Lessons from Easter Island | Carl Lipo | TEDxBermuda

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 67

  • @scotty1404
    @scotty1404 4 года назад +4

    Hotu Matua is the older brother to Hotu Roa.
    Hotu Roa was the Captain of the Tainui Canoe that left Rapa Nui in search of another land to live in and following the Southern Cross Star Constellation bought them to New Zealand(Aoetearoa)
    Now known as Maori.
    The descendants of the Tainui Canoe are the Waikato people located on the west side of North Island in New Zealand.

  • @ritchyrich914
    @ritchyrich914 4 года назад +7

    Much love to our Rapa nui brothers and sisters.

    • @pokemasterx4244
      @pokemasterx4244 3 года назад

      Well there were only like 1200 of them left and I thought most of them left

  • @hehunches
    @hehunches 3 года назад +1

    Lipo demonstrates that only an engineer could come to logical conclusion about how these structures were made and moved. Woah. Amazingh.

  • @blancaroca8786
    @blancaroca8786 6 лет назад +7

    Interesting stuff! What about the destruction of the trees which was supposed to a big thing?

  • @MrBg681
    @MrBg681 5 лет назад +1

    If the community was so small and so isolated...it seems building and keeping that statues was the thing that gave a sense of the community. Doing something toghether, something in what all belived and participated. Despite the basic labor for producing food.
    From otherhand in sertan moment of natural changes that cultural norm of making statues could over ehsoste the rescources. Could be both true.

  • @thebigriddle2000
    @thebigriddle2000 4 года назад +3

    Based on the graph, the number of Maoi falling over seems to correspond to European contact. Statutes are standing prior to European contact, then they start to fall over. I am sure some fell over on their own, but I am sure a number of them were pushed over by outsiders.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 11 месяцев назад

      European contact had nothing to do with the disintegration of island culture. The short ears killed the long ears and ate them. Religious and social warfare between them. They forgot how to fish and ate each other. Don't be naive. Human Nature: Economics over Morality.

  • @losmuertos12
    @losmuertos12 6 лет назад +1

    Great presentation. I would have loved to listen about findings about the moai top hats and also who the team of Japanese were that came post 1950 to stand moai up

  • @pokemasterx4244
    @pokemasterx4244 3 года назад

    So what happened to the trees?

  • @bertiepimplebum9715
    @bertiepimplebum9715 6 лет назад +2

    If you were a passing alien, where would you land? Easter Island statues depict what they looked like.

  • @pokemasterx4244
    @pokemasterx4244 3 года назад

    Could they have done sea burials?

  • @mannyrevuelta4070
    @mannyrevuelta4070 5 лет назад

    Brilliant presentation.

  • @AngloFrancoDane
    @AngloFrancoDane 6 лет назад

    Thank you! I have read these things but this is a great presentation.

  • @russg1801
    @russg1801 6 лет назад +1

    OK, am I the only one who concludes that the Moai, rather than being a waste of human labor, might actually be the BYPRODUCT of those rock gardens? IOW, they were what was left over after they quarried the minerals they needed? Carving the statues might have simply provided some motivation for what would otherwise have been a task of pure drudgery.

  • @Blue-gl7hw
    @Blue-gl7hw 6 лет назад

    If people got there and started to make the statues, why aren't there similar statues elsewhere?

  • @TheGhettoBirds
    @TheGhettoBirds 9 лет назад +1

    Great talk! The Earth is our only land and we should take care of it.

  • @christiribbons6394
    @christiribbons6394 4 года назад +1

    They probably got most of their food from the ocean

  • @stewmsinternational
    @stewmsinternational 4 года назад +1

    It's like there is only one ideolgy that permeates every single tedtalks..

  • @pokemasterx4244
    @pokemasterx4244 3 года назад

    Also why is he so trusting of accounts made by people at that time?

  • @pokemasterx4244
    @pokemasterx4244 3 года назад

    Maybe he could have talked about the ecological disaster after cutting all the trees, but ye

  • @chaosmasker9858
    @chaosmasker9858 6 лет назад +1

    I think maybe those tools are coconut openers 😕

  • @itssalty
    @itssalty 7 лет назад +1

    Beautifull

  • @teressakarr3610
    @teressakarr3610 5 лет назад

    I have a theory on how they moved these statues on Easter island. They used beeswax. After the statues were removed from the quarry they left a long narrow rectangular vein on the backs and inserted that into a tract they constructed and slid them on a cushioned pathway they created using Palm leaves soaked with beeswax , thus a frictionless surface. They easily slid them down the mountain, so to onlookers at the base of the mountain it would appear these statues were walking. Once the statues were on more level ground they inserted compressed beeswax slabs under the front angled space in the base to move them to the platform. Once the statues were in place they carved off the vein and levelled the base.

