Easter Island 4 - Look At My Hat
by World Reflections By Sharon
Title
Easter Island 4 - Look At My Hat
Artist
World Reflections By Sharon
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
This statue' photograph was taken during a trip to Easter Island.
I am honored my photograph was featured in these Fine Art America/Pixels groups -
Vertical Images 1/03/22
Hodge Podge 12/25/21
Lady Photographers 12/23/21
Fine Art Exploration Photography 12/20/21
Everything Else non objective abstract different and alternative art 12/21/21
USA Photographers ONLY 12/19/21
"Easter Island, Spanish Isla de Pascua, also called Rapa Nui, Chilean dependency in the eastern Pacific Ocean. It is the easternmost outpost of the Polynesian island world. It is famous for its giant stone statues. The island stands in isolation 1,200 miles (1,900 km) east of Pitcairn Island and 2,200 miles (3,540 km) west of Chile. Forming a triangle 14 miles (23 km) long by 7 miles (11 km) wide, it has an area of 63 square miles (163 square km); its highest point, Mount Terevaka, is 1,969 feet (600 metres) above sea level.
To its original inhabitants the island is known as Rapa Nui (“Great Rapa”) or Te Pito te Henua (“Navel of the World”). The first European visitors, the Dutch, named it Paaseiland (“Easter Island”) in memory of their own day of arrival. Its mixed population is predominantly of Polynesian descent; almost all live in the village of Hanga Roa on the sheltered west coast. Pop. (2002) 3,304; (2017) 7,750.
The small and hilly island is not part of a sunken landmass but is a typical oceanic high island formed by volcanoes rising from the seafloor. Geologic and oceanographic evidence shows that no perceptible emergence or submergence of the island’s coastline has taken place since the last fall in sea level, which occurred less than 10,000 years ago. However, in the early 21st century Easter Island experienced increasing coastal erosion because of rising sea levels, which also threatened various archeological sites. Three extinct volcanoes chiefly composed of tuff (a porous rock formed of compacted volcanic fragments) and joined by their own lava flows give the island its characteristic triangular shape. Parasitic tuff craters and cones (i.e., craters and cones formed on the side of, or near, volcanoes after the original vent has become plugged up) are interspersed in the landscape, which is otherwise dominated by eroded lava fields in which obsidian is commonly found.
There is no natural harbour, but anchorage is found off Hanga Roa on the west coast; off Vinapu and Hotu-Iti on the south coast; and off Anakena and in the Bahía la Perouse on the north coast.
Indigenous plants and animals are few. Today only 31 wild flowering plants, 14 ferns, and 14 mosses are reported. Grass and small ferns dominate the barren landscape, whereas the boggy crater lakes are thickly covered by two imported American species, the totora reed (an important building material) and Polygonum acuminatum (a medicinal plant). A number of cultivated species of plants were also introduced partly from America and partly from Polynesia before the arrival of Europeans; of these the principal species was the sweet potato, which was cultivated in extensive plantations and formed the staple diet. Bottle gourds, sugarcane, bananas, taro, yams, and two useful trees (i.e., the Asiatic paper mulberry, with bark used for cloth manufacture, and the American Triumfetta semitriloba, with bark used for rope making) were of aboriginal importation, as also probably were the husk-tomato, a small variety of pineapple, and the coconut.
The island’s population represents the easternmost settlement of a basically Polynesian subgroup that probably derived from the Marquesas group. The original Rapa Nui vocabulary has been lost except for some mixed Polynesian and non-Polynesian words recorded before the Tahitian dialect was introduced to the decimated population by missionaries in 1864. Today Spanish is generally spoken. In their traditions, the islanders consistently divide themselves into descendants of two distinct ethnic groups, the “Long-Ears” and the “Short-Ears”
Whereas the aboriginal economy was based on the cultivation of sweet potato, chicken raising, and coastal fishing, the island has shifted to a cash economy based on tourism. The opening of an airport at Mataveri near Hanga Roa has permitted an increasing influx of tourists since the 1960s, and a few small hotels have been built in the village area, where many islanders and settlers from continental Chile also have accommodations in their homes.
The island is famous for its gigantic stone statues, of which there are more than 600, and for the ruins of giant stone platforms (ahus) with open courtyards on their landward sides, some of which show masterly construction. Archaeological surveys were carried out in 1886, 1914, and 1934; archaeological excavations were initiated in 1955. The excavations revealed that three distinct cultural periods are identifiable on the island.
Easter Island was added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 1995." Encyclopedia Britannica
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December 18th, 2021
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Comments (7)
Dr Debra Stewart's Gallery
Congratulations, your amazing image has been featured in the Intent of the Artist group -- thanks for sharing it with us! Please feel free to add it to the 2021 Feature Archive in the Discussion section (using the "embed" link on your image page).
World Reflections By Sharon replied:
Dr. Debra - Thanks for choosing Easter Island 4 - Look At My Hat" as one of your favorites and as a featured image in the Intent of the Artist group on 1/9/22! I greatly appreciate the honors!
World Reflections By Sharon
Bob - A big thank you for featuring 'Easter Island 4 - Look At My Hat' featured on Vertical Images homepage on 1/4/22. I really appreciate it!
World Reflections By Sharon
Bob- Thank you for the honor of having 'Easter Island 4 - Look At My Hat' featured on the Hodge Podge homepage on 12/26/21. I greatly appreciate it!
World Reflections By Sharon
Karen - I greatly appreciate the honor of having 'Easter Island 4 - Look At My Hat' featured on the Lady Photographers and Artists homepage on 12/24/21. Thank you!
World Reflections By Sharon
Judy - Thank you so much for featuring 'Easter Island 4 - Look At My Hat' on the USA Photographers ONLY homepage on 12/20/21. I greatly appreciate the honor!