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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: Easter Island’s giant statues “walked” to their locations Easter Islands giant statues walked to their locations Posted by TANN ArchaeoHeritage, Archaeology, Australasia, Breakingnews, Easter Island, Oceania 8:30 PM The startling claim comes from archaeologists Terry Hunt of the University of Hawaii and Carl Lipo of California State University Long Beach, who showed how as few as 18 people could move a 5-ton statue with just some ropes and hopes. It sounds impossible, and contradicts other current theories. But it jibes with ancient village legends. A 10-foot, 5-ton replica of an Easter Island "moai" dances down the road, guided by teams on each side and behind it. Archaeologists Carl Lipo and Terry Hunt, who led the experiment, report that once the balance of the teams and ropes was established, the statue "just did its thing." The experiment, funded by the National Geographic Society, is described in the July 2012 issue of National Geographic magazine [Credit: Sheela Sharma] The experts can say whatever they want, 25-year-old Rapa Nui resident Suri Tuki told National Geographic. But we know the truth. The statues walked. Some have suggested the 887 giant heads currently documented on the 63-square mile in the middle of the Pacific Ocean were built by stranded extraterrestrials, such as best-selling Swiss author Erich von Daniken. Others theorize the Peruvian Incas carved them. Modern science links them instead to Polynesia -- but how these peoples moved the heads from the quarry across miles of rocky island had remained a mystery. Scientists may have just discovered how. In experiments conducted last year and funded by the National Geographic Society, Hunt and Lipo showed just how to do it. With three strong ropes and a bit of practice, the magazine writes, this many people can easily maneuver a 10-foot, 5-ton moai replica a few hundred yards. The fat bellies of the statues were essential to this mobility, the argument goes, helping them maintain momentum, while they were rocked from side to side via a rope around the statue's head. The real statues were moved potentially for miles, but the demonstration shows the rock and roll technique could be the answer. Images of the stunt from the July edition of National Geographic magazine show just how it happened; the full story is published in a book by Lipo and Hunt titled The Statues That Walked. But thats hardly the only theory. Ethnologist Jared Diamond believes the gigantic carvings were dragged on wooden sledges, a technique successfully tested by UCLA archaeologist Jo Anne Van Tilburg. She serves as the islands unofficial spokeswoman, having been documenting Easter Island for decades. Researchers Terry Hunt and Carl Lipo test a new theory that suggests how ancient Easter Islanders may have used ropes to "walk" the moai to their platforms. First Van Tilburg documented the islands statues and those that have been removed to museums; there are 887 inventoried, though she says the number is closer to 1,000. Then she began the next phase of work to reveal what lay beneath the ground -- covered up not intentionally by men, but through centuries of exposure to the environment. That process has taken 12 years so far, and may take a lifetime of work. Its the first time that one has been excavated in such a way that the documentation was complete and scientific, she told FoxNews.com last month. Other groups have dug in the past, and looters have found their way to the remote island as well. People have been treasure hunting there for a long time. Is the rock and roll theory correct? Its hard to say: The last statue was carved sometime in the 1800s, and the debate will surely continue -- as will fascination with the island and its mysteries. Source: Fox News [June 21, 2012] Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#1. To: tom007 (#0)
(Edited)
Tom - This has to rank at, or near, the very least of my worries today. Curious enough, however.
Sir Lod... Sorry bout that young man. I had a bum day, tried whining, family said shape up or off to the olde fools home. Cut me no slack.
Tell'em to make it a double. Phooey on it all. Suck it up, family; who writes the checks?
There are no replies to Comment # 3. End Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
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