Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
Making Maori
Despite persistent myths, there is no doubt that the first settlers of NZ were the Polynesian
forebears of today's Maori. Beyond that, there are a lot of question marks. Exactly where in
east Polynesia did they come from - the Cook Islands, Tahiti, the Marquesas? When did
they arrive? Did the first settlers come in one group or several?
Some evidence, such as the diverse DNA of the Polynesian rats that accompanied the
first settlers, suggests multiple founding voyages. On the other hand, only rats and dogs
brought by the founders have survived, not the more valuable pigs and chickens. The sur-
vival of these cherished animals would have had high priority, and their failure to be suc-
cessfully introduced suggests fewer voyages.
NZ seems small compared with Australia, but it is bigger than Britain, and very much
bigger than other Polynesian islands. Its regions vary wildly in environment and climate.
Prime sites for first settlement were warm coastal gardens for the food plants brought from
Polynesia (kumara or sweet potato, gourd, yam and taro); sources of workable stone for
knives and adzes; and areas with abundant big game.
NZ has no native land mammals apart from a few species of bat, but 'big game' is no ex-
aggeration: the islands were home to a dozen species of moa (a large flightless bird), the
largest of which weighed up to 240kg, about twice the size of an ostrich. There were also
other species of flightless birds and large sea mammals such as fur seals, all unaccustomed
to being hunted.
For a thorough overview of NZ history from Gondwanaland to today, visit www.history-nz.org .
For people from small Pacific islands, this was like hitting the jackpot. The first settlers
spread far and fast, from the top of the North Island to the bottom of the South Island with-
in the first 100 years. High-protein diets are likely to have boosted population growth.
By about 1400, however, with big-game supply dwindling, Maori economics turned
from big game to small game - forest birds and rats - and from hunting to gardening and
fishing. A good living could still be made, but it required detailed local knowledge, steady
effort and complex communal organisation, hence the rise of the Maori tribes. Competition
for resources increased, conflict did likewise, and this led to the building of increasingly
sophisticated fortifications, known as pa . Vestiges of pa earthworks can still be seen around
the country (on the hilltops of Auckland, for example).
 
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