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The
Marquesas Islands Today
The Marquesas Islands are an isolated group of thirteen volcanic islands
and rocks situated on the eastern edge of Polynesia between 7 and 12 degrees
south of the equator, and 138 and 142 degrees west latitude. Along with
the Society Islands the Australs, the Tuamotus, the Gambiers and Mangareva,
the Marquesas are a part of the French Polynesia, a French overseas territory.
Due to French disinterest and the anti-Marquesan orientation of Tahitian
politics for the last 25 years or so, these islands have been quite neglected
in comparison to the economic development which has taken place in other
areas of French Polynesia, e.g. in Tahiti, Bora Bora, Rai’ate’a and on
the major Tuamotu atolls. The Marquesas do not have an international port
or airfield, and cannot be reached directly from the Americas except by
private yachts or aircraft. All goods shipped to the Marquesas mus come
through Tahiti where exorbitant taxes are imposed and then must be shipped
to the Marquesas, adding freight costs to already expensive commodities.
Tourists wishing to visit the Marquesas can only do so through Tahiti,
from where one can embark on the M/S Aranui, by far the best way to see
the islands, or alternatively one may take Air Tahiti, the domestic air
service which flies daily to Nuku Hiva and Hiva Oa the largest islands
of the archipelago. From these two islands, connections are available
to Ua Pou and Ua Huka on a less regular basis.
The Geology of the Marquesas
Two terms encompass the geological history of the Marquesas Islands: plate
tectonics and volcanism. The Marquesas, like nearly all other island groups
of Eastern Polynesia (all of French Polynesia, Hawai’i, and the Cooks),
sit on the Pacific Tectonic Plate, the largest of the 13 major plates
that make up the earth’s crust. Propelled by lava oozing from the Eastern
Pacific Mid-Ocean Ridge, this enormous plate is sliding northwest toward
Japan and Siberia at the astounding speed of 10-15 cm per year, carrying
with it the total burden of all these archipelagos as well as the submarine
mountains which repose thereon.
Beneath the Pacific plate are “hot spots” or “ hot regions; “ areas where
hot magma rises from the earth’s inner core, burning through the plate
on occasion to form submarine mountains , or even breaking through the
ocean surface to form islands. Such processes take millions of years to
accomplish, but in terms of geological time, this is but a blink of the
eye. Moreover, none of these geological processes is ever finished: the
earth is a dynamic organism, constantly in transition, and the only thing
constant in its geological history is change itself.
The Marquesas arose from lava welling up through a fractured, weak area
in the Pacific plate, beginning about 7 million years ago. The oldest
islands in the archipelago are the islands of Eiao. Hatu’utu, Motu One,
and surrounding rocks and reefs along a line 8 degrees south of the equator.
Magma kept on flowing upward as the plate moved northwest over the next
6 million years or so generating the foundations of the remaining islands
in the archipelago. . Originally it appears that there were only three
major land masses where the Marquesas now stand: a northern island, of
which Eiao and the other rocks, Hatu ‘utu, Motu One, and the associated
rocks are remnants; a large island including Nuku Hiva, Ua Huka and Ua
Pou ; and another large island including all the islands of the southern
group . These “super” islands apparently blew apart or sank beneath the
seas, leaving only remnants; the islands that we see today. For several
million years, many of the islands remained beneath the surface of the
sea, only emerging above the ocean surface after 2-3 million years had
elapsed. The southernmost island in the Marquesas group is Fatu Iva, which
is only 1.25 million years old.
Today, there is a “hot spot” south of Fatu Iva, and there are still traces
of volcanic activity and instability along the entire length of the archipelago.
Eiao has been found to be geologically quite unstable by French investigators
who were seeking to determine the possibility of conducting underground
nuclear weapons tests there. There are also volcanic sulphur gas outlets
along the south coast of Hiva Oa, andseveral islands have mineral springs
of volcanic origin. Finally, occasional mild earth tremors are noted.
