The remains were found during construction work at a church.

Police are investigating whether bones found on a popular holiday island that was once an Aboriginal prison are human.

Human bones are believed to have been found on a popular holiday island with a tragic past.

The remains were found by workers at Rottnest Island, off the coast of Perth, on Wednesday, WA police say.

“The bones, which are believed to be human, were located during construction work on church grounds,” a spokeswoman said in a statement.

An investigation has been launched, and forensic specialists will examine the bones to determine their age.

Rottnest, located 19km off the coast from Fremantle, is home to the quokka, a small wallaby-like marsupial, and a popular holiday spot.

Police are investigating whether bones found on a popular holiday island that was once an Aboriginal prison are human.Police are investigating whether bones found on a popular holiday island that was once an Aboriginal prison are human. Credit: 7NEWS The remains were found during construction work on church grounds.The remains were found during construction work on church grounds. Credit: 7NEWS

Also known as Wadjemup, it has white-sand beaches, shipwrecks and secluded bays where holiday makers sunbake and snorkel.

The island, which measures 11km long by 4.5km wide, also has a dark history.

WA state records indicate 3700 Aboriginal men and boys were imprisoned there between 1838 and 1931, according to the Rottnest Island Authority.

Many were leaders, lore men and warriors, and the removal from their communities had lasting effects.

Rottnest Island has white sand beaches and shipwrecks.Rottnest Island has white sand beaches and shipwrecks. Credit: John Crux/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Living conditions were brutal on the island. Overcrowding and a lack of sanitation and nutrition, extreme weather, and physical and psychological abuse contributed to hundreds of deaths.

Most were buried in unmarked graves on the island.

After the prison closed, one of Australia’s largest Aboriginal burial grounds was largely forgotten about, the island authority said.

The island became a holiday resort and the area where the Aboriginal burial ground lay became a budget camping ground known as Tentland.