February
23 - 28,
2007
EASTER ISLAND
Located 3,700 km (2,300
miles) off the west coast of Chile, Easter Island is the
world's most isolated inhabited island. It is also one
of the most mystifying places on Earth, possessing a
history that remains as unclear as it is evocative.
Easter Island's tiny land area
(only 117 sq. km.) and remarkable isolation make its
discovery and settlement an event that seems as unlikely
as it was mysterious. The original settlers seem to have
been Polynesian, although there is substantial evidence
that they were joined by a South American people early
in the island's history. The island's native name, Rapa
Nui, is Polynesian. Isolated for centuries from the
outside world, the people of Rapa Nui developed their
own distinctive culture, a culture perhaps best known by
the moai, huge figures carved of volcanic rock. Hundreds
of these sculpted monoliths dot the landscape, some in
imposing rows, others toppled, broken, and scarred by
violence. Scholars have been able to reconstruct some of
the tragic history that lies behind the disintegration
of Rapa Nui culture, but many important parts of the
puzzle-including how and why the moai were built-remain
uncertain.
The first Europeans to stumble
upon the tiny island were the Dutch, under the command
of Admiral Jacob Roggeveen. Roggeveen made landfall on
Rapa Nui on Easter Day of 1722, thus providing Easter
Island with its modern name. Easter Island remained only
slightly less isolated over the ensuing centuries,
although it did attract the malevolent interest of
Peruvian slave ships during the 19th century. Despite
these depredations, the majority of Easter Island's
population is still composed of descendants of its
original inhabitants Even today, their distinctive
language and cultural traditions give visitors a glimpse
of an ancient lifestyle.
All of the residents of Easter
Island live in the town of Hanga Roa, and it is an easy
day's drive from town around the island in search of
moai and ahu (the rectangular stone platforms which moai
were mounted on). One of the most famous sites on the
island is Rano Raraku, where 70 moai seem to rise from
the earth. The remains of over 150 other figures lie in
a nearby volcanic crater, where the rock for the moai
was extracted. It is still unclear how the moai were
moved from these rock quarries to other parts of the
island.
The restored village of Orongo
offers another Easter Island mystery. The village sits
in a spectacular setting, between the volcano of Rano
Kao and a sheer cliff drop-off. Rocks found at the
village contain 150 carvings showing figures with a
man's body and a bird's head. Anthropologists believe
they were part of a religious cult, but the details on
the "Bird Man" are still obscure.
Above borrowed from:
www.geographia.com/chile/easterisland.htm
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Easter Island
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Posted
03-04-07 - Sunday
Use the above link to a
website on Easter Island