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  <front>
    <journal-meta>
<journal-id journal-id-type="publisher"/>
<journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>Archaeology International</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
<issn>2048-4194</issn>
<publisher>
        <publisher-name>Ubiquity Press</publisher-name>
      </publisher>
</journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
<article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.5334/ai.1613</article-id>
<article-categories>
        <subj-group>
          <subject>Article</subject>
        </subj-group>
      </article-categories>
<title-group>
        <article-title>Rapa Nui (Easter Island)’s Stone Worlds</article-title>
      </title-group>
<contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name name-style="western">
<surname>Hamilton</surname>
<given-names>Sue</given-names>
</name>
          <email>s.hamilton@ucl.ac.uk</email>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff-1"/>
        </contrib>
<aff id="aff-1">UCL Institute of Archaeology, London WC1H 0PY, United Kingdom</aff>
</contrib-group>
<pub-date pub-type="epub" publication-format="online">
<day>24</day>
        <month>10</month>
        <year>2013</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>16</volume>
<issue>1</issue>
<fpage>96</fpage>
<lpage>109</lpage>
<permissions>
<copyright-statement>© 2013 The Author(s)</copyright-statement>
<copyright-year>2013</copyright-year>
<license license-type="open-access" xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/">
          <license-p>This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
            Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use,
            distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source
            are credited. See <uri xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/</uri>.</license-p>
        </license>
</permissions>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.ai-journal.com/article/view/ai.1613"/>











        
      <abstract>
        <p>This article explores the spatial, architectural and conceptual relationships between
          landscape places, stone quarrying, and stone moving and building during Rapa Nui’s
          statue-building period. These are central themes of the ‘Rapa Nui Landscapes of
          Construction Project’ and are discussed using aspects of the findings of our recent
          fieldwork. The different scales of expression, from the detail of the domestic sphere to
          the monumental working of quarries, are considered. It is suggested that the
          impressiveness of Rapa Nui’s stone architecture is its conceptual coherence at the
          small scale as much as at the large scale.</p>
      </abstract>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <p>The remarkable nature of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) is so much more than its renowned colossal
      statues, known as <italic>moai</italic>. The <italic>moai</italic> are indisputably
      monumental; those set up on stone ceremonial platforms (<italic>ahu</italic>) are up to 10m in
      height (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F1">1</xref>), while even larger statues, up to a vast
      22m, remain at the statue quarry of Rano Raraku. However, what is most impressive and
      intellectually stimulating is the island-wide scale and interconnectivity of the architectural
      outcomes and meaning endowed in its prehistoric stone garnering, quarrying and construction
      activities (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B10">Hamilton <italic>et al</italic>., 2011</xref>).
      The ‘Rapa Nui Landscapes of Construction Project’ (LOC) is particularly concerned
      with the social and conceptual meanings of these construction undertakings and stone use. The
      Project was first reported in <italic>Archaeology International</italic>, when it was
      initially supported by a small grant from the British Academy (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B6">Hamilton, 2007</xref>). We are now two field seasons into a 4-year programme of AHRC-funded
      research. This AHRC project is based at UCL, in conjunction with co-investigators Colin
      Richards (University of Manchester) and Kate Welham (Bournemouth University), and our Project
      Partner, the University of the Highlands and Islands (led by Jane Downes). On the Island, the
      Project works with Rapa Nui elders and students and in close cooperation with CONAF (Chilean
      National Parks Authority, Rapa Nui) and MAPSE (the Island’s Museo Antropologico Padre
      Sebastian Englert).</p>
    <fig id="F1" orientation="portrait" position="float">
      <label>Fig. 1</label>
      <caption>
        <p>
<italic>Ahu</italic> Nau Nau, showing the canoe-shaped <italic>ahu</italic> platform, its
            <italic>poro</italic> (sea boulder) ramp and partly <italic>poro</italic>-paved plaza on
          the landward side, and Rano Raraku statues with <italic>pukao</italic>
          (‘hats’) in place.</p>
      </caption>
      <graphic xlink:href="Fig01_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
    </fig>
    <sec>
      <title>Living archaeology</title>
      <p>No archaeological fieldwork can or should be independent of the particular locale in which
        it takes place. Rapa Nui has a uniquely marooned island location, a difficult history and,
        today, a dynamic living community of c.5,000 persons. These three elements are at the core
        of any archaeological undertakings on the Island.</p>
      <p>Rapa Nui is a small South Pacific island of 164 square kilometres (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F2">2</xref>) at the south-easternmost point of the Polynesian
