Easter Island Mystery: What Really Happened To Rapa Nui Society?News Staff
Easter Island studies : contributions to the history of Rapanui in memory of William T. Mulloy Easter Island studies : contributions to the history of Rapanui in memory of William T. Mulloy edited by Steven Roger Fischer (Oxbow monograph, 32) Oxbow Books , [Distributor USA], David Brown ...
Rapa Nui, otherwise known as Easter Island (or Isla de Pascua), is one of the most remote inhabited places on the planet. It's hard to find on a map — the island is little more than a stray dot in the vast southeastern Pacific Ocean. Its closest neighbors are the tiny Pitcairn...
However, by the 1950s, the naming convention changed and in the U.S., hurricanes were given female names based on the international alphabet, according to the NHC. The practice of calling storms by female names only was abandoned in 1978. Despite the seemingly open-ended possibilities, meteoro...
A pen & a little notebook always with me and every evening (or when I think about it) I write it all down in an excel sheet...What does this excel sheet look like? It hasn't changed much since the beginning, I must say!
we’ll be changed for the better because we’ve learned and grown through the trials put before us we’ve drawn closer boundaries are dissolving in spite of distancing Today De is our host for the Quadrille, one of the more popular prompts. Head over todVerseto check out her presentation ...
Then, for reasons that remain unclear but were probably the result of internal conflicts, the Rapa Nui toppled nearly all of their ancestors' moai over the course of about 60 years, completing this destruction in the 1830s. Then in the 1860s, slave traders took about half the remaining ...
Rapa Nui Mystery: What Really Happened on Easter Island?Easter Island is famous for its humongous stone statues, calledmoai. But the island itself is...BotkinKowacki, Eva
Rapa Nui is one of the smallest, most remote, and isolated landmasses in the world to have already been settled when European explorers arrived in the eighteenth century. The first people to arrive on Rapa Nui were Polynesians thought to have island-hopped from east Asia (mitochondrial origin...