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    Sea People

    Page 36
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      “considerable caution”: Spriggs, “Dating of the Island Southeast Asian Neolithic,” 604.

      They rejected samples: Matthew Spriggs and Atholl Anderson, “Late Colonization of East Polynesia,” Antiquity 67 (1993): 207.

      Of the one hundred nine Hawaiian dates: Ibid., 208–10; Atholl Anderson, “The Chronology of Colonization in New Zealand,” Antiquity 65 (1991): 783.

      According to the new orthodoxy: Kirch, “When Did the Polynesians,” 16–18; Anderson, “Chronology of Colonization,” 792. More recent work puts these dates even later, at A.D. 1000 and 1300, respectively. See, for example, Matisoo-Smith, “Human Landscape.”

      One computer simulation: Álvaro Montenegro, Richard T. Callaghan, and Scott M. Fitzpatrick, “Using Seafaring Simulations and Shortest-Hop Trajectories to Model the Prehistoric Colonization of Remote Oceania,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113, no. 45 (November 2016): 12685–90, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1612426113.

      A second study: Ian D. Goodwin, Stuart A. Browning, and Atholl J. Anderson, “Climate Windows for Polynesian Voyaging to New Zealand and Easter Island,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111, no. 41. (October, 2014): 14716–21.

      “bold expeditions”: Fornander, Account, 2:6.

      the new science: Thanks to Greg Harris for this clever formulation.

      Coda: Two Ways of Knowing

      “mythical fictions”: Finney, Voyage of Rediscovery, 317–18.

      “could actually reflect an era”: Ibid., 318.

      to “detach” himself: Allen, “Te Rangi Hiroa’s Physical Anthropology,” 14.

      “an ongoing vehicle”: Howe, Quest for Origins, 36.

      “What does their existence”: Brian Durrans, “Ancient Pacific Voyaging: Cook’s Views and the Development of Interpretation,” in Captain Cook and the South Pacific, ed. T. C. Mitchell (London: British Museum, 1979), 139.

      “To inquire into my history”: Tipene O’Regan, “Who Owns the Past?,” in From the Beginning: The Archaeology of the Maori, ed. John Wilson (Auckland: Penguin, 1987), 142.

      “belongs first to those”: Greg Dening, “Respectfulness as a Performance Art: Way-finding,” Postcolonial Studies, 11.2 (2008): 149.

      “We cannot translate”: Judith Binney, “Maori Oral Narratives, Pakeha Written Texts,” in The Shaping of History, ed. Judith Binney (Wellington: Bridget Williams Books, 2001), 13.

      “keep our minds as sensitive”: Krauss, Keneti, 249.

      “chose to be puzzled”: Kyselka, An Ocean in Mind, 235.

      “was come to the afterpiece”: Stevenson, In the South Seas, 9.

      “I have watched the morning”: Ibid., 20.

      “the face of the world”: Ibid., 21.

      Index

      The pagination of this digital edition does not match the print edition from which the Index was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader’s search tools.

      Page numbers of illustrations and their captions appear in italics.

