On the improbability of pre-European Polynesian voyages to Antarctica: a response to Priscilla Wehi and colleagues
- PMID: 39440189
- PMCID: PMC11485678
- DOI: 10.1080/03036758.2021.1973517
On the improbability of pre-European Polynesian voyages to Antarctica: a response to Priscilla Wehi and colleagues
Abstract
Recent publications by Wehi and colleagues assert that Māori or other Polynesians in the pre-European era voyaged to and from the Antarctic. Such ideas have been advanced for more than a century, largely in relation to Rarotongan traditions translated by Percy Smith. As the juxtaposition of unexamined Polynesian traditions with historical archives is problematic for both historiography and matauranga Māori, an analytical approach is taken here to the traditional evidence. It is argued that a key assertion referring to frozen seas has a different and more probable interpretation and that there are no compelling traditions of Antarctic voyaging. In addition, Polynesian voyaging through the circumpolar westerlies would have little chance of success and archaeological evidence of Polynesian voyaging does not extend south of about 50° South. It is concluded that Antarctic voyaging by pre-European Polynesians seems most unlikely.
Keywords: Antarctic; Maori; Polynesian voyaging; sailing conditions; translation errors.
© 2021 The Royal Society of New Zealand.
Conflict of interest statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
References
-
- Anderson AJ. 1998. The welcome of strangers. Dunedin: University of Otago Press.
-
- Anderson AJ. 2009. Prehistoric archaeology in the Auckland Islands, New Zealand subantarctic region. In: Dingwall PR, Jones KL, Egerton R, editor. In care of the Southern Ocean. Auckland: NZAA Monograph; p. 9–37.
-
- Anderson AJ. 2014. Te Ao Tawhito, the old world 3000 BC-AD 1830. Wellington: Bridget Williams Books.
-
- Anderson AJ. 2016. The making of the Māori middle ages. Journal of New Zealand Studies NS. 23:2–18.
-
- Anderson A, Conte E, Smith I, Szabó K.. 2019. New excavations at Fa‘ahia (Huahine, Society Islands) and chronologies of colonization in central East Polynesia. Journal of Pacific Archaeology. 10:1–14.
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Research Materials