| Sponsored by Kingston Strategic (NZ) Ltd |
|
![]() Keep up to date with Maori News on Twitter |
![]() Or follow the news on Facebook. |
![]() Click above to access the TKI RSS feed |
![]() Also click to see Te Karere Ipurangi on Bebo. |
16th
JAN
Search for Maori homeland
Posted by karere under Maori News
Study by language expert suggests voyagers may not have begun from Samoa.
EXPAND
It is thought the ancestors of Maori may have set out from one of Polynesia’s outliers, such as Takuu. Photo / Supplied
A Hawaiian linguistics professor believes eastern Polynesian ancestors, including Maori, began their colonisation of the Pacific from remote atolls near the Solomon Islands, not Samoa as has long been believed.
It is from these coral outcroppings, which barely break the Pacific Ocean and sustain tiny populations, that the original homeland of Pacific peoples, Hawaiki, may be located.
Professor William Wilson has been a key figure in the revitalisation of the Hawaiian language movement. Bubbling away in the background of that work over the past 30 years has been a desire to look more closely at the languages of atolls such as Takuu and Luangiua - known as Polynesian outliers because they are inside Melanesia and outside the Polynesian triangle which is bounded by New Zealand, Hawaii and Rapa Nui/Easter Island.
In a paper published in December’s edition of Oceanic Linguistics, Professor Wilson argues that while anthropologists and linguists have assumed East Polynesia, including New Zealand, was settled from Central Western Polynesia, most likely Samoa, his study suggests otherwise.
The paper details 73 lexical and grammatical structures that are shared by the outlier and eastern Polynesian languages but not by Samoan or any other western Polynesian languages.
He believes outlier populations, sophisticated navigators, voyaged to Samoa and back to the outlier atolls. After a time - it is not clear how long - the language evolved and it was from the atolls that the ancestors of Maori and others eventually set out.
Speaking from Hawaii yesterday he said other evidence for the theory, such as sophisticated fishing techniques for deepsea expeditions, was shared across the outlier and eastern cultures.
Similarly, carving traditions here, in Hawaii and throughout the east do not exist in the west but do in the outlier atolls.
Hawaiki might well have been located in the outliers, Professor Wilson said, which would mean those seagoing people travelled vast distances to Aotearoa.
Otago University archaeologist Professor Richard Walter said it sounded plausible and should be tested archaeologically.
By Yvonne Tahana Email
Read all the news [here]



Originally up Mesopotamia way until split occurred and another section went to North America, Mexico and South America. See–Olmecs and see your relatives. Tamatekapua Tia and Ngataroirangi erected the stone Tuahua or energy concentrators locked into the global Pyramid Lay Line Grid when they arrived pre 5000 years ago. The key stone form the equilateral triangular at set minutes of arc of the speed of light. Yes people they were not the savages our white brothers would like you all to think. Besides they were giants too. The gene runs in my line and is especially prominent in the women today. Subsequent mega catastrophes of which four were related to me by the Tohunga of Te Arawa occurred since that time destroying the original stone kingdoms and burying them. I think mega quake or Taupo took one lot out and Tsunami’s the others. Last mega disaster to hit was around 1500 years ago and wiped out East Coast. Re-settlement occurred around two centuries later for various pacific rim islands and would explain the language connection. Always remember that carbon dating is abstract at best and cannot date stone. Be proud of the harmonics knowledge they left us.