Posted on 10/08/2010 5:45:01 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Lichen are eating away at the Moai, the 400 volcanic stone heads that dominate the skyline of Easter Island. Earlier treatments to preserve these ancient monoliths at this World Heritage Site called for filling some of the most deeply corroded stones with concrete. Unfortunately, experts think that this treatment might have worsened the damaging effects of the wind and saltwater that batter the Polynesian island. In fact, the lichen may even be feeding off the concrete used to save the Moai.
Professor Lorenzo Casamenti and five of his students from the restoration school Lorenzo de' Medici in Florence have found an inexpensive treatment for the gigantic statues of Rapa Nui -- the indigenous name of Eastern Island.
Casamenti visited Easter Island in 2008 and asked for samples of the island's volcanic rock which, like the Moai, are also contaminated by these dangerous fungi. Lengthy research has now produced a "chemical" solution to the problem. "We have at long last discovered a solvent that destroys the lichen but not the statues," said Casamenti.
He will work in collaboration with archaeologists living on Easter Island who have already attended university courses on stone restoration in Florence. The aim of the treatment is to rid the stones of the "white flowers of evil" that leave holes in the colossal statues.
(Excerpt) Read more at theartnewspaper.com ...
400 old stone heads. Not 1000.
There’s a lot of room on Earth. A lot.
Maybe they should take the heads and offer to sell them to different countries for their museums?
I close my eyes, only for a moment, and the moment’s gone
All my dreams, pass before my eyes, a curiosity
Dust in the wind, all they are is dust in the wind.
Same old song, just a drop of water in an endless sea
All we do, crumbles to the ground, though we refuse to see
Dust in the wind, all we are is dust in the wind
[Now] Don’t hang on, nothing lasts forever but the earth and sky
It slips away, and all your money won’t another minute buy.
Dust in the wind, all we are is dust in the wind
Dust in the wind, everything is dust in the wind.
Didn’t the whole culture starve to death after making the heads?
Didn’t the whole culture starve to death after making the heads?
I think a strip of zinc on the roof prevents moss from growing. How about some nice zinc hats?
Their own oral tradition is, there were three major revolts against the ruling Long-ears; each time the Long-ears and families would take refuge on a neck of land they had fortified with stones, earth, and fire. The third time this happened they were betrayed (by a woman who had married in from the Short-ears) and were slaughtered but for one. Later on a couple Long-ears who had escaped to the quarry but had starved to death there became the models for a traditional common subject for wood carving:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Skeletal_easter_island_statue.JPG
http://www.google.com/images?q=wood+carving+easter+island
In the quarry itself there’s an unfinished statue, all but done, over 90 feet in length, which is speculated to have been the last straw. In that scenario, the Short-ears threw down their tools (which supposedly can still be found in the quarry) and rebelled.
What followed was the Birdman phase, which lasted perhaps 100-150 years, and a lot of that time the extended families spent hiding in their own caves, involved in an island-wide feud. There is of course a strictly political view that everything on the island was peachy until Europeans visited and destroyed the entire ecosystem. This outlook is exactly congruent with the Nation of Islam’s idiotic racist fantasy about the past.
Europeans first arrived in the form of Captain Cook’s expedition, I think. An earlier voyage to find this rumored island was a failure because the titular head of the expedition couldn’t get the pee-pants captain to sail in the correct direction. Had that succeeded, Europeans would have arrived when the statues were still being built! That would have settled a lot of questions I think, and perhaps have resulted in a continuity that is lacking now.
Interesting, a bearded statue:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rano_Raraku#Tukuturi
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Moai_Easter_Island_geod0095.jpg
the wiki-wacky pedia entry:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_Island
There used to be specialty cruises advertised in “Archaeology” mag et al, going to the Galapagos (that name just cries out to be pronounced “Gal oh PAY goes”) and seems to me once in a while they had Easter Island cruises. It can’t be much of a cruise, but you’d see a part of the Earth’s wet surface that over 99 percent of humanity has never seen. :’)
Years ago in “Strange” magazine (published by the late Mark Chorvinsky) Vincent Gaddis (an old stage magician and anomalist) penned an article about vanished islands and mystery lands that was very interesting; the one that is in context here is a small, inhabited archipelago w of Panama (a long way west) which was obscure and unheard of. An otherwise obscure 18th c ship’s captain learned of it from a priest who had lived on the islands, and who told him its discovery history and location. The captain sailed off to visit it, but couldn’t find it. He did however find floating debris, including broken nearly-whole trees, suggestive of submergence (volcanic eruption? landslide?) of a landmass.
I’ve got some in the kitchen. In fact, I’ve got everything in the kitchen. Oh wait. I’ve got everything in there except the kitchen zinc.
Who knows! ;-)
This brings up the difficulty of convincing tourists to visit Moldavia.
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