Easter Island

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Easter Island

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Easter Island Span. Isla de Pascua, Polynesian Rapa Nui, remote island (1992 pop. 2,770), 66 sq mi (171 sq km), in the South Pacific, c.2,200 mi (3,540 km) W of Chile, to which it belongs. Of volcanic origin, Easter Island is mostly covered with grasslands and is swept by strong trade winds. The inhabitants are of Polynesian stock. Farming and sheep raising are the principal occupations; wool is the only export.

Chile regards the island as an integral part of the mainland, not as a colony. The inhabitants are citizens of Chile but do not pay taxes and are not subject to military conscription. A Chilean naval officer is governor, and a mayor and council of elders have a voice in local matters but no power to raise revenues. There have been sporadic campaigns for the island's independence, and an independence movement exists.

It is unclear when the isolated island was settled by Polynesian voyagers, but recent estimates date their arrival to as early c.AD 800 or as late as c.AD 1200. Easter Island was named on Easter Day, 1722, by the Dutch navigator Jakob Roggeven. At that time the population was about 4,000, down from perhaps 9,000 two centuries earlier, probably because of overuse of sparse resources. The spread of European diseases, especially smallpox, and the raids of Spanish slavers reduced the population to slightly more than 100 by 1887. Chilean annexation in 1888 led to stabilization.

Easter Island has long been famous for its hieroglyphs and for hundreds of remarkable monolithic stone heads ( moais ) whose origin and meaning have been widely debated. Carved from soft volcanic tufa, the statues are from 10 to 40 ft (3-12 m) high, some weighing over 50 tons. Regarding the origin and culture of the builders of these monuments, one formerly popular theory is that of Thor Heyerdahl , that fair-skinned invaders from the East carved the monoliths, and that later (c.1680) the present Polynesians conquered the island, unleashing violent strife leading to near extinction of the population. Now generally accepted, however, is the conclusion of French ethnologist Alfred Métreaux that the statues are no more than 500-600 years old and that they were built by the Polynesian ancestors of the present inhabitants. DNA samples taken from the oldest bones found on the island reveal Polynesian characteristics. Among other ideas now debunked are those connecting Easter Island with Egyptian or Hindu cultures or making it the remnant of a "lost continent." The entire island is now a national park.

Bibliography: See studies by J. Dos Passos (1971) and J. A. Van Tilburg (1994).

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Easter Island

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Easter Island (Isla de Pascua) Volcanic island in the se Pacific; the chief town is Hanga Roa. The most isolated island in Polynesia, a Dutch navigator discovered it on Easter Day, 1722. Chile has administered the island since 1888. It is famous for the curious hieroglyphs (rongorongo) and formidable statues carved in stone, standing up to 12m (40ft) high. It is mainly hilly grassland. The subtropical climate allows a variety of crops, such as sugarcane and bananas. Industries: farming, tourism. Area: 163sq km (63sq mi). Pop. (2000) 3618.

http://www.netaxs.com/~trance/rapanui.html; http://www.mysteriousplaces.com/Easter_Isld_Pge.html; http://www.pacificislandtravel.com

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Easter Island: what to learn from the Puzzles?
Magazine article from: American Diplomacy; 11/6/2007
Free Article Easter island.(Using a Map)
Magazine article from: Know Your World Extra; 4/6/2007
Free Article Easter Island, Tikopia, and the choices we have.(From Readers)(Letter to the Editor)
Magazine article from: World Watch; 11/1/2003

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Easter Island: what to learn from the Puzzles?
Magazine article from: American Diplomacy; 11/6/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...returned recently from a visit to Easter Island and discusses below some of the...are examining is small, e.g., Easter Island, it is even more tempting to advance...global concerns. Geographically, Easter Island (or Rapa Nui as it is known to... Read more
Easter island.(Using a Map)
Magazine article from: Know Your World Extra; 4/6/2007; 183 words ; This map shows Easter Island. Study the map, and then answer the...Your plane lands in the capital of Easter Island. What is the name of the capital? 2. Name one of the volcanoes on Easter Island. 3. You want to study the volcanoes... Read more
Easter Island, Tikopia, and the choices we have.(From Readers)(Letter to the Editor)
Magazine article from: World Watch; 11/1/2003; ; 505 words ; ...learn from the awful lessons of Easter Island, where the inhabitants overharvested...response. As a parable, the fate of Easter Island doubtless appeals to those who...the inhabitants of Tikopia and Easter Island responded differently to the challenge... Read more
The Easter Island Statues.(Brief Article)(Children's Review)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Children's Bookwatch; 4/1/2005; 77 words ; The Easter Island Statues Deborah Underwood Thomson Gale...is a special focus on the mysterious Easter Island statues, a topic generally not given...grade group of 3-5. 48 pages discuss Easter Island history, the investigations into the... Read more
Donkeys on Easter Island. (Democratic Leadership Council convention in Cleveland, OH)
Magazine article from: National Review; 6/10/1991; ; 700+ words ; CLEVELAND has come back, they say, and there are signs of it. But the overall impression is still of an Easter Island of industrialism-a landscape dotted with vast structures, among which Clevelanders wander like natives who retain only legends... Read more
The Straggler: Long Island Easter.(Column)
Magazine article from: National Review; 5/19/2003; ; 700+ words ; Religious observances aside, the principal component of Easter, so far as the Derbyshire household is concerned, is a picnic...spread of open land, about two miles by one and a half, on Long Island's north shore. It was perfectly wild until 1921, when Marshall... Read more
Lazos polinesios. (estudiantes hawaianos hacen estudio sobre la cultura de la Isla de Pascua en Polinesia)(TT: Polynesian bonds) (TA: Hawaiian students make a study about the Easter Island culture in Polynesia)
Magazine article from: Américas (Spanish Edition); 9/1/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...propios reflejos. De acuerdo con Grace Atkins del National Geographic, que acompañó al grupo para comenzar a filmar Easter Island Awakening (El despertar de la Isla de Pascua), que se va a transmitir en noventa países en el año 2000, se tratará... Read more
FESTIVAL DEL TIEMPO PERDIDO.(festival atlético y cultural en Isla de Pascua)(TT: Commemorating past times.)(TA: athletics and cultural festival on Easter Island)
Magazine article from: Américas (Spanish Edition); 1/1/2001; ; 700+ words ; A PESAR DE LA PRESION DE LA MODERNIDAD, LOS HABITANTES DE RAPA NUI CONSERVAN ANTIGUAS TRADICIONES EN EL FESTIVAL ANUAL QUE CELEBRA SU HIBRIDA CULTURA A miles de kilómetros del estadio más cercano, lejos del terreno del deporte profesional, bronceados y jóvenes atletas ponen a prueba sus aptitudes y Read more
What is sustainability, anyway?(Biosphere II and Easter Islands)
Magazine article from: World Watch; 9/1/2003; ; 700+ words ; Introduction Twelve years ago this September, eight men and women said goodbye to wellwishers and walked into Biosphere II, a 3.1-acre airtight greenhouse in the Arizona desert. The door was sealed behind the bionauts, a team of specialists right out of Mission: Impossible: a systems engineer, a Read more
Easter blessing for revamped church.
Newspaper article from: Northumberland Gazette (Alnwick, England); 4/18/2007; 389 words ; THE first mass in a Holy Island church which has been refurbished was said on Easter Sunday. Bishop Kevin Dunn...enable people who come to the island for contemplation and to...Owens, parish priest of Holy Island and Seahouses, and Sister...spirit of the people of the island and local parish ... Read more
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