      Account of the Polynesian Race, An (Fornander), 154–60, 161

      Account of the Voyages . . . , An (Hawkesworth), 28

      Afrikaansche Galei (ship), 62

      Ahutoru (Tahitian), 85

      Aikau, Eddie, 285, 286

      Aitken, Robert, 177

      Alanakapu Kauapinao (Pinao), 152, 153

      Aleutian Islands, 120

      Alkire, William, 268

      American Indians in the Pacific (Heyerdahl), 245–46

      American Museum of Natural History, New York, 191

      Anaa Island, 48

      Ancient Voyagers in the Pacific (Sharp), 250–51

      Ann Alexander (ship), 151

      Anson, Commodore George, 41–42

      Antarctica, 4, 26, 27, 52

      anthropology, 175–87, 316

      Bayard Dominick Expedition and, 176–82

      competing migration theories, 300–301

      human “races,” 181–82, 337n181

      Sullivan’s data and, 182–86

      Te Rangi Hiroa and, 188–98, 188

      Aotearoa. See New Zealand

      archaeology, 199–209

      fish hooks, 210, 215–16

      Ha‘atuatua site, 217–20

      human remains, 302, 303, 304

      Lapita patterns from Site 13, 221

      moa sites, 199–209, 199, 303

      New Zealand and, 199, 201, 303

      pottery, 215, 219–33, 222, 302

      radiocarbon dating and, 210–20, 306–8, 347n307

      seriation, 215

      South Point site, 210, 216

      stratigraphy, 204, 215, 307

      Teouma site, 302

      Wairau Bar site, 206–7, 210, 217, 218, 299, 303–4, 308

      architecture, 24, 36–37, 103, 177

      art and sculpture, 85, 85, 177, 239

      stone statues (moai) of Easter Island, 24, 60, 122, 240, 246

      Aryan Māori, The (Tregear), 139, 146

      Aryan or Indo-Aryan theory, 142–49, 156, 182, 186, 192, 314, 316

      Atiu Island, 252

      Atlantic Ocean, 20, 21, 42, 263

      Austral Islands, 89, 94, 177, 220, 305

      Australia, 25, 26, 41, 52, 54, 87, 188, 258, 337n194

      Cook and, 4, 110

      first migrants arrive, 18, 197

      land bridge and, 18, 197

      Balboa, Vasco Núñez de, 20

      Bali, 18

      Banks, Joseph, 69, 85, 100

      comparative word list of, 107–9

      eyewitness accounts of, 78, 79, 80, 82, 87, 89, 91, 99, 100, 107

      Mai and, 251

      Polynesian arcana and, 125

      sweet potatoes collected by, 247

      Tahitian language and, 107–8

      Tupaia and, 80–81, 86–87

      Tupaia’s chart and, 91, 92

      Bayard Dominick Expedition, 176–86, 213, 217, 222

      Beagle (ship), 44

      Beaglehole, J. C., 43, 84

      Beaufort scale, 94

      Bering Strait, 120

      Berne Historical Museum, Switzerland, 191

      Best, Elsdon, 11, 134

      Binney, Judith, 316

      Bishop Museum, Honolulu, 176, 190, 213

      Bismarck Archipelago, 18, 221, 223, 226, 227–28

      Bligh, Captain William, 36, 42

      Blumenbach, Johann, 181

      Bonk, William J., Fishhooks, 210

      Bopp, Franz, 145

      Bora Bora, 70, 87, 90, 136, 163

      Borneo, 18, 228

      Bougainville, Louis-Antoine de, 75–76, 80, 85

      Bounty (ship), 36, 42

      Britain

      knowledge system, 94–95

      perspective of maps, 95

      motivation of expeditions, 68

      South Pacific exploration, 67–68

      Broca’s Couleurs de la Peau et du Système Pileux, 179

      Brothers Grimm, 105, 118

      Brown, Forest B. H., 177

      Buck, Peter. See Te Rangi Hiroa

      Byron, Commodore John, 68, 70

      California, 25, 68, 86, 120, 151, 153, 223, 224, 274

      canoes, 10, 99

      evolution in design of, 57

      example, British museum, 48–49

      eyewitness reports, 32–33, 36–37, 82

      Hōkūle‘a and, 275–85, 288–94

      Finney’s recreation of, 274–75

      language and, 19, 49, 228

      Lapita people and, 227–28

      of New Zealand, 56–57, 99

      outrigger, 19, 32–33, 36, 82, 148, 189, 273

      of prehistoric sea people, 19

      reproductions, mid-1990s, 294

      similarity in Polynesia, 57, 103–4

      Tahitian, 73, 82, 89

      of the Tuamotus, 48–50

      Canoes of Oceania (Haddon and Hornell), 48–49

      Cape Horn, 41–43, 58, 63, 77, 116, 151

      Cape of Good Hope, 41, 42

      Caroline Islands, 193, 265, 268–69, 278, 345n290

      Cassini, Giovanni, I

      Chart of the Society Islands (
    Cook), 88

      “Chart of the South Pacifick Ocean . . .” (Dalrymple), 78

      Chatham Islands, 133

      Christianity, 3, 32, 35, 115–16, 132–33, 152, 156

      Christmas Island, 260

      clothing, 59, 62, 100, 103, 203

      Cocos Islands, 108

      Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, “Kubla Khan,” 118

      commensals, 9, 23–24, 305

      Asian origin of, 240

      genetics and, 304–5

      of the Lapita people, 231

      Marquesan dog, 24, 31

      not known in South America, 120

      Pacific rat, 62, 231, 305

      Quirós’s account, 36

      of the Tuamotus, 47

      voyage of the Hōkūle‘a and, 279

      computer simulations, 12, 257–61, 262, 308, 313

      Cook, Captain James, 25, 65, 106, 116, 193

      account of Easter Islanders, 103–4

      account of lost Tahitians, 251–53

      Antarctic Circle crossing, 4

      arrival in Hawai‘i, 5–6

      Asiatic origin of the Polynesians and, 119, 313–14

      astronomy and, 69

      burial service for Whatman, 3

      as chart maker, I, 92, 88

      death of (on Hawai‘i), 6, 103, 110

      Endeavour, ship of, 69 (see also Endeavour)