        Triangle made between Hawai’i, Aukland Island and Rapa Nui. It is surrounded by an
        infinity of sea, lying some 2,000km from its nearest neighbour, Pitcairn Island, and 3,700km
        from the mainland, Central Chile. Language characteristics, material culture and genetic
        analysis of mitochondrial DNA of prehistoric skeletons (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B5">Hagelberg, 1995</xref>) all indicate that Rapa Nui was first colonised by eastward
        voyaging Polynesians. The debated origin point includes an island in the Marquesas group,
        and Mangareva amongst the possibilities (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B2">Flenley and Bahn,
          2003: chapter 2</xref>). The arrival date of the founder population has been much
        disputed. Traditionally, on the basis of glottochronology, dated stratified finds and
        palaeo-environmental sequences, a ‘start’ date as early as c.AD 800 has been
        advanced. More recent radiocarbon dates, and a critique of the pre-existing sequences and
        dates, suggest a later date of around the 11th century AD for the arrival of Polynesian
        colonists (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B3">Flenley and Bahn, 2007a</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B4">2007b</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B13">Hunt and Lipo,
          2006</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B26">Wilmhurst <italic>et al</italic>.,
          2010</xref>). Either way, the construction of Rapa Nui’s iconic monuments appears to
        have been fully established by AD 1200.</p>
      <fig id="F2" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 2</label>
        <caption>
          <p>Map of Rapa Nui, showing the places mentioned in the text, including the statue roads;
            the area of red shading is the present-day town of Hanga Roa. The locations of some of
            the major image <italic>ahu</italic> (<italic>ahu</italic> with statues) around the
            coast are marked by black dots; &gt;100 of the <italic>ahu</italic> around the coast may
            originally have had statues, but these are too numerous to depict here (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B18">Martinsson-Wallin, 1994</xref>).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig02_web.png" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
      <p>The Island’s extreme isolation, the suggested fragility of its fossil volcanic
        landscape and its low biodiversity, Polynesian-introduced rats and, following its discovery
        by Europeans in 1772, the imported diseases/epidemics that the outside world brought to the
        Island in the mid-late 19th century, have all variously been used to account for Rapa
        Nui’s cultural heights and troughs (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B1">Diamond,
          2005</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B14">Hunt and Lipo, 2007</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B24">Sahlins, 1955</xref>). These include Rapa Nui’s remarkable
        cultural efflorescence during the statue-building period, the cessation of statue quarrying
        c.AD1650, with associated profound changes in the political system, and the disastrous
        plummet in population size, down from estimates of up to c.6,000 persons by the first
        European visitors to the 111 inhabitants recorded in the 1872 census (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B2">Flenley and Bahn, 2003: 169</xref>).</p>
      <p>Today, Rapa Nui is part of Chile, having been annexed in 1888. From 1903 until 1953 the
        island was rented for intensive sheep rearing. This resulted in the Rapa Nui population
        being forced off the land and being contained within the Island’s only settlement of
        Hanga Roa (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F2">2</xref>). Paradoxically, this also resulted
        in the preservation of the Island’s remarkably continuous landscapes of stone
        archaeological features that are the mainstay of its tourist economy today. This landscape
        includes: <italic>ahu</italic> (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F1">1</xref>); houses
        (including canoe-shaped houses: <italic>hare paenga</italic>); earthern cooking ovens with
        stone surrounds (<italic>umu</italic>); rock gardens and walled enclosures for plantings
          (<italic>manavai</italic>); chicken houses (<italic>hare moai</italic>); quarries and
        statue roads; and a substantial repertoire of petroglyphs. The great importance of this
        archaeological landscape was recognised by Chile in declaring Rapa Nui as a National Park in
        1935. Since 1996 Rapa Nui has been designated a UNESCO Cultural Landscape. The first
        commercial air-flights to Rapa Nui began in the 1960s and have greatly increased in recent
        times. Approximately 70,000 tourists now visit Rapa Nui each year. Concurrently, there has
        been a major revival of interest in indigenous traditions and in fostering and maintaining
        Rapa Nui identity and independence. The Chilean government is now returning land to the Rapa
        Nui – and there is an urgent need to understand how the integrity of the archaeology
        across the Rapa Nui landscape can best be maintained as part of this important process.</p>
      <p>Rapa Nui thus has a living archaeology that is meaningful and integral to the present-day
        Rapa Nui community, their sense of identity and their understanding and use of the Island.
