Rapa Nui Journal Volume 22 Issue 1

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    Clemente Hereveri Teao (Obituaries)
    (2008-01-01)

    Rapanui islander, Clemente Hereveri Teao died on December 5th, 2007, at age 32. Popular and beloved among his fellow Rapanui, he was also known in the foreign scientific community, as many of us worked with him in one way or the other. Highly knowledgeable about his ancestral culture, he was at the same time profoundly shaped by it. During his early years he spent many hours with his adopted father in the leper colony, an enclave where Rapanlui culture was preserved and reproduced like nowhere else on the island. He also was a pupil of prominent Rapanui elder Juan Haoa who taught him about Rapanui genealogies and other oral traditions.

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    Arne Skjolsvold 1925-2007 (Obituaries)
    (2008-01-01)

    Arne Skjolsvold 1925-2007

    The Norwegian archaeologist and pioneer in Easter Island archaeology, Professor Arne Skjolsvold, passed away on the 26th of October 2007, after some years of illness.

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    Moai Sightings and What's New
    (2008-01-01)

    Moai Sightings

    What's New in the Pacific

    What's New in Hangaroa

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    Letters
    (2008-01-01)
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    Publications
    (2008-01-01)
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    Book Review: Rapa Nui, Aku Aku from Afar
    (2008-01-01) Lee, Georgia

    Rapa Nui. Aku Aku from Afar

    by Helene Martinsson-Wallin

    Rapanui Press, Museo Antropologico Padre Sebastian Englert, and the Kon-Tiki Museum, 2007, US 25 236 pages, soft cover, illustrated

    Review by Georgia Lee

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    Book Reviews: Moon Fiji, 8th Ed. and Moon Tahiti, 6th Ed.
    (2008-01-01) Lee, Georgia

    Moon Fiji, 8th edition by David Stanley

    Moon Handbooks, Avalon Travel Publishing, Emeryville, CA 94608; 2007.

    Soft cover, 389 pages ISBN 1-56691-982-7 US $19.95

    Moon Tahiti, 6th edition by David Stanley

    Moon Handbooks, Avalon Travel Publishing, Emeryville, CA. 94608; 2007.

    Soft cover, 330 page ISBN 1-56691-804-9. US 19.95

    Reviews by Georgia Lee

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    Book Review: Manu Moriori. Human and Bird Carvings on Live Kopi Trees on the Chatham Islands
    (2008-01-01) Lee, Georgia

    Manu Moriori. Human and Bird Carvings on Live Kopi Trees on the Chatham Islands by Rhys Richards

    Lavishly illustrated with drawings, black/white photographs and many color photos

    soft cover, 96 page . Paremata Press, Wellington, NZ, 2007

    ISBN 0-9582013-7-4; NZ$45

    Review by Georgia Lee

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    Book Review: Inventing "Easter Island"
    (2008-01-01) McLaughin, Shawn

    Inventing 'Easter Island' by Beverly Haun

    University of Toronto Press,2008

    Soft cover' ISBN 978-0802093530 US $35

    Hard cover; ISBN 978-0802098887 US $85

    illustrated

    Review by Shawn McLaughlin

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    Book Reviews: Chile and Easter Island
    (2008-01-01) McLaughin, Shawn

    Frommer's Chile and Easter Island, 1st edition by Stephan Kuffner and Kristina Schreck

    Wiley Publishing, 2007, ISBN 978-0-470-12816-9, US $22.99

    Moon Handbooks Chile, including Easter Island, 2nd edition by Wayne Bernhardson

    Avalon Travel Publishing, 2007 ISBN 97 -1-56691-754-4; US $22.95

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    Getting to Know You: Catherine Orliac
    (2008-01-01) Orliac, Catherine
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    Mysterious Easter Island Described by a Passenger on Once-a-Year Steamship
    (0208-01-01) Hell, Heinz

    New York Herald Tribune, 1933; In three parts.