      exploration of Polynesian Triangle, 103

      exploration of South Pacific, 4

      first voyage (1768–71), 69, 77–80, 86–91, 98–101, 110

      historic contribution of, 109

      in the Marquesas, 37

      monument for, 7

      New Zealand and, 100

      Polynesian arcana and, 125

      on Polynesian beauty, 35

      Polynesian passengers, 85–86

      route to the Pacific, 77

      sailing around Cape Horn, 42

      second voyage (1772–75) 102–3, 222, 252

      “secret” instructions to, 88–90

      shooting of a Māori, 100

      as a surveyor, 69, 84–85, 87

      Tahiti and, 4, 80, 81–82, 251, 328n70

      third voyage (1776–78), 103, 251

      transit of Venus and, 69, 88

      Tupaia and, 80–87, 91, 92, 100–101, 119, 251, 314, 316

      Tupaia’s chart and, 91–98

      Cook Islands, 8, 92, 103, 190, 220, 261, 263, 304, 305, 308

      island of Aitutaki, 166–67

      Cook Strait, 202, 206

      Cooper, James Fenimore, The Last of the Mohicans, 118

      coral atolls, 44–47

      Cover, Rev. James, 72–73, 74

      creation myths, 133–37, 155, 333n141

      “The Canoe Song of Ru,” 162–63, 335n163

      chants from Bora Bora, 136–37

      cosmic genealogy, 137

      Hawaiian, 137

      Polynesian cosmogonic vision, two themes of, 134, 137

      recorded Polynesian, 133–38

      Tahitian, 122–24, 133, 134, 136–37

      Te Ao, 134

      Te Kore, 136

      Te Pō, 134–36, 166

      told to Moerenhout, 122–25, 134, 137–38

      variants in, 134

      See also mythology and folklore

      Crosby, Alfred, 230–31

      culture of Polynesia, 86

      cyclical calendars of, 158

      European contact and cultural change, 117, 155

      founder figures and, 233

      genealogies and lineages, 158–59

      Gifford study of, 177

      lack of dates or time system, 158

      material culture of, 103–4

      subjective and objective reactions (or history and myth) unified, 130–32, 161–71, 309–13, 315

      system of rules and prohibitions (tapu), 2

      worldview, subject-centered, 96

      See also art and sculpture; clothing; pottery; religion; other specific aspects of