        LOC aims to work with the Rapa Nui community to provide training and help to record,
        investigate and conserve their own remarkable archaeological past. In doing so LOC hopes to
        build a framework of knowledge that concurrently elucidates research questions and works
        collaboratively with the Rapa Nui community and authorities to provide resources and
        information for presenting Rapa Nui’s pre-contact past. Several Rapa Nui students,
        supervised by Sorobael Fati, a Rapa Nui elder (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F3">3</xref>),
        have worked regularly with us on our excavations, and last summer the Project set up a
        Bursary with UCL to bring a Rapa Nui university student studying archaeology to the UK, to
        join the Institute of Archaeology’s field training course at West Dean, West Sussex.
        Francisca Pakomio was the first recipient of this award (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F3">3</xref>).</p>
      <fig id="F3" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 3</label>
        <caption>
          <p>Rapa Nui colleagues. Clockwise from left: Sorobael Fati overlooking the 2013
            excavations in the interior of Puna Pau (Colin Richards and Jane Downes are planning the
            deeply stratified quarry tip lines); Francisca Pakomio on the UCL Institute of
            Archaeology training excavation at West Dean, West Sussex; and Susana Nahoe,
            Archaeologist for CONAF Rapa Nui participating in our <italic>umu</italic> ceremony at
            the end of a Puna Pau excavation season (photos: M. Seager Thomas).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig03_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
      <p>In a similar ethos we are working with CONAF to assist monitoring and managing Rapa
        Nui’s archaeological landscape. In January/February 2013, we undertook a survey for
        CONAF of the south-west branch of the ‘statue road’ (<italic>Ara Moai</italic>),
        from Rano Raraku to <italic>Ahu</italic> Tetenga (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F2">2</xref>): to verify and assess the archaeological context of its route; to study the
        state of preservation of the so-called ‘in transport statues’ along the route;
        and to make suggestions as to how best develop a tourist ‘<italic>Ara
        Moai</italic>’ trekking trail while protecting the archaeology of the route. This work
        has allowed us to consider the role and function of the ‘statue roads’ as
        connectors of the communities associated with the <italic>ahu</italic> at the coastline with
        Rano Raraku quarry.</p>
      <p>Some of LOC’s recent fieldwork work, its interpretative framework and how it is being
        developed to provide an integrated, island-wide understanding of the sites and monuments of
        the statue-building period, is discussed below.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>Landscape boundaries with other worlds</title>
      <p>Rapa Nui is triangular in shape and consists mainly of three extinct coalesced volcanoes:
        Terevaka, at an altitude of 507m, forms the bulk of the island, with two other volcanoes,
        Poike and Rano Kau, forming the eastern and southern tips (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F2">2</xref>). Lesser cones and other volcanic features include the crater Rano
        Raraku, where the majority of the statues were carved, and the cinder cone of Puna Pau,
        where the red scoria statue ‘topknots’ or ‘hats’
          (<italic>pukao</italic>) were quarried and also facing stones for the <italic>ahu</italic>
        platforms. There are three <italic>rano</italic> (freshwater crater lakes), at Rano Kau,
        Rano Raraku and Rano Aroi, near the summit of Terevaka, and a spring (<italic>puna</italic>)
        near Puna Pau. There are no permanent streams or rivers so that these sources of freshwater
        are exceptional in an otherwise waterless landscape; hence they have distinct
        phenomenological, as well as practical, qualities. There are also numerous volcanic caves,
        many below ground, that were used by the inhabitants for a range of activities and uses,
        including burial.</p>
      <p>The founder population may have transferred the conceptual importance of certain landscape
        places in Polynesian societies to Rapa Nui. In Polynesian cosmologies recurrent themes are:
        the importance of volcanoes and their crater vents as conduits between above-ground and
        interior worlds; concerns with boundaries between ‘outer’ and
        ‘inner’ worlds; and the idea that the spirits of the dead travelled homeward
        across the sea, westward to a point of ancestral origin (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B25">Williamson, 1933</xref>). We discuss these concerns in a Rapa Nui context below.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>The Puna Pau red ‘topknots’</title>
      <p>The Project’s focus of excavation has been in the Puna Pau quarry (Figs <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F3">3</xref> and <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F4">4</xref>), which is
        situated in the south-west of the Island. More than 100 <italic>pukao</italic>
        (‘topknots’ or ‘hats’) of red scoria are known either from the Puna
        Pau quarry and its outer slopes or from <italic>ahu</italic>. They are all made of the
        coarse, porous, dark red lava that comes from Puna Pau and are monumental in their own
        right, being large squat cylinders up to 2.5m tall and likewise in diameter. Ours are the
        first ever excavations at Puna Pau and are important for dating and defining activity at the
        quarry. The obsidian hydration dates that we obtained from our excavations on the outside of
        the crater indicate quarrying activity there from the 14th-17th centuries AD. This is in
        line with the established and later periods of statue use at the <italic>ahu</italic>.
