Online Encyclopedia

EASTER ISLAND (Rapanui, i.e. Great Rapa)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 830 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EASTER ISLAND (Rapanui, i.e.
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Great Rapa)
  , an island in the eastern
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part of the South Pacific ocean, belonging to Chile (since 1888), in 27° 8' S. and 109° 28' W., 1400 M . E. of
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Pitcairn, and 2000 M. from the South
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American coast . It is roughly triangular in shape, with its hypotenuse 12 M. long
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running north-east and south-west, and its three angles marked by three volcanic peaks, of which the north-eastern reaches 1768 ft. of altitude . The
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area of the island is 45 sq. m . The coast has no good natural harbour, and landing is difficult . There is no lack of fertile
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soil, and the
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climate is moist enough to make up for the absence of running
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water . Formerly the island appears to have been wooded, but it now presents only a few bushes (Edwardsia, Broussonetia, &c.), ferns,
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grasses, sedges, &c . The natives grow bananas in the shelter of artificial pits, also
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sugar-canes and sweet potatoes, and keep a few goats and a large stock of domestic fowls, and a Tahitian commercial house breeds cattle and sheep on the island . It is doubtful whether Rapanui was discovered by Davis in 1686, though it is sometimes marked Davis Island on maps .
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Admiral Roggeveen reached it on
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Easter day 1722; in 1774 Captain Cook discovered it anew and called it Teapi or Waihu . It was subsequently visited by La Perouse (1776), Kotzebue (1816), &c . At the time of Roggeveen's
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discovery the island probably contained from 2000 to 3000 inhabitants of Polynesian
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race, who, according to their own tradition, came from Rapa Iti (Little Rapa) or Oparo, one of the Tubuai or Austral
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group .

In 1863 a large proportion of the inhabitants were kidnapped by the Peruvians and transported to

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work at the guano diggings on the Chincha Islands . The next
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year a Jesuit
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mission from
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Tahiti reached the island and succeeded in the task of
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civilization . The natives, who number scarcely one
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hundred, are all Christians . Easter Island is famous for its wonderful archaeological remains . Here are found immense platforms built of large cut stones fitted together without cement . They are generally built upon headlands, and on the slope towards the sea . The walls on the seaside are, in some of the platforms, nearly 30 ft. high and from 200 to 300 ft. long, by about 30 ft. wide . Some of the squared stones are as much as 6 ft. long . On the
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land side of the platforms there is a broad terrace with large stone pedestals upon which once stood
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colossal stone images carved somewhat into the shape of the human trunk . On some of the platforms there are upwards of a dozen images, now thrown from their pedestals and lying in all directions . Their usual height is from 14 to 16 ft., but the largest are 37 ft., while some are only about 4 ft . They are formed from a grey trachytic
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lava found at the east end of the island .

The

top of the heads of the images is cut flat to receive round crowns made of a reddish vesicular tuff found at a
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crater about 8 m. distant from the
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quarry where the images were cut . A number of these crowns still lie at the crater apparently ready for removal, some of the largest being over to ft. in diameter . In the
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atlas illustrating the voyage of La Perouse a plan of the island is given, with the position of several of the platforms . Two of the images are also represented in a
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plate . One statue, 8 ft. in height and weighing 4 tons, was brought to England, and is now in the
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British Museum . In one part of the island are the remains of stone houses nearly too ft. long by about 20 ft. wide . These are built in courses of large flat stones fitted together without cement, the walls being about 5 ft. thick and over 5 ft. high . They are lined on the inside with upright slabs, on which are painted geometrical figures and representations of animals . The
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roofs are formed by placing slabs so that each course overlaps the
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lower one until the opening becomes about 5 ft. wide, when it is covered with flat slabs reaching from one side to the other . The lava rocks near the houses are carved into the resemblance of various animals and human faces, forming, probably, a kind of picture writing . Wooden tablets covered with various signs and figures have also been found . The only ancient implement discovered on the island is a kind of stone chisel, but it seems impossible that such large and numerous
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works could have been executed with such a tool .

The

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present inhabitants of Easter Island know nothing of the construction of these remarkable works; and the entiresubject of their existence in this small and remote island is a mystery .

End of Article: EASTER ISLAND (Rapanui, i.e. Great Rapa)
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