    "German Newspaper Man tells of Visiting Polynesian Colony 2,000 Miles Off Chile; Huge Statues Carved from Lava Centuries Ago Continue to Puzzle Archaeologist. Easter Island, 2000 miles off the coast of Chile, is one of the archaeological mysteries of the South Seas. On it are hundreds of huge statues carved from compressed volcanic ash. How the primitive people could have transported these images has never been explained. The island is owned by Chile, which leases the sheep-breeding rights to a British firm. Once a year this company sends a vessel to bring back wool and cattle. Heinz Hell, a German newspaperman, made the trip on the vessel's most-recent voyage. He has written three articles describing the island and its people'. "

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    Easter Island in the Photographic Archive of the Norwegian Archaeological Expedition, 1955-56
    (2008-01-01) Horley, Paul

    The Norwegian Archaeological Expedition to Easter Island and the East Pacific was an important milestone in Rapa Nui research. The expedition team directed by Thor Heyerdahl arrived to the island on 27th of October 1955 onboard the ship Christian Bjelland, and included William Mulloy, Arne Skjolsvold, Carlyle Smith, Edwin Ferdon and Gonzalo Figueroa. The expedition carried out large-scale excavations at Vinapu, 'Orongo, Rano Raraku, 'Anakena, Tepeu, Poike "ditch", and also investigated house foundations, walled enclosures, hare moa and caves around the island. After more than five months of intensive work, the expedition left Rapa Nui on 6th of April 1956, heading to other Polynesian islands to gather the data for comparative studies. Expedition reports were published in two large volumes, the first of which is completely dedicated to Easter Island (Heyerdahl and Ferdon 1961).

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    Easter Island: A Pathway to Sustainable Development
    (2008-01-01) Campbell, Petra

    Remote Easter Island, a 166 square kilometer outcrop in the Pacific Ocean 3,700 kilometers from mainland Chile, is best known for the incredible moai carvings and for being the site of a man-made environmental disaster that devastated a population and culture. Today, Easter Island's population is threatened by a second environmental catastrophe. This paper focuses on ecological sustainability, looking at the problem facing the modem Easter Island (Rapa Nui), and outlines the steps that need to be taken to help the Islanders on a pathway to sustainable development.

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    A Preliminary Lichenometry Study on Rapa Nui - The Rapa Nui Youth Involvement Program Report
    (2008-01-01) Rutherford, Susannah; Shepardson, Brett; Stephen, Jesse

    Lichens are an inconspicuous but ornnipresent feature of Rapa Nuj's rugged semi-tropical environment. A close inspection of any barren surface will often reveal these unique organisms, observable in colorful communities of whjte, green, grey and orange individual growth forms. Silently persisting, their existence and importance throughout centuries past has never passed unnoticed by islanders, but the interest of researcher from around the world was more recently tapped with the advent of lichen studies in the natural sciences.

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    Traditional Marquesan agriculture and subsistence: General ethnobotany, animal husbandry, the use of pork and European-introduced animals Part IV of IV
    (2008-01-01) Addison, David J.

    Earlier installments of this series on traditional Marquesan agriculture as seen through the eyes of early European visitors dealt with topics concerning subsistence economy. This final installment covers general ethnobotanical notes, animal husbandry. the use of pork. and European introduced animals.

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    Ritual House Posts, and "House Societies" in Polynesia: Modeling Inter- and Intra- Household Variability
    (2008-01-01) Kahn, Jennifer G.

    The recent paper by Kahn and Coil (2006) published data on intra-site variation in late prehistoric Society Island house structures, focusing on the raw materials used to fashion house posts. Variation in the woods used to construct posts differed both by site function and socioeconomic status of the occupant . House sites serving as elite dwellings or those used for specialized, ritual activities were constructed from ritually charged and economically valued tree species, while lower status sleeping houses were made from common tree species that lacked ritual or cosmological association. This pattern was linked to the creation of sacred spaces on the landscape for a well-defined ritual and social elite who controlled many key aspects of agricultural production and the ritual calendar in the late prehistoric Society Island chiefdoms.

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    Top-down archaeology: High resolution satellite images of Rapa Nui on Google Earth™
    (2008-01-01) Hunt, Terry L.; Lipo, Carl P.

    The archaeological record is, by its very nature, nonrenewable. Each aspect of the record comprises unique information, the sum of which provides the only testament for vast amounts of human history in pace and time. The recognition of the nonrenewable character of the archaeological record has led to the compelling rationale for a "conservation ethic" (Lipe 1974).