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Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
Sun Apr 21, 2019, 09:22 PM Apr 2019

Easter Island's famous moai statues slowly fading away


For years, archaeologists have wondered how the mysterious statues came to dot the island in the Pacific. Now, they're trying to find a way to keep the statues around

2019
Apr 21
CORRESPONDENT
Anderson Cooper

- video at link -

On this Easter Sunday, we thought it would be fitting to take you on a journey to Easter Island. It's one of the most remote inhabited islands in the world, far into the pacific, 2200 miles due west from the coast of Chile.

Why did people stop building statues on Easter Island?
Dutch explorers gave it its name after they spotted it on Easter Sunday in 1722. What they found has fascinated and confounded the world ever since, giant stone statues that tower over the island's landscape. They're called moai, and as we learned our first morning on Easter Island, there is nothing quite like them anywhere else in the world.

When dawn breaks on Easter Island, it is the moai that first feel the sun.



These 15 moai at a site called Tongariki are perhaps the most famous. Carved out of volcanic rock, they're placed on a stone platform called an ahu. The tallest is nearly 30 feet. They stand, strange silent sentinels, facing away from the sea, watching over the land and its people.

At least a thousand moai can be found scattered across this island, which is about the size of Washington DC. Many more moai remain buried underground. To the descendants of those who built them, these are more than statues made of stone, they are immortal branches of an ancient family tree.

More:
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/easter-island-heads-famous-moai-statues-slowly-fading-away-60-minutes-2019-04-21/

Also posted in Anthropology:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/12294652
4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Easter Island's famous moai statues slowly fading away (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2019 OP
They should rebirth some of them so they don't face the elements. applegrove Apr 2019 #1
Sun, wind and rain are really impacting & 'dissolving' the moai. appalachiablue Apr 2019 #2
Loved Easter Island or Rapa Nui. But I seem drawn to places far from sinkingfeeling Apr 2019 #3
Easter Island has always facinated me. Thanks for post riversedge Apr 2019 #4

applegrove

(118,696 posts)
1. They should rebirth some of them so they don't face the elements.
Sun Apr 21, 2019, 09:27 PM
Apr 2019

Saw the Anderson Cooper 60 Minutes interview tonight on Easter Island. The indigenous mayor teased Anderson that he was a typical domesticated city person that worked all the time. Good one.

appalachiablue

(41,146 posts)
2. Sun, wind and rain are really impacting & 'dissolving' the moai.
Sun Apr 21, 2019, 09:43 PM
Apr 2019

Conservation time maybe? Saw the CBS segment.

sinkingfeeling

(51,460 posts)
3. Loved Easter Island or Rapa Nui. But I seem drawn to places far from
Mon Apr 22, 2019, 12:33 AM
Apr 2019

civilization, like Anartica and Easter Island.

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