on Morotai in the 80's).
Ok Browny, I agree with you let's keep Noemfoor on our list, but I've got more to add to the list after doing more homework. I studied the Dec '44 USAAF Combat Chronology, and putting each airfield into the Australian War Memorial photo archive search engine. In addition I looked at the Combat Chronology, and compared with the map of Halmahera Island. Here're the results:
Miti Island--Very small maybe 1 mile in diameter in the Kao bay of Halmahera. This one is probably forgotton by scrappers. There was a Japanese airfield there.
Kaoe AKA Kao airfield. This is now a recognized airport near Miti at the mouth of Kao bay. Supposedly this was a Kao area mentioned as having 300+ planes on the indonesiaphoto website. Not sure if the airport is ever used to this day. There may be some wrecks in the vicinity.
Galela Airfield--a little North of Kao, received some bombardment. Again marked as a current airfield on the Halmahera map, but so is Morotai. Maybe something could be found there.
In the Moluccas Islands Haruku airfield on Haraku Island AKA Haroekoe. It's on the island of Haruku, population 100,000. It's possible something exists there, but I think it's far more likely on Halmahera--(5-10x larger only 130,000 people). It looks like the only airport on that island was the wartime airport.
Buru Island--West of Ceram, population 32,000. Airfield called Namlea. It is possible wrecks still exist there. A penal colony for anti Sawarto folks during Sawarto's gov't. It appears likely for wrecked aircraft.
Borneo--Jesselton Airfield This one is a possibility. Sparsely populated area. AWM photo archive shows a Ki-21 Sally tail at Jesselton.
Borneo--Sandakan Airfield heavily bombarded Japanese Airstrip--photo says unservicible airfield. Japanese. Prison camp nearby.
More to follow,
Chris