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Beyond Tiki, Bilge, and Test / Bilge / Ask Little Lost Tiki Absolutely Anything

Post #495633 by little lost tiki on Wed, Nov 25, 2009 8:16 AM

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On 2009-11-25 02:55, Atomic Tiki Punk sophisticatedly asked:
LLT, Since you are student of Ancient Pacific culture, what place is considered the origin/cradle of Polynesian culture?

Well,No student,just a layman's knowledge of too much stuff....
As there are time restraints this pre-holiday workday
I will quote here the answer
the most logical one-the theory that satisfies me the most...

Let me get my smoking jacket and robe here..
Ah! my reading spectacles...
Ready!
let the plagiarism begin!
(actually you can check out this wonderful website where i lifted the info...

The islands scattered along the north shore of New Guinea first drew people in canoes eastwards into the ocean. By 1500 B.C., these voyagers began moving east beyond New Guinea, first along the Solomon Island chain, and then to the Banks and Vanuatu Archipelagos. ( Vanuatu art is so wild and crazyfun to look at...Would be interesting to placw all these artforms on a timeline -just to gauge for an evolution of style thru contact with other environments...)As the gaps between islands grew from tens of miles at the edge of the western Pacific to hundreds of miles along the way to Polynesia, and then to thousands of miles in the case of voyages to the far corners of the Polynesian triangle, these oceanic colonizers developed great double-hulled vessels capable of carrying colonists as well as all their supplies, domesticated animals, and planting materials. As the voyages became longer, they developed a highly sophisticated navigation system based on observations of the stars, the ocean swells, the flight patterns of birds and other natural signs to find their way over the open ocean. And, as they moved farther away from the biotic centers of Southeast Asia and New Guinea, finding the flora and fauna increasingly diminished, they developed a portable agricultural system, whereby the domesticated plants and animals were carried in their canoes for transplantation on the islands they found.

Once they had reached the mid-ocean archipelagos of Fiji, Tonga, and Samoa, these seafarers - the immediate ancestors of the Polynesians - were alone in the ocean, for only they had the canoes and navigational skills needed to push so far into the Pacific. The gaps between islands widen greatly in the eastern Pacific and the prevailing winds become less and less favorable for sailing to the east. Nonetheless, the archaeological evidence indicates that they sailed eastward to the Cook, Society, and Marquesas Groups, and from there crossed thousands of miles of open ocean to colonize the islands of Hawai'i in the north, Easter Island in the southeast (this theory may be questionable as Thor heyerdahl has posited that the Rapa Nui-ans may have migrated over to Easter island from South America,when there were a chain of islands there....), and New Zealand in the southwest, thus completing settlement, by around 1000 AD, of the area we know today as the Polynesian Triangle.

When the Southeast Asian sailors started out on their odyssey they were not yet identifiably Polynesian. Only after many years of learning how to voyage long distances, and to survive on the high islands and atolls they found in the sea, did the ocean-oriented Polynesian culture take on its classic form.

In addition to a highly developed sailing and navigational technology, that cullture included a uniquely oceanic world view and a social structure well adapted to voyaging and colonization. Polynesian societies combined a strong authority structure based on genealogical ranking that was useful for mounting long expeditions and founding island colonies.....

Please... mix yourself a martini and think away!
Thank you for your question
:)