Easter Island (Rapa Nui) is located on the west of the Chilean coast in the South Pacific Ocean. It is one of the most deserted islands in the world. It was founded by a Dutch Admiral Jacob Roggeveen on Easter Sunday April 5, 1722. That is where the name “Easter Island” comes from. The island is small measuring 60 sq. miles. Rapa Nui is mostly famous for the obscure statues ( Moai’s) that are giant human statues that are all spread all throughout the island. Archaeologists are still examining today how the early settlements moved them from where they are today.
Easter Island first inhabitants before Easter Island was discovered and is claimed to be a group of people from the Marquesas. (an island in French Polynesia) Archaeologists believe
…show more content…
From artifacts, it is believed that they were sculpted by the early settlers. The physical features of the statues are that they have male human-like heads and are enormous weighing about 75 tons and measuring 40 feet from the ground. The Moais were built for religious and political reasons. The statues tend to attract many tourists throughout the …show more content…
The citizens of Easter Island did not become Chilean citizens until 1965. Also in 1965 a governor was selected to govern the island. Today Easter Island is maintained by governors. When the the Polynesians came , Rapi Nui was a sub-tropical island coated with palm trees and familiar to many different bird species. The population started to decline around 1500 A.D because of stress to the island’s ecosystem. The islanders were starting to cut down the palm trees so the people could move the Maois and supply fuel for the people. Soon the people’s natural resources began to decline and Rapi Nui went from a tropical island covered with palm trees to an island covered with rocks and
In the article by Jared Diamond, many interesting theories are discussed about Easter Island’s history and decline. Diamond makes connections to the environmental challenges we face today and he compares the catastrophe of Easter Island to our current over consumption of natural resources. While this article makes for an interesting read, much of it is offered from a single perspective and little counter evidence is offered. The author writes in a way that could engage a non-academic audience who may not be interested in counter evidence, or proper referencing. The article lacks credibility due to its narrow scope and conversational diction. At the root of this discussion however, is the notion that the Rapa Nui people were
In the op-ed “Truth is in the Ear of the Beholder”, columnist Gregory Rodriguez explores the ways rumors form in accordance to our beliefs and anxieties, in order to bring light to society’s hypocritical and biased acceptance or rejection of rumors and conspiracy theories. Rodriguez argues that rumors only thrive in the minds of people who are willing to believe them. He then goes on to state that those who start rumors rely on the current beliefs and biases of their intentional audience.
Both Easter Island and The Lorax have many things in common , one similarity is overuse of resources. In the Lorax the once-ler invaded and cut down all the Truffula trees to make a thread for universal use. While on Easter Island the native people cut down all the palm trees to make canoes but to manly make boards to move there giant statues around that were made out of stone. Both the Lorax and Easter Island used up all their trees so production of their products had to stop, however they do have their differences.
was one of the few free sets of islands out there. Interests in Hawaii started In America in the 1820s.
In 1518, when Juan de Grijalva arrive with the first Spanish expedition, some areas of the island where deserted and unspoilt, because the mayas that were living there, considered some places sacred, and they cannot walk near them, because of their ideas, they think the goods will punish them.
Polynesians were the first settlers to come to Hawaii around a thousand years ago, which explains the cultural similarities (“A Brief History of Hawaii”). Captain Cook, an Englishman, discovered
The original inhabitants of Easter Island serve to show us what the ingenuity of the human spirit can accomplish and the follies that can accompany them. The first islanders were the Polynesians that arrived around 400 AD from south-east Asia. It is estimated that their were between twenty and thirty individuals that made the colossal journey. By the innovation of the double canoe it allowed them to travel a great distance to an island where they could establish a brilliant civilization. There civilization was based on being the best one can be which fostered intense competition between the different clans. Competition brought out the best and the worst in the people over their greed for the resources that the island provided.