        Quarrying inside the crater may have started earlier, and we await obsidian hydration dates
        and radiocarbon dates for LOC’s recent (2012/13) excavations in Puna Pau’s
        interior.</p>
      <fig id="F4" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 4</label>
        <caption>
          <p>Fieldwork at Puna Pau. Clockwise from top left: exterior of the Puna Pau crater, with
            the line of <italic>pukao</italic> marking the main route out of the quarry (photo: M.
            Seager Thomas); tomography analysis of the exterior of Puna Pau (image: S. Ovenden);
            excavation of a <italic>pukao</italic> and associated ‘road surface’ on the
            exterior of Puna Pau (photo: A. Stanford); and laser scanned topography of Puna Pau
            (image: K. Welham).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig04_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
      <p>We have used laser scanning and Global Position Satellite survey to map the complex
        present-day topography of Puna Pau (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F4">4</xref>). This
        complexity is the outcome of the reconfiguration of the exterior and interior of the cone by
        the major prehistoric quarrying activities that took place. Clearly, evidence of the
        earliest quarrying activities lies very deep below the present-day surface. We have used
        tomography (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F4">4</xref>), a form of geophysical prospecting
        that provides sections through deeply accumulated strata, together with electro-conductivity
        and fluxgate magnetometry survey, to investigate the existence of both short-lived and more
        formalised routes through and out of the quarry for the roughed-out
        <italic>pukao</italic>.</p>
      <p>LOC’s first excavation trench was located on the quarry exterior where a line of
        quarried <italic>pukao</italic> runs down the side of the cone. This was where our
        tomography survey had previously isolated the possibility of a compact ‘road’
        surface adjacent to the line of <italic>pukao</italic> (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B6">Hamilton, 2007</xref>: fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F6">6</xref>). Excavation in the
        vicinity of one of these <italic>pukao</italic> did uncover an ancient road surface, with
        evidence that the <italic>pukao</italic> had been deliberately placed to the side of it, in
        a ramped hollow (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F4">4</xref>). A finely-flaked obsidian adze
        had been placed, perhaps symbolically, underneath the base of this <italic>pukao</italic>.
        This suggests that the <italic>pukao</italic> running down the exterior of the Puna Pau cone
        were formally positioned as a monumental row marking a road/formal route-way into the quarry
        interior. The implication of this is that the quarry crater was meaningful in its own right
        – and that this was signalled by monumentally enhancing entry into it.</p>
      <p>Today, within Puna Pau’s interior, there are few remaining visible outcrops of
        workable scoria, the most pronounced of which form part of the southern slope, where a
        ‘rock-face’ revealing different bands of red scoria is visible. It appeared that
        some bands or strata had been exploited for <italic>pukao</italic> production and so this
        location was selected for one of the 2012/13 excavation trenches. This revealed the remains
        of bays from which the <italic>pukao</italic> were quarried and a carved pair of large
        ‘eyes’ above an emptied quarry bay (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F5">5</xref>). The eyes have a diameter of c.0.18m, with slightly protruding eyeballs, and are
        0.3m apart. They are of a size that means they can be seen from the lip of the crater prior
        to entering the quarry. These eyes add further to the idea that symbolism/sacred meaning was
        attached to the cinder cone and its associated quarrying activities.</p>
      <fig id="F5" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 5</label>
        <caption>
          <p>Carved eyes at the Puna Pau and Rano Raraku quarries. Clockwise from top left:
            3D-photogrammetry image of a single eye and pairs of lenticular and round carved eyes at
            Rano Raraku (A. Stanford); the pair of carved circular eyes in the interior of the Puna
            Pau crater; and a pair of carved lenticular eyes on the side of a Rano Raraku quarry bay
            (photos: M. Seager Thomas).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig05_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
      <p>Excavation of a second trench in the quarry interior, proximate to one of a group of
          <italic>pukao</italic> rough-outs lying on the present-day quarry surface, located a
        multi-surfaced road through the quarry that had already been picked up by our resistivity
        survey. Excavations there, and associated with the quarry face, have produced the first
        stratified assemblages of quarrying and working tools associated with <italic>pukao</italic>
        production. These tools comprise stone types from many locales across the Island and are
        indicative of island-wide networks of stone use.</p>
      <p>LOC’s recent work at Puna Pau therefore suggests several themes that we are exploring
        in other foci of our work on Rapa Nui. These include: the importance of eyes in Rapa Nui
        belief systems; the idea that quarry locales were potentially special places – to be
        travelled to, as much as being utilitarian places from which to garner products; and the
        interconnectivity of stone acquisition, use and meanings attached to Rapa Nui’s
        prehistoric stone architecture and its locations.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>The ‘eyes’ of Rano Raraku</title>
      <p>More than 1,000 <italic>moai</italic> are known, many of which remain at Rano Raraku, the
        statue quarry, either still attached to the rock or set up upright within the quarry (Fig.
