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Judi Lynn

(162,377 posts)
Fri Feb 7, 2020, 06:07 AM Feb 2020

Researchers revise timing of Easter island's societal collapse

5-FEB-2020

Team led by University of Oregon doctoral student says new evidence, based on statistical modeling of radiocarbon dates, shows the island's monument-building culture was thriving when Europeans arrived

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON

EUGENE, Ore. - Feb. 6, 2020 - The prehistoric collapse of Easter Island's monument-building society did not occur as long thought, according to a fresh look at evidence by researchers at four institutions.

"The general thinking has been that the society that Europeans saw when they first showed up was one that had collapsed," said Robert J. DiNapoli, a doctoral candidate in the University of Oregon's Department of Anthropology who led the analysis. "Our conclusion is that monument-building and investment were still important parts of their lives when these visitors arrived."

Easter Island, a Chilean territory also known as Rapa Nui, is located about 3,000 kilometers (1,864 miles) from South America and 2,000 kilometers (1,242 miles) from any other inhabited island.

Rapa Nui is believed to have been settled in the 13th century by Polynesian seafarers. They soon began building massive stone platforms stacked with megalithic statues and large, cylindrical stone hats that were used for cultural and religious rituals, including burial and cremation. A widely-held narrative is that monument construction stopped around 1600 after a major societal collapse.

More:
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-02/uoo-rrt020520.php

6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Researchers revise timing of Easter island's societal collapse (Original Post) Judi Lynn Feb 2020 OP
Researchers Piece Together What Happened On Rapa Nui Following European Contact Judi Lynn Feb 2020 #1
Argument isn't convincing. Loki Liesmith Feb 2020 #2
Much more difficult for a collapsed society wnylib Feb 2020 #4
When I went to Rapa Nui in 2016, we had a wonderful native sinkingfeeling Feb 2020 #3
So glad to see your comments. What an experience. So much to be learned ahead, too. Judi Lynn Feb 2020 #6
Hmmm. Interesting. PoindexterOglethorpe Feb 2020 #5

Judi Lynn

(162,377 posts)
1. Researchers Piece Together What Happened On Rapa Nui Following European Contact
Fri Feb 7, 2020, 06:10 AM
Feb 2020




Madison Dapcevich
By Madison Dapcevich
06 FEB 2020, 21:23

Located just off the coast of Chile, the island of Rapa Nui holds secrets that continue to mystify archaeologists to this day. Who were its inhabitants and why did they build the enigmatic giant-headed statues known as moai? More importantly, what happened to the ancient society?

New research from an international team of scientists now attempts to answer those questions, proposing that the people of Easter Island were extremely resilient in the face of great tragedy.

Rapa Nui is known for its elaborate architecture, particularly the nearly 1,000 moai statues and hundreds of large ahu platforms that support them. There are a number of theories as to why the giant stone statues were constructed. The scientific community largely agrees that the statues were built to serve as a focal point for social and ritual activity, possibly to encourage fertile soil conditions or point to freshwater sources. Previous theories thought that the construction of the statues ceased sometime in the 1600s following a major societal collapse of ecological or cultural catastrophe – a hypothesis that scientists are now calling into question.

To determine when and how quickly the people of Rapa Nui ceased constructing monuments, researchers examined ahu radiocarbon dates, architectural stratigraphy, and ethnohistoric accounts of the island.

More:
https://www.iflscience.com/editors-blog/researchers-piece-together-what-happened-on-rapa-nui-following-european-contact/

Loki Liesmith

(4,602 posts)
2. Argument isn't convincing.
Fri Feb 7, 2020, 07:06 AM
Feb 2020

A collapsed society can still construct monuments, just at a greater cost.

This research looks ideological.

wnylib

(24,389 posts)
4. Much more difficult for a collapsed society
Fri Feb 7, 2020, 08:31 AM
Feb 2020

to unify the manpower necessary for large monument construction. If the manpower even exists any more. Diminished numbers, due to disease and slave raiding would disrupt social unity and manpower supply, making construction of monumental structures nearly impossible to continue. People might continue with rituals regarding existing structures, depending on the purpose of the structures, after a societal collapse.

But societal collapse means that a social unity system no longer functions. The records of outside visitors about continued use of the monuments and rituals strongly
suggests that societal unity had not yet collapsed at that time. Might have been on a downturn in 1770 since it had collapsed by 1774, but was still functioning in 1770 according to descriptions from outsiders.

sinkingfeeling

(52,993 posts)
3. When I went to Rapa Nui in 2016, we had a wonderful native
Fri Feb 7, 2020, 08:15 AM
Feb 2020

archeologist as a guide. He fully believed their decline was directly caused by European involvement with the islanders.

I enjoyed the absolute peace and quiet of the island, but my traveling companions thought they'd go nuts on such an isolated island.

Thanks for posting.

Judi Lynn

(162,377 posts)
6. So glad to see your comments. What an experience. So much to be learned ahead, too.
Thu Feb 13, 2020, 05:42 AM
Feb 2020

It was shocking when they discovered below the giant heads are actually shoulders, torsos, etc. underground. Astonishing.

Thank you, s.f.

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