    • @MaterLacrymarum
      @MaterLacrymarum 4 года назад +2

      Did you watch the video? The guy literally shows you how they likely moved the statues. He even went and did it himself (with others). No need for beeswax.

    • @emssssh
      @emssssh 3 года назад +2

      Bees were introduced to Rapa Nui in the mid-19th century.

    • @pokemasterx4244
      @pokemasterx4244 3 года назад

      No they used wood to roll the rock or used wood as levers etc

  • @MrGigigigia
    @MrGigigigia 6 лет назад

    It's easy. The statue fall on their own over time.

  • @virginiahelzainka
    @virginiahelzainka 4 года назад

    whos here after watching leblanc video

  • @PolishMan597
    @PolishMan597 3 года назад

    They broke bedrock?? They must''ve been in creative mode...

  • @PolishMan597
    @PolishMan597 3 года назад

    jk

  • @Nikita22286
    @Nikita22286 8 лет назад

    h

  • @gillypoof
    @gillypoof 4 года назад

    research mudflood.

  • @itssalty
    @itssalty 7 лет назад

    WHOW

  • @whkwole6842
    @whkwole6842 4 года назад

    I don't believe the statues were ever moved. They were built right where they stand today with cement concrete. Ancient people were known to have cement many thousands of years ago and to have built large quantities of bricks with it. Why could they not use the same cement to built statues? The demonstrator statue must have been built with cement. Why ancient people could not do the same cement job? What was hard to get in ancient times was the metal tools. Without these, ancient people had fingers.
    We should cut stone samples and investigate them under an electronic magnifying glass to find whether there are traces of marine lives and human hair in the statue structure.

    • @annamartin2881
      @annamartin2881 4 года назад

      how do you reckon they moulded the concrete?

    • @whkwole6842
      @whkwole6842 4 года назад

      @@annamartin2881 :I reckoned the statues were moulded with concrete because of impossibility of carving and moving. Ancient people did not have sharp enough metal tools to carve natural stones, and did not have transport vehicles to move the stones. Now, there is another idea easy to try. That is, cut a few pieces off the statues and taste them with our tongue to find whether there is salt. If salt exists in the statues, it means sea water was used to mix the cement. Cement is present in the huge platform where 16 statues stand; cement is also present in the pedestals on which the 16 statues sit. The pedestals were built with natural stones bound together with cement. And the pedestals must pretty high, reaching up to the chest of each statue so as to keep them from being toppled by powerful winds from the sea. Such pedestals also mean that the statues are hollow from bottom to the chest. A hollow body should mean that, the statues were moulded cement concrete.

    • @pokemasterx4244
      @pokemasterx4244 3 года назад +1

      @@whkwole6842 lol no

  • @robertwomack6721
    @robertwomack6721 9 лет назад

    The earth is ours... We belong to the earth

  • @wkdwiz
    @wkdwiz 3 года назад +1

    The Europeans probably tore them down for their love to Jesus 🙄

  • @justincase1660
    @justincase1660 4 года назад

    this guy never heard of evolution ?

  • @samanthalaurie5591
    @samanthalaurie5591 6 лет назад

    The part that he did not say is the stone is not native to Easter Island it was put there

    • @emssssh
      @emssssh 6 лет назад +7

      The moai are constructed mostly from tuff, some from scoria and basalt. These are all volcanic rocks; the island itself is a volcanic formation. There's a volcanic cone on the island which was a quarry for the tuff used to create the majority of the statues, and there are plenty of unfinished statues still present within it. The stone is all native to Rapa Nui. Where else would it have come from?

    • @blancaroca8786
      @blancaroca8786 6 лет назад +4

      Samantha, where you get your data from? Or maybe you are just winding us up? Only problem is there are so many gullible people who get swept along by misinformation, and our political supposedly democratic system needs good information with informed citizens, which we don't have and so we are heading toward our own fall like the Romans and others .

    • @028TuvaluanHero
      @028TuvaluanHero 6 лет назад

      Isn't the material used to build the pyramids not primarily from there? Lol

    • @swamivardana9911
      @swamivardana9911 6 лет назад

      Or maybe the whole thing is a giant hoax.

    • @XOXO1490
      @XOXO1490 5 лет назад

      🤦🏻‍♀️🤦🏻‍♀️