          <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F6">6</xref>). Many others may have been completely buried by
        subsequent quarrying activities. This suggests that Rano Raraku, with its crater lake, was
        important not just as a source of freshwater and of stone for <italic>moai</italic>
        creation, but also as a place that connected with above-ground and below-ground
        ‘worlds’ (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B8">Hamilton <italic>et al</italic>.,
          2008</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B21">Richards <italic>et al</italic>.,
        2011</xref>).</p>
      <fig id="F6" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 6</label>
        <caption>
          <p>Rano Raraku statue quarry. Clockwise from left: statues remaining attached to the
            quarry rock on the crater exterior; the interior of Rano Raraku showing the crater lake
            and (at the right-hand bottom) the head and upper torso of a large <italic>in
              situ</italic> statue; and view of the exterior (photos: M. Seager Thomas).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig06_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
      <p>Rano Raraku has ‘eyes’ carved in association with its quarry bays and, in 2013,
        we undertook a review of these to see if they had any similarity in location or style to our
        Puna Pau ‘eyes’. We found one similar pair of circular, protruding eyes carved
        in a quarry face (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F5">5</xref>), but the c.25 others that we
        noted were lenticular in shape and similar to the eyes of the Rano Raraku statues when
        placed on the <italic>ahu</italic> (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F7">7</xref>). Adam
        Stanford of Aerialcam has documented these eyes using 3D photogrammetry. This provides a
        record for CONAF and, importantly, has identified eroded carvings of eyes that are no longer
        readily visible to the naked eye (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F5">5</xref>). Both single
        examples and pairs of these lenticular eyes occur immediately above or on the sides of many
        of the Rano Raraku quarry bays, both inside and outside the quarry.</p>
      <fig id="F7" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 7</label>
        <caption>
          <p>Detail of a Rano Raraku statue at <italic>Ahu</italic> Nau Nau, showing eye sockets and
              <italic>pukao</italic> ‘hat’ (photo: A. Stanford).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig07_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
      <p>This concern with eyes is interesting. It evokes ideas of the ‘living rock’
        that are noted in Polynesian ethnography: for example, the red scoria of the Marquesas,
        quarried for stone for ceremonial platforms, was considered to be living and able to
        replenish itself (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B15">Linton, 1925: 165</xref>). The watching
        eyes in the rock faces of the Puna Pau and Rano Raraku craters may point to a conceptual
        relationship with the eyes of the statues. The Rano Raraku statues are ‘blind’
        while remaining at the quarry – and during transport from the quarry (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F8">8</xref>). It is only those set up on the <italic>ahu</italic>
        that have been given eye sockets (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F7">7</xref>); occasional
        finds in their vicinity of lenticular coral irises, with scoria or obsidian pupils, suggest
        that the eyes of these <italic>moai</italic> were periodically activated by their insertion
        into the sockets (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B19">Martinsson-Wallin, 2007:
          46–47</xref>). The statues on the <italic>ahu</italic> were placed looking inland
        – away from the sea – and thus towards their source where ‘seeing’
        eyes are carved in the quarry faces. This suggests that there was a spatially integrated
        activation of places and material culture, through the ascription of sentinel attributes, to
        exert influences on the living.</p>
      <fig id="F8" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 8</label>
        <caption>
          <p>Geophysical prospection of ‘road’ statues (top and centre); and (bottom)
            conservation survey of a ‘road’ <italic>moai</italic> showing
            ‘blind’ eye with a weathering pattern suggesting that it was once standing
            (photos: A. Stanford).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig08_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>Follow the statue roads</title>
      <p>Carl Lipo and Terry Hunt have used satellite imagery to map the so-called ‘statue
        roads’, with their recumbent roadside ‘in-transit’ statues, and describe
        them as emanating like ‘spokes from Rano Raraku’ (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B16">2005:7</xref>; Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F2">2</xref>). The first recorded
        sighting was of the south-west statue road by Katherine Routledge (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B23">1919:194</xref>), who suggested the likelihood of an arrangement of roads over
        the Island to account for the many Rano Raraku <italic>moai</italic> across it. Routledge
