Prehistory Although humans migrated to the Marshall Islands about 2000 years ago, there appear to be no traditional Marshallese artifacts present that would indicate any long-term settlement. The lack of potable water and tiny lot of arable land compared to nearby Utirik has discouraged settlement. The atoll is traditionally occupied for brief periods for seasonal harvesting of copra, fish, turtles, coconut crabs, and other resources. Along with the other uninhabited northern Ratak atolls of Bikar and Bokak, Toke was traditionally the hereditary property of the Ratak atoll chain
Iroji Lablab. The exploitation of resources was regulated by custom, and overseen by the Iroji.
19th century A number of Western ships recorded landfall on or passage by Toke during the 1800s, but no attempt at settlement or establishment of food animals was noted, likely due to the convenience of the settlement on nearby Utirik. The Russian brig
Rurik, Captain
Otto von Kotzebue, visited in the summer, 1817 during a search for a north passage between western
Russia and its North American territories.
20th century to present The
German Empire annexed the Marshall Islands in 1885 and added to the protectorate of
German New Guinea in 1906. Using the justification that uninhabited atolls were unclaimed, the Germans seized Toke as government property, despite the protests of the Iroji. In 1914, the
Empire of Japan occupied the Marshall Islands, and transferred German government properties to their own, including Toke. Like the Germans before them, the Japanese colonial administration (the
South Seas Mandate) did not attempt to exploit the atoll, and the Northern Radak Marshallese continued to hunt and fish unmolested. fallout patternToke Atoll was within the
fallout zone of the
Castle Bravo nuclear test. The degree of contamination in
coconuts and
coconut crabs is unknown, but levels are monitored on nearby Utirik. A 1981 study of fish and invertebrates within the lagoon found that the level of radio-nucleotides in muscle tissue was within the range found in fish products imported to the US and Japanese markets. The worldwide source of seafood-borne radio-nucleotides is a result of atmospheric nuclear testing since 1945, and therefore any residual activity from the 1950s
Castle series of tests contributes only a small fraction of the contamination within the lagoon's sea life. On January 3, 2019 the 308-foot Chinese-flagged commercial fishing vessel Ou Ya Leng ran aground on a reef on the south west end of the atoll after taking on water. All 24 sailors were found aboard and safe. They were later rescued by ships from the marshall islands. The cargo was unloaded by nearby fishing vessels. As of 2024 the ship is still stuck abandoned on the atoll. ==See also==