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ON EASTER ISLAND

HUGE STONE STATUES UNEXPLAINED MYSTERIES Tho expedition being fitted out by Eldredge E. Johnson, of Moorestown, N.J.,. to explore the mystery of Easter Island in the Pacific, 2300 miles west of Valparaiso is, of course, not the first effort of natural scientists to determine the origin of the extraordinary archaeological remains which have made this little islet famous, says the "Christian Science Monitor" in an editorial. Only thirteen miles, long by seven miles wide, volcanic in char-1, acter, with little or no timber, few | streams, and a population, mainly native, of less than 300, this island holds more than 000 huge stone busts, some of them 70ft in height, and carefully planned and executed stone platforms, carved with inscriptions in an alphabet unknown and thus far undeciphered. Who were the people who constructed these colossal memorials? The tools with which the work was done, stone chisels, lie in many cases beside the half-completed work, as though the sculptors were frightened away by some disaster. No metal tools have been found, and tho fact that where the lava, from which the statues are cut, contained a lump harder than the stone chisel which did the cutting, the lump -was left standing on the body of the statue like a wart, would seem to prove the lack of anything more efficient than flint or obsidian chisels. EARLY EXPLORERS. The island first became known to peoples of Western Europe when on Easter Sunday in 1722 a Dutch navigator named Roggewein discovered it. It was visited again by the redoubtable Captain Cook in 1773. There are those who have studied the relics of the ancient civilisation who believe that, had these navigators gone inland, particularly to the crater of the extinct volcano, they might have found thoi natives at work at their sculptures. Unfortunately, neither of them explored the island or loft any record as to the size of its population. It does not seem that these colossal works could have been carried out in such numbers except by a numerous people equipped with some method of handling heavy bodies, yet the island as it exists to-day could not possibly support more than the few hundred who now occupy it. NEW ZEALANDER'S VISIT. In 1913 an expedition under the authority of the Bi-itish Museum/ headed by \V. Scoresby Koutledge and his wife, was dispatched to make a thorough scientific inquiry into the relics on the island and their possible origin. Unhappily, they got there just in time to encounter the backwash of the World War, for the island was for a time made the base of the German fleet of Admiral yon Spec, later destroyed by the British. The English explorers, therefore, fled after a comparatively brief inquiry into the relics. Even at that their report is the most important one we have of a scientific character bearing on this problem. Some eight years later Professor MacMillan Brown, of Christchurch, New Zealand, also visited the island, and made a report to ' a scientific society. The "Christian Science Monitor" at the time quoted him as Baying: These monuments are standing to-day just as they stood hundreds of years ago, huge images fashioned rudely in human form standing on great stone platforms. There are about 100 images, and between 400 and 500 platforms which circle the island. Some of the statues are of immense size, fully seventy feet in height, and they stand there, sphinxlike, mysterious, looking out to sea just as they looked in those days when for some mysterious reason the men who fashioned them, who in some marvellous manner drew them over miles of rough and hilly country, abandoned their work and never returned to it. Not long after Professor Brown's visit; the mystery of the island was still further enhanced by a report, widely printed, that it had disappeared following an earthquake which shook Chile and the floor of tin South Pacific. This report, however, was ultimately proved to be incorrect, and the island with all its colossal images now awaits the studies of the American expedition. . . POSSIBLE EXPLANATION. The most reasonable speculation as to the way in which these huge images, seemingly so much beyond the power of the present sparse population, came into being, is that the present island is but a mountain peak, all that remains of a once large and populous territory, submerged at some prehistoric time by volcanic action. It is hardly probable that any investigation conducted purely oa land, and limited to a study of the existing memorials, can produce new information. If the American expedition can be fully equipped for deep-sea sounding—and perhaps for: such a study of-the bottom of the ocean where-the-water is not too deep as Professor William-Beebe has been inaking i in" the Caribbean—some evidence may be obtained.' of 'similar images -or works of stone submerged in its surrounding waters. If so, the theory of-a once populous region, suddenly plunged beneath the sea, would seem to be readily substantiated.^

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19300213.2.162

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 37, 13 February 1930, Page 21

Word Count
830

ON EASTER ISLAND Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 37, 13 February 1930, Page 21

ON EASTER ISLAND Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 37, 13 February 1930, Page 21

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