        provided an account of an approach to Rano Raraku with ‘at least five magnificent
        avenues on each of which the pilgrim was greeted at intervals by a stone giant guarding the
        way to the sacred mountain’ (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B23">1919:196</xref>). This
        idea was later superseded by the still popular view that the recumbent statues along the
        roads were abandoned in transit. Lipo and Hunt (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B16">2005</xref>)
        suggest that the bifurcating pattern of roads, as they run out from Rano Raraku, reflects
        the routes that the statues were taken along to different <italic>ahu</italic>. An
        alternative perspective is that the routes to Routledge’s ‘sacred
        mountain’ were as important as the transport of some statues away from Rano Raraku.
        There are indications from past fieldwork that some of the statues were set up along the
        roadside. One of Routledge’s (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B23">1919</xref>) excavations
        proximate to the road revealed a pit in which perhaps a <italic>moai</italic> once stood.
        Excavations by Thor Heyerdahl and Arne Skjølsvold of two <italic>moai</italic> along
        the south-west road (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B12">Heyerdahl <italic>et al</italic>.,
          1989</xref>) suggested the presence of a ‘statue platform’ behind each of two
        recumbent <italic>moai</italic>.</p>
      <p>Preliminary geophysical work by LOC in the vicinity of the recumbent <italic>moai</italic>
        along the south-west <italic>moai</italic> road suggests further evidence for stone plinths,
        congruent with the idea that the statues were originally set up as monuments beside it (Fig.
          <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F8">8</xref>). LOC’s conservation survey for CONAF, along
        2km of the same road, systematically considered the weathering patterns of 16
        ‘road-side’ <italic>moai</italic> and the weathering features that might be
        expected on statues that were originally set upright and had stood for some time before
        toppling (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B11">Hamilton <italic>et al</italic>., 2013</xref>).
        The weathering patterns on several of these <italic>moai</italic> suggested that they had
        indeed been in an upright position for a prolonged period (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F8">8</xref>); this analysis is on-going. This is suggested by such features as
        having minimal weathering under the chin, a weathered upper belly and a less weathered under
        belly, and weathering on the under-eye area due to water drip from the overhanging brow.
        Such weathering patterns would have been unlikely to occur on statues that were in a
        recumbent position from early on in their history beyond the quarry.</p>
      <p>LOC’s fieldwork therefore suggests that the roads were monumentalised as much for
        journeys to Rano Raraku as for the transport of statues from Rano Raraku. Our archaeological
        survey for CONAF, on an approximate 20m-wide strip either side of the south-west statue
        road, produced numerous architectural features of a more domestic nature: chicken houses;
        canoe-shaped houses; cooking ovens; <italic>manavai</italic> complexes; and numerous minor
        quarries for building stone. This denotes that the sacred and everyday worlds were in close
        physical proximity and that the constant or periodic demarcation between the two was the
        course of the road itself and its monumentalisation, rather than through an exclusion zone
        proximate to the road.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>Architectural metaphors at different scales</title>
      <p>Monumentality in stone on Rapa Nui is not restricted to the statues, the statue roads and
        the <italic>ahu</italic> on which the statues were set up. Its architecture of the
        statue-building period suggests a complex intertwining of themes of origin, ancestry and
        conceptually dangerous boundaries between different worlds that are expressed within the
        imprints of the smallest to the largest of Rapa Nui’s stone structures, and recur
        spatially from the <italic>ahu</italic> at the coast to the houses and rock gardens of the
        interior. LOC’s on-going research is exploring the interconnection between these
        places and their architecture. Here, an example of the repetition of shared themes at
        different architectural scales and formats is briefly outlined using <italic>ahu</italic>
        and <italic>hare paenga</italic>, and this will be developed in our future work.</p>
      <p>The island’s coastline is ringed with image <italic>ahu</italic> and the statues on
        the <italic>ahu</italic> are traditionally believed to represent the ancestors. The backs of
        the <italic>ahu</italic> platforms face the sea and have crematoria on their seaward side,
        and the statues on these platforms likewise have their backs to the sea. A few image
          <italic>ahu</italic> occur inland, but it is notable that the majority are located at the
        interface between land and sea. Many of the <italic>ahu</italic> platforms have canoe-shaped
        bases and all had a <italic>poro</italic>-paved (beach boulder) ramp at their front (Fig.