      Dalrymple, Alexander, “Chart of the South Pacifick Ocean . . .”, 78

      Dana, Richard Henry, 86

      Darwin, Charles, 44–45, 300

      coral atoll formation theory, 44–45

      Descent of Man, 148

      Davis, Edward, 27

      Davis’s Land, 59

      Defoe, Daniel, Robinson Crusoe, 117

      “Departure of the Six Canoes from Rarotonga for New Zealand” (Watkins), 161

      Diamond, Jared, 300, 328n61, 328n62, 345n300

      DNA. See genetics

      Dolphin (ship), 68, 69–70

      arrival in Tahiti, 71–74

      battle of Matavai Bay, 74

      scurvy aboard, 71, 75

      Tahitians, sex and trade, 75

      Dominick, Bayard, Jr., 175–87

      drift theory, 249, 250–61, 264

      Duff, Roger, 206–8, 217, 303, 308

      The Moa-Hunter Period of Maori Culture, 210

      d’Urville, Jules Dumont, 194, 197, 337n194

      Dutch East India Co., 53, 107

      Dutch East Indies, 110

      Easter Island (Rapa Nui), 9, 11, 24, 37, 59, 98, 309

      commensals and, 24, 62

      Cook’s second voyage and, 103

      cosmogony of, 133

      creation myth chant, 137

      drift route impossible for, 260

      ecological collapse of, 61–62

      Hōkūle‘a passage to (1999), 294

      inhabitants of, 47, 59, 62, 103–4

      mysteries of, 60, 61

      Pacific rat and, 62, 305

      as Polynesian Rapa Nui, 59, 294

      radiocarbon dating, 307–8

      Roggeveen’s voyage to, 58–62

      stone statues (moai) of, 24, 60, 122, 240, 246

      sweet potatoes grown on, 247

      topography of, 59

      tree loss and vanished species, 59, 60–62, 328n61, 328n62

      Éfaté Island, 302

      Ellis, William, 240

      Emory, Kenneth P., 213–17, 274, 306, 308, 316

      Fishhooks, 210

      radiocarbon dating and, 215–17

      South Sea Lore, 214

      “The Tuamotuan creation charts by Paiore,” 126

      Endeavour (ship), 69, 78–79, 99

      course, after leaving Ra‘iatea, 89–91, 98, 99–100

      dysentery and deaths, 110

      length of time in Tahiti, 81–82

      New Zealand and, 100

      “secret” instructions and, 88–90

      suicide of Greenslade, 79

      Tahiti voyage, 1768–69, 77–80

      Tupaia aboard, 87, 110

      eugenics, 186

      European explorers

      coming to the Pacific, 3, 11

      contact experiences, 5–6, 21, 23, 55–56, 74–75

      Cook’s arrival in Hawai‘i 4

      eyewitness reports of, 12, 31–38

      false claims of, 27

      geographical error, 25–27, 38

      hardships of, 31–32, 78

      increase in expeditions, 67

      lack of information sharing, 64

      maps used by, 25–26

      motivations of, 23, 25, 68

      observer bias, 24–25

      Pacific, difficulty reaching, 42–43

      Pacific exploration, years needed to complete, 23

      Pacific’s size and, 32

      Polynesians with, 85–86

      routes followed by, 39, 42–43

      signs of land, 78–79

      word lists made by, 107

      See also specific explorers

      experimental voyaging movement, 12, 235, 312

      computer simulations, 12, 257–61, 262

      Heyerdahl and, 237–49, 237

      Hōkūle‘a’s first voyage, 274–84, 274

      Hōkūle‘a’s passage to Easter Island (1999), 294

      Hōkūle‘a’s second voyage, 284–85

      Hōkūle‘a’sthird voyage, 288–89

      Lewis and, 263–71

      Marquesas to Hawai‘i, canoe fleet (1995), 294

      Nainoa Thompson and, 286–95

      eyewitnesses, 12, 15


      accounts as literature, 118

      animals found on islands, 23–24

      Banks’s accounts, 78–80, 82, 87, 89, 91, 99, 100, 107

      Cook’s voyages and, 78–87, 251–53

      islanders as a single cultural group, 110–11

      observer bias, 24–25

      Quirós’s account, 31–38

      Robertson’s account, 71, 72

      Roggeveen’s account, 58–62

      size of Polynesian populations, 23, 31

      Tasman’s accounts, 54–58

      of the Tuamotus, 47–48

      what they did not see, 24

      Eyles, Jim, 205–7, 303

      Falkland Islands, 68

      Fangatau atoll, 243

      Fatu Hiva Island, 32, 37, 237–38

      Fenua Ura Island, 83

      Fiji, 109, 157, 222, 224, 226, 230, 232

      Finney, Ben, 274–84, 289, 312

      on navigator Mau, 280, 282

      Fishhooks (Emory, Bonk, and Sinoto), 210

      Flannery, Tim, 231

      food

      Asian origin of, 240

      breadfruit, 28, 31, 36

      on coral atolls, 47

      fish, 31

      Polynesian plants, soil requirements, 193

      of prehistoric sea people, 19

      Quirós’s account of the Marquesas, 36

      similarity in all Polynesia, 103

      story of Aka’s voyage and, 164

      sweet potato, significance of, 246–48, 341n248

      Fornander, Abraham, 150–60, 150, 167, 168, 171, 190, 256, 289, 309, 314, 316

      alteration of accounts by, 170

      An Account of the Polynesian Race, 154–60, 161

      wife and children of, 152–53, 159, 314

      Forster, Georg, 81

      Forster, Johann, 91, 120, 194, 196, 197

      Fritsch, Gustav, 179

      Futuna Island, 226

      Galápagos Islands, 9

      Genesis, 140

      genetics, 9, 301–6

      ancient DNA, Teouma, 302–3

      ancient DNA, Wairau Bar, 303–4

      human “races” and, 181–82, 337n191

      “Polynesian motif,” DNA mutation, 301, 303

      George III of England, 76

      Gerrards, Theodore, 27

      Ghyben-Herzberg lens phenomenon, 44

      Gifford, Edward W., 177, 222–26, 316, 340n226

      radiocarbon dating, 224–25, 226

      succession of cultures theory, 223

      Gilbert Islands, 193, 265, 270

      Gill, William Wyatt, Myths and Songs from the South Pacific, 262

      Gladwin, Thomas, 268–69, 270, 272, 273, 280

      Gondwana, 52, 223, 320, 331n121

      Gore, John, 101

      Green, Roger, 343n272

      Greenland, 18

      Greenslade, William, 79

      Gregory, Herbert E., 176, 190

      Grey, Sir George, 203

      Gulliver’s Travels (Swift), 117

      Haast, Julius von, 201–2, 204

     


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