All of this shows that the Hawaiian volcano goddess, Pele (also known
to the ancient Marquesans), is not yet sleeping soundly in the Marquesas.
A recent (1982) totally unexpected eruption in Mehetia, 90 miles south
of Tahiti, shows how dangerous it can be to become complacent about volcanism.
As a result of the volcanic origin, all the Marquesas Islands are composed
solely of volcanic stone: basalts and hawaiite. There are no sedimentary
rocks on the islands. One island, Ua Pou, has a significant amount of
trachyte, indicating a possible origin from a different level of the earth’s
lithosphere. In some of this trachyte one finds attractive mineral formations
resembling yellow flowers: the famous flower stones of Ua Pou.
Because of the islands’ location, lying across the cool Humboldt current
from Peru, the seas around the islands are too cool to support the growth
of coral reefs such as one sees in Tahiti and the other Society Islands.
There is, however, some coral in some bay heads, where the water is shallow
and more easily warmed by the sun. The lack of fringing reefs had a profound
effect on Marquesan culture, causing the Marquesans to focus on deep sea
fish as a source of food.
The Prehistory of the Marquesas
Archeological investigations have revealed that the Marquesas archipelago
was settled from Western Polynesia sometime in the period between 500
BC and 300 BC. The earliest C-14 dated sites are all in areas that would
not have been the most favorable for habitation by the first settlers:
Ha’atuatua on Nuku Hiva, Ana Pua on Ua Pou, and Hane on Ua Huka, all of
which date to the middle of the second century BC. Another site, a cave
in Hanatekua, Hiva Oa, dates to 80 AD but the date is from a sample taken
from deposits one meter above the bottom of the cave. The lowest deposits
were not dated and would be certainly older than 80 AD. The first settlers
brought with them pottery, some of which was made in Fiji. Pottery has
been found on Nuku Hiva, Ua Huka and Hiva Oa. This pottery is of the type
known as Lapita Plain, a characteristic culture trait of the Lapita culture,
which is considered to be the ancestral culture of the Polynesian peoples.
(The Lapita culture arose in western Melanesia some 1900 years BC and
moved rapidly eastward along the north coast of New Guinea through Melanesia
and into Fiji, Western Polynesia, and New Caledonia, by about 1600 BC.
The Lapita peoples were maritime traders: extensive archeological work
in Melanesia has uncovered evidence of Lapita trade routes up to 2600
km in length).
The early Marquesans brought with them the entire kit of Polynesian useful
plants: breadfruit, taro, pandanus, yams, sweet potatoes, coconuts, etc.
They also brought with them pigs, dogs, chickens, and rats, as well as
skinks and geckos who apparently came as stow-aways. Another element in
the Marquesan diet was human flesh, for there is evidence of cannibalism
from the earliest times. The soil of the Marquesas proved to be excellent
for breadfruit and the entire economy of the culture was based on that
staple, derived from large groves planted in the deep well –watered valleys.
The Marquesans seem to have always maintained some kinds of contacts
with other archipelagos, as evidenced by artifacts which seem to reflect
trade; such as poi pounders of Tahitian type, exotic types of stone found
in archeological sites, as well as artifacts made from large pearl shells
which appear to originate in the Tuamotus.
After approximately 1000 years, the best valleys of the Marquesas Islands
began to become overpopulated. Settlements spread from the main, well-watered
valleys on the southern and eastern coasts into more remote areas with
reduced precipitation and less fertile, rocky soils. At the same time,
there is evidence of tribal warfare in the form of fortifications and
observation posts on dominant ridgelines around major valleys.