          <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F1">1</xref>). In front of the <italic>ahu</italic> were plazas,
        which are presumed to have been places for ceremonies. Near the <italic>ahu</italic> these
        plazas were paved with <italic>poro</italic>, and beyond, landward, they were cleared of
        land stone and levelled (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F1">1</xref>). <italic>Ahu</italic>
        thus physically link land and sea with two sea metaphors: boat and sea boulders (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B10">Hamilton <italic>et al</italic>., 2011</xref>). The positioning
        of these <italic>ahu</italic> concurrently monumentalised, blocked and controlled the
        boundary between land and sea, with sea access being via a <italic>poro</italic>-paved ramp
        that is often located on one side of the <italic>ahu</italic> (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B7">Hamilton, 2010</xref>). Conceptually, <italic>ahu</italic> are located at the
        interface between the world of the living and that of the dead/ancestors, who were
        processed, deposited and monumentalised at the <italic>ahu</italic>. This land-edge location
        aligns with the Polynesian concept that on death the soul travels westward across the sea to
        the point of ancestral origin of the voyaging colonisers (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B7">Hamilton, 2010</xref>).</p>
      <p>We have likewise explored concepts of boundaries and interfaces between conceptual worlds
        for Rapa Nui’s <italic>hare paenga</italic> (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B9">Hamilton
          and Richards, in press</xref>). The <italic>hare paenga</italic> are often located just
        beyond and overlooking the <italic>ahu</italic> plaza, at the juncture with landscapes of
        the Island’s interior that are packed with domestic architecture and rock gardens. The
          <italic>hare paenga</italic> share the same visual, sea-related metaphors as the
          <italic>ahu</italic> in being boat-shaped in plan with <italic>poro</italic> pavements in
        front. Exceptionally, examples up to c.9m long and 1.6m high existed, as reported on during
        a brief visit by HMS <italic>Portland</italic> in 1853 (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B22">Richards, 2008: 86</xref>). In general, however, they have excessively substantial stone
        foundations with holes drilled at regular intervals to take light, stake superstructures.
        John Gilbert, Master of the <italic>Resolution</italic>, described them in 1774 as being
        covered with combinations of plantain and other leaves with rush and grass thatch, and as
        being from c.3.5m long and 1.2m in height at their centre (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B22">Richards, 2008: 17</xref>). Interestingly, the <italic>hare paenga</italic> foundations
        are made of the stones from many preceding houses, often five or six, and this can be
        tracked quite precisely via the mismatched combinations of stone widths, half
          <italic>pu</italic> (hole/s) and entrance stones reused in the main sections of the house
        foundations (Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F9">9</xref>). <italic>Hare paenga</italic> can
        thus be considered to be conceptually and physically ancestral houses with foundations of
        lineages of stone, just as <italic>ahu</italic> were places associated with lineages of
        ancestors.</p>
      <fig id="F9" orientation="portrait" position="float">
        <label>Fig. 9</label>
        <caption>
          <p>
<italic>Hare paenga</italic> (canoe-shaped houses). Clockwise from top left: lay-out of
            the stone base of <italic>hare paenga</italic> (photo: A. Stanford); Mike Seager Thomas
            with one of the ‘house gods’ in the Island’s museum (MAPSE) store; and
            two <italic>hare paenga</italic> foundations comprising the foundation stones of several
            former <italic>hare paenga</italic> (photos: M. Seager Thomas).</p>
        </caption>
        <graphic xlink:href="Fig09_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
      </fig>
      <p>The <italic>hare paenga</italic> encountered by Pierre Loti in 1872 (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B17">2004: 69–73</xref>) are described as darkened/dim inside with – at
        certain times – sunbeams penetrating the ‘hole that serves as a door’. The
        entrance gaps of <italic>hare paenga</italic> are less than 50cm wide and entry required
        crawling on hands and knees to get through the diminished height of the entry point. Several
        accounts suggest that the <italic>hare paenga</italic> were used primarily for sleeping
