Prehistory About 2000 years ago,
Oceanic speakers who made plainware pottery (late
Lapita) and used shell adzes, fishhooks, and other implements migrated from the Solomon Islands to found settlements on several volcanic islands of central Micronesia (Chuuk, Pohnpei, and Kosrae), and colonize the atolls of the Marshall Islands.
16th to 19th Century First recorded sighting of Ailuk Atoll by Europeans was by the Spanish expedition of
Miguel López de Legazpi on 10 January 1565. It was charted as
Los Placeres (The Pleasures in Spanish). Two of its islets were charted as
San Pedro and
San Pablo, those being the names of the flagship ("capitana") and the "almiranta" (secondary ship or ship of the Admiral) Ailuk Atoll was claimed by the
German Empire along with the rest of the Marshall Islands in 1885.
20th century to present After World War I, the island came under the
South Seas Mandate of the
Empire of Japan. Following the end of World War II, it came under the control of the United States as part of the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands until the independence of the Marshall Islands in 1986. In December
2020, Marshall Islands police found an abandoned 5.5-meter (18-foot) fibreglass boat that washed ashore at Ailuk Atoll with 649 kilograms (1,430 pounds) of cocaine worth an estimated US$80 million. This was the largest drug haul in Marshall Islands history. == Demographics ==