It is clear that there was an abundant supply of manpower and food resources
in the main valleys for it is only shortly thereafter, around 1300-1400
AD, that large monumental stone structures appear, stone house platforms
(paepae) and temple platforms (me’ae) as well as sprawling tribal ceremonial
complexes (tohua) built around large rectangular dance plazas, several
hundred feet long, built on massive artificial terraces several meters
high. This tohua were the centers of public ceremonial tribal activity;
each tribe had at least one, although when the tribe consisted of more
than a single clan some had more than one. These often gigantic structures
were built strictly by manpower, equipped with nothing more complex than
levers of wood. During the construction of such monuments, the chief was
responsible for feeding the labor force, which required in turn a capability
for storing large quantities of food especially breadfruit paste, which
was stored in packets in huge pits . The paste fermented naturally, becoming
what the Marquesans called ma: this was mixed with freshly -pounded breadfruit
paste to make the Marquesan staple: popoi. Remnants of these ma pits may
be seen throughout Marquesan valleys. Two especially large pits, 10 feet
or more square and some 30 feet deep, may be found deep in Taipi valley.
The Marquesans engaged in prodigious construction activities throughout
the last several centuries before the coming of the Europeans. So diligent
were they that the floors and the slopes of every valley on the south,
east, and north coasts of the largest islands are presently covered with
stone ruins. Such contruction activity bears mute witness to the prestige
and power of the chiefs and the priests. According to early European visitors
they were not necessarily easy to pick out from the lesser Marquesans
who flocked to visiting ships, but they were certainly deeply respected
and feared. Mgr. Rene-Ildefonse Dordillon, bishop of the Marquesas during
the years 1855-1888, made a very telling comment about chiefly power in
the Marquesas: “No one commands, but everyone obeys!” The supernatural
power of the chiefs, whose ancestry could be traced directly to the gods,
was paramount. We know that warriors, priests, and others could also rise
from the mass of the population to become chiefs, by demonstrating unusual
abilities but this was not a common occurrence.
The large stone tiki which still stand on several temple sites and tribal
ceremonial centers around the archipelago are only remnants of the vast
array of monumental statues in wood and stone which were found everywhere
in the Marquesas, and have since diappeared into museums or private collections
, or simply due to weather in the case of the wooden figures. The stone
tiki which were seen by the Norwegian fantasist Thor Heyerdahl, as evidence
of Peruvian Indian contact in the ninth century AD, in fact turn out to
have been sculptured around 1700-1750 AD, almost two hundred years after
the European discovery of the Marquesas in 1595 (see below: History of
European Contacts).
The Marquesan population grew to an estimated 100,000-120,000, soon before
the main European onslaught in the 1790s. Each valley was held by a tribe,
which was normally composed of a several subtribes, in fact clans, all
related by loose kinship bonds. Warfare was endemic, with a constant round
of raids and reprisals taking place. There were traditional alliances
among groups of tribes, but these were seldom honored, in a situation
of constantly shifting opportunistic intertribal relationships. Droughts
occasionally caused serious hardships.
The Marquesans possessed a wide range of watercraft, ranging from small
dugout outrigger canoes to large twin-hull double canoes over 60 feet
long. These vessels served for major fishing expeditions (organized net
fishing was very common) for war, for interisland and interarchipelago
travel, and for exploration in search of new lands. When tribes were defeated
in war they often took to the canoes rather than remain and suffer the
consequences at the hands of the victors.
Although discovered by the Spaniards in 1595, and visited by Cook in 1774,
it was not until the 1790s that the Marquesas first encountered Europeans
in large numbers, and in the brief period of 60 years, the two thousand
year old culture disintegrated, as the Marquesans themselves were wiped
out by introduced diseases (mainly childhood communicable diseases and
VD) as well as the effects of alcohol, and firearms. After 1838, the repressive
policies of the Catholic Mission and the French administration working
in concert, explicitly targeted many vital aspects of the culture, banning
tattoing, singing, dancing, artwork and any activities related to the
old religion.
You can contact Dr. Suggs via:
Email: mongonui@msn.com
Phone: 208-429-1619 (USA)
Fax: 208-429-1825
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