The quarry at Tubukuia mountain was important source of stone for Suloga axes, that were imortant trade objects used up to
Gulf of Papua in the west. The Australian
whaling ship (Captain George Grimes) called in the 1830s and the report of that visit led to
Woodlarks name being attached to the island. Other whaling ships visited for water and wood in the decades that followed and islanders sometimes served as crewmen on those vessels. In 1841, the surviving crew of the Whaler Mary, having been wrecked on the nearby Lachlan Islands, sailed to Woodlark, and there all but one were murdered. The last recorded whaling ship to call was the American vessel
Adeline Gibbs in October 1873. An Italian missionary order of Roman Catholic clergy, the
Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions (P.I.M.E.), sent five priests and two brothers to Woodlark Island in 1852.
Giovanni Battista (John) Mazzucconi was killed there in 1855 by an islander called Avicoar who opposed the missionaries and their religion. Richard Ede and Charles Lobb, who had a trading post on the nearby Laughlan (Nada) Islands, discovered gold on the island in 1895. News of the find sparked off a gold-rush from Australia. By early 1897, steamers were arriving with gold seekers from
Queensland every fortnight. In 1896–97, there were 400 white miners and 1,600 Papuan labourers on Woodlark who produced 20,000 ounces of gold. Records show an estimated pre-
World War II gold production, including
alluvial sources, of about 220,000 ounces of gold.
Operation Chronicle was the name given to the landing of the United States'
112th Cavalry Regiment on Woodlark Island and
Kiriwina on June 30, 1943, during World War II. Within a few months of the landing
Seabees of the
60th Naval Construction Battalion had constructed a major airbase at
Guasopa Bay, known as Woodlark Airfield (later
Guasopa Airport). The island has been extensively logged for
ebony which has always been an important cash commodity to the communities on the island since the 1970s. Modern gold exploration was initiated on Woodlark Island in 1962 with the
Bureau of Mineral Resources undertaking surface
geochemistry, limited
geophysics, and
diamond drilling during 1962 and 1963 at
Kulumadau. ==Population issue==