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Six kilometers of caves discovered in Easter Island


Santiago (Chile), July 14 : A team of experts has discovered a six-kilometer-long lava cave system on Easter Island thought to have been used as a refuge by the islands inhabitants during the 16th century.

According to a report in The Santiago Times, the team confirmed that it is the largest cave on the island and the 11th-largest in the world in terms of area.

The expedition, which began in 2005 and focused on the Roiho sector in the east of the island, uncovered 45 caves with a host of archaeological finds, including arrowheads, spears, axes, utensils, petroglyphs (rock engravings), and some 30 human skeletons.

Cave experts, or speleologists, confirmed the caves were used by inhabitants of the island as refuge from tribal wars at a time when society was on the verge of collapse as a result of infighting, severe environmental degradation caused by deforestation, droughts, and famine.

The most common use was in periods of tribal warfare, when the caves would turn into secret chambers where islanders would protect themselves, explained Claudio Cristino, an archaeologist from the Universidad de Chile, who took part in the expedition.

They also would have been used as a site to collect water, he added.

Easter Island, also known as Rapa Nui, is a Polynesian island located some 3,500 kilometers off the west coast of Chile. It was annexed by Chile in 1888, with its inhabitants given Chilean citizenship in 1966.

It was our fourth expedition to Rapa Nui, explained Jabier Les, president of the Spanish Alfonso Antxia Society of Speleological Sciences, which led the expedition alongside a team of Italian experts and Chilean archaeologists.

In each expedition we charted the island and its caverns, being surprised by a series of finds. But to find a system of natural galleries more than six kilometers long in such a small, distant island was astonishing, he added.

Prior to their exploration, the caves had aroused the interest of tour operators who told stories of islanders who continued to inhabit the caves to emulate the lives of their ancestors.

It has been a revelation, said Enrique Tucki, administrator of the Rapa Nui National Park. We knew these caves existed they have been there for centuries but we had not taken into account their variety, quantity, and peculiarity, he added.

The discovery will be featured in the TV show Science Hunters, for which state-owned TV network TVN is negotiating the rights.

Copyright Asian News International (ANI)


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Comments on Six kilometers of caves discovered in Easter Island

I too have read Fatu Hiva and was very intrested in the cave that Heyerdahl found there they are discribed as man made if I'm not mistaken

By » Howard Sherrer on 2009-08-25 19:55:15
A six-kilometers long cave ...... in my opinion it’s too long for hiding during tribal wars. As I have known there haven’t been many inhabitants on this island for all time. For this reason and due to Easter Island is relatively small for being strong tribal divisions, I suppose that were more reasons to hide the inhabitants in these caves.

By » robertj136 on 2009-08-09 21:45:59
Please send me all the notices of this Island, specially the environmental issus
Thanks
Geraldo G.J.Eysink
Brazil


By » Geraldo G.J.Eysink on 2009-07-24 02:36:18
Thor Heyerdahl in his book Aku-Aku described crawling through many caves on Easter Island. On one occasion his guide may have tried to kill him thinking that Heyerdahl already knew too much. I still get the creeps thinking about it. I enjoyed also Heyerdahl's book Fatu Hiva. He and his new wife went to the island in the western Pacific to live like natives. His wife put up with quite a bit of hardship. Thor I don't think noticed. I'm surprised that Heyerdahl wasn't mentioned in this article. It's possible the writers didn't know of him.

By » John Hall on 2009-07-17 12:19:38