Any story told over an extensive amount of time that is repeated from one person or another will undoubtedly change – that is quite literally how rumors start. Furthermore, if Diamond is going to accept oral tradition as a premise for truth, then it is rather peculiar how he fails to account for what is ostensibly considered to be the the most well-known oral tradition in Rapa Nui oral history – the statues ‘walked’ to their locations (Lipo, Hunt, Rapu Haoa, 2012; Journal of Archeological Science; 2859). Diamond’s choice of recalling the logs of Roggeveen on a consistent basis is also questionable for two notable reasons. The first being reliability of the findings of a Dutch explorer that were documented almost 300 years ago. Secondly, Roggeveen documented that his visit on the island was for a couple days, which is grounds for questioning the reliability of his claims that there were no large trees or big ropes to help them move the stone statues. Easter island is approximately 64 square miles in size – far too large to be able to gather a complete and thorough ecological account of the wildlife and flora that were on the island at the time of his visit. The second reason being the biased and singular account made in 1722 by one explorer rather than taking a multitude of other accounts made by others. Other writer-explorers, like Thor Heyerdahl, accounted for the reports of other earlier explorers,
The Tahitians used the land of Tahiti in a sustainable way and eventually make high classed boats with the tree wood from the island. Which the Samoans then used to travel and went on to setting Hawaii.The Tahitians used their land for mostly market gardening, food crops and food orchards. Before the arrival of the Europeans the Tahitians wore clothing that was made out of various plants such as dried pandanus leaves, coconut fibre and breadfruit bark. Tahiti is very mountainous island 61% of the island is cover by slopes and mountainous terrain (Tahiti tourism, 2017). Evidence suggests that three-quarters of Tahiti's surface area is unsuitable for cultivation (forestry department, 2016). The islands of Tahiti are believed to have formed from a series of underwater volcanic eruption (tahiti.com, 2017). Even though Tahiti doesn't have the best landscape for farming the Tahitians used the land they had very well.
In 400 A.D. a few settlers known as the Polynesians arrived and found they found a lush
The line chart illustrates the percentage of American and China births and how these rates changed from 1920 to 2000.
Easter Island, or Rapa Nui as the island's natives would say, is a small remote island taking up approximately 65 square miles of Chilean territory. Rapa Nui acquired the name Easter Island when a dutch explorer, Jacob Roggeveen, and his voyagers came across the island by mistake while enroute for a different island on Easter Sunday in 1722. This volcanic island is located over 2,000 miles off the coast of Chile, but still remains part of the Polynesian Islands. Being founded by Polynesians, the island soon became heavily influenced by Polynesian culture. Many myths and traditions carry out the history of the island before Dutch explorers discovered Rapa Nui and conquered the land but some things of Rapa Nui remain a mystery. However, one of
Geologically, Easter Island is one of the youngest inhabited territories on the earth. Its inhabitants, the Rapu Nui, have endured epidemics or disease, famines, slave raids, civil war, cannibalism, and have seen their population crash on more than one occasion. Easter Island is famous for its statues, the Moai. Easter Island is a Chilean territory located in the south eastern Pacific Ocean. It has a population of six thousand and has an area of 163.6 km2 .Easter Island is famous for its 200 stone statues. The Moai as they’re known were made by the local people from basalt stone picks and hard volcano ash. They were made to show remembrance to their gods and ancestors. I will be exploring what caused the downfall of Easter island.
The people of Easter Island came over to their new land, and recognized that it was ideal for them to settle. The land was lush; the sea was providing a bounty of fresh fish, and other seafood. The earth was dark brown, and very rich. Everything was just the way it needed to be to support a growing community of people.
Criminal law and justice is a broad discipline that deals with the study of laws and law enforcement. Making your career in criminal law permits the people to help in making their surroundings safe and secure. By studying this discipline, students get the opportunity to explore the sociological and historical aspects of different types of laws. Once you obtain qualification in the field of criminal law, it can open doors for a wide range of career opportunities such as police officer, criminologist, private investigator, FBI agent, crime scene investigator, forensic scientist, legal professional, criminal psychologist and others.