Returning to the Hypothesis of Amerindian Settlement on Rapa Nui (Easter Island)

Authors

  • Atholl Anderson Kā Waimaero | Ngāi Tahu Research Centre, University of Canterbury; Australian National University

Keywords:

Rapa Nui (Easter Island), Amerindians, genetic admixture, ahu (ceremonial platform), tupa structures, birdman motifs, seafaring

Abstract

The hypothesis of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) colonisation by Amerindian voyagers has been largely dismissed archaeologically since the mid-twentieth-century controversy generated by Thor Heyerdahl’s American Indians in the Pacific. The orthodox hypothesis today is that Rapa Nui was settled exclusively by Polynesians who, however, brought the sweet potato and a few other items from South America by return voyaging. This view is challenged by recent evidence that widespread admixture of Amerindian and East Polynesian DNA in East Polynesia, dated to the twelfth to fourteenth century AD, could represent Amerindian landfalls. Reconsideration, here, of putative Amerindian archaeological remains on Rapa Nui—notably the façade of the ceremonial platform known as Ahu Tahiri, circular stone structures known as tupa, and birdman motifs—in the light of recent, largely contextual, research also appears to offer more support for the hypothesis than hitherto. However, the argument is heavily constrained by the long absence of systematic analytical research designed to test such indications, perhaps because marginalising the Amerindian hypothesis suits archaeological perspectives on both sides of the southeast Pacific. The purpose of this review is to encourage new research on the archaeological material in question.

Author Biography

Atholl Anderson, Kā Waimaero | Ngāi Tahu Research Centre, University of Canterbury; Australian National University

Atholl Anderson is an Emeritus Professor, formerly on the staff of the Anthropology Department, University of Otago, and held the Chair of Prehistory in the Institute of Advanced Studies, Australian National University from 1993 to 2008. He has worked extensively in Oceanic archaeology, ethnohistory and palaeoenvironmental studies across the Indian and Pacific oceans from Madagascar to the Galápagos Islands. In retirement his research is mainly in southern New Zealand. He co-authored the multiple-award-winning Tangata Whenua: An Illustrated History with Judith Binney and Aroha Harris (Bridget William Books and Auckland War Memorial Museum, 2014).

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Published

2021-11-01

Issue

Section

Shorter Communications