At the Rapa Nui Rendezvous at Laramie, Wyoming, in August 1993, it was painfully obvious that Easter Island scholars are divided into two main ideological camps: those who believe that Polynesians were the island's only prehistoric inhabitants and those who don't.</p
Numerous scientific investigations have been undertaken to answer the question of Polynesian origins...
Rapanui is the world's most remote continuously inhabited place and this isolation enclosed its rema...
Available evidence suggests a Polynesian origin of the Easter Island population. We recently found t...
For well over two centuries, scholars have debated the origin of the people of Easter Island-and wit...
The origins and lifeways of the inhabitants of Rapa Nui (Easter Island), a remote island in the sout...
The possibility of voyaging contact between prehistoric Polynesian and Native American populations h...
This essay is not just about Easter Island's archaeology. Rather the perspective is a multi-field on...
Given the intense archaeological study of Easter Island over the past forty years, it is surprising ...
The discovery and settlement of the tiny and remote Easter Island (Rapa Nui) has been a classical co...
BackgroundRapa Nui (Easter Island), located in the easternmost corner of the Polynesian Triangle, is...
The discovery and settlement of the tiny and remote Easter Island (Rapa Nui) has been a classical co...
I have been long puzzled about the denomination of 'Zoopal' that appeared in the annexation act of 9...
In his recent article in RNJ Vo1.7(3) entitled "Rapa Nui Rendezvous: A Personal View" Dr. Paul G. Ba...
While the ethnographic, linguistic and archaeological findings of Easter Island research are well do...
Studies of ahu on Easter Island started more than a hundred years ago and a major scientific contrib...
Numerous scientific investigations have been undertaken to answer the question of Polynesian origins...
Rapanui is the world's most remote continuously inhabited place and this isolation enclosed its rema...
Available evidence suggests a Polynesian origin of the Easter Island population. We recently found t...
For well over two centuries, scholars have debated the origin of the people of Easter Island-and wit...
The origins and lifeways of the inhabitants of Rapa Nui (Easter Island), a remote island in the sout...
The possibility of voyaging contact between prehistoric Polynesian and Native American populations h...
This essay is not just about Easter Island's archaeology. Rather the perspective is a multi-field on...
Given the intense archaeological study of Easter Island over the past forty years, it is surprising ...
The discovery and settlement of the tiny and remote Easter Island (Rapa Nui) has been a classical co...
BackgroundRapa Nui (Easter Island), located in the easternmost corner of the Polynesian Triangle, is...
The discovery and settlement of the tiny and remote Easter Island (Rapa Nui) has been a classical co...
I have been long puzzled about the denomination of 'Zoopal' that appeared in the annexation act of 9...
In his recent article in RNJ Vo1.7(3) entitled "Rapa Nui Rendezvous: A Personal View" Dr. Paul G. Ba...
While the ethnographic, linguistic and archaeological findings of Easter Island research are well do...
Studies of ahu on Easter Island started more than a hundred years ago and a major scientific contrib...
Numerous scientific investigations have been undertaken to answer the question of Polynesian origins...
Rapanui is the world's most remote continuously inhabited place and this isolation enclosed its rema...
Available evidence suggests a Polynesian origin of the Easter Island population. We recently found t...