Easter
Island is a destination that seems to inhabit our subconscious.
The image of those great stone moai with their backs to the vast
Pacific strikes some chord within us, recalls some ancient, creative
urge.
This
is the world's most isolated bit of land, a tiny pinprick in the
great pacific, a mound of consolidated lava and ash from three
submarine volcanoes. The natives call their island Rapa Nui or
Te Pito o Te Henua, 'the navel of the earth.'
Linguistic
and cultural comparisons indicate that the first humans on Easter
Island arrived from the west, most likely from the Marquesas islands
or Mangareva, as part of a greater migratory process which spread
Polynesian culture throughout the south Pacific. However, the
twelve centuries which elapsed between the arrival of the first
intrepid 'settlers' near 500 AD and the 'discovery' of the island
in 1722 by the Dutch admiral Jacob Roggeveen are among the world's
great mysteries.
European sailors visiting the island found that the natives could
not explain the construction and transport of the great moai megaliths,
the largest of which exceeds sixty feet in height.
Nor
could they decipher the rongo rongo tablets whose hieroglyphic
script appears to be a forgotten form of written language.
Somewhere
in the past - a past which seems to have seesawed from ancestor
worship, monument building and population growth, to deforestation
and food shortages, feuding and in some cases even cannibalism
- the old knowledge had been lost. It is the mystery of these
disappeared artisans, and the awesome presence of their works,
which continues to draw scientists and seekers from across the
globe.
Today,
Rapa Nui National Park protects most of the island's archaeological
sites, and the native todomiro forests that once graced the island
are being replanted.
Opportunities
for hiking, mountain biking, and horseback riding abound on the
island, while a rich marine ecosystem of corals and colorful tropical
fish makes Easter Island a prime destination for scuba diving
and snorkeling.