        (e.g. <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B17">Loti, 1872 [2004]: 73</xref>), but the larger ones may
        have been community/assembly houses (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B20">Metraux, 1971:
          200</xref>). The excessive bulkiness of the foundation stones suggests that this curbing
        also had a conceptual role in protecting a key boundary between the exterior worlds of the
        living and the interior worlds of the sleeping/assembly (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B9">Hamilton and Richards, in press</xref>). Just as the seaward ramp down the side of an
          <italic>ahu</italic> was a conduit between the real and conceptual worlds of land and sea,
        with the last sight on going down the ramp being the eyes of the statues, entering and
        exiting a <italic>hare paenga</italic> appears to have been a graded and controlled
        transition. For the <italic>hare paenga</italic> this included a phenomenological transition
        from light to dark and from upright position to scrabbling on all fours – and vice
        versa on exit. The <italic>hare paenga</italic> entrance also appears to have been
        symbolically guarded. An illustration by Loti in (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B17">1872</xref>) shows two small statues either side of a <italic>hare paenga</italic>
        entrance and he describes one house entrance as being ‘guarded by two granite
        divinities with sinister expressions’ (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B17">Loti, 1872
          [2004]: 69</xref>). Metraux (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B20">1940 [1971]: fig. 17</xref>)
        illustrates two small pillars on either side of a house entrance at <italic>Ahu</italic> Te
        Peu, which may have served a similar purpose, and mentions the existence of ‘small
        stone images’ of a similar size. This has led us to search for small stone statues of
        which there turn out to be a substantial number in the Island’s museum stores (Fig.
          <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F9">9</xref>).</p>
      <p>Thus, albeit at a different scale to the configuration of an <italic>ahu</italic>, or
        monumentalisation of the vents and cones and entry/exit routes of fossil volcanoes, the
          <italic>hare paenga</italic> may have shared a common, Island-wide cosmology in which the
        boundaries between different conceptual works were considered to be dangerous to the extent
        that they required to be marked and strengthened through architectural devices.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>Conclusion</title>
      <p>The above but touches upon some of the themes, findings and interpretative trails of
        LOC’s recent work on Rapa Nui. It is an interim observation with a number of samples
        waiting dating and further analysis/fieldwork to come. For the moment what this article
        hopes to express is an exemplification of the complexity of Rapa Nui’s archaeology and
        its ingenuity of expression that can only be fully revealed when studies have been carried
        out across multiple categories of architecture and activity. ‘Understanding’
        this ingenuity benefits from its consideration within a Polynesian framework of cosmology.
        An integrated perspective on Rapa Nui’s archaeology and its use of stone <italic>par
          excellence</italic> is where the revelation of the weight of its exceptionality must
        surely lie.</p>
    </sec>
  </body>
  <back>
    <ack>
      <p>Excavations and fieldwork were undertaken under a Permit issued by the Chilean Ministry of
        Culture (ORN No 1699 CARTA 720 DEL 31 del 01.2008), and with the support of the Rapa Nui
        Council of Elders, CONAF and MAPSE.</p>
      <p>We would like to thank the Island’s Governor, Carmen Cardinali Paoa, and Sonia Haoa
        Cardinali and Lili Gonzales, for their advice and guidance.</p>
      <p>Susanna Nahoe, CONAF’s archaeologist, and Francisco Torres H, Director of MAPSE, are
        Co-Directors of our project and have greatly assisted and advised us in undertaking work on
        the island. We would also like to thank Enrique Tucki of CONAF for his generous advice and
        assistance.</p>
      <p>The LOC Core Team comprises: Sue Hamilton (Principal Investigator), Colin Richards
        (Co-Investigator), Kate Welham (Co-Investigator), Jago Cooper (for 2012), Jane Downes, David
        Govantes, Mike Seager Thomas, Lawrence Shaw, Adam Stanford and Ruth Whitehouse.</p>
      <p>On Rapa Nui we would like to thank the following people who worked with us: Sorababel Fati
        (Excavation Supervisor) and Rapanui students: Joaquin Soler Hoti, Isaias Hey Gonzalez,
        Francisa Pakomio Villanueva, Tiki Paoa and Alejandro Tucki Castro.</p>
    </ack>
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