3D model shows small clans created Easter Island statues
Easter Island is famous for its giant monumental statues, called moai, built some 800 years ago. The volcanic rock used for the moai came from a quarry site called Rano Raraku. Archaeologists have created a high-resolution interactive 3D model of the quarry site to learn more about the processes used to create the moai. (You can explore the full interactive model here.) According to a paper published in the journal PLoS ONE, the model shows that there were numerous independent groups, probably family clans, that created the moai, rather than a centralized management system.
βYou can see things that you couldnβt actually see on the ground. You can see tops and sides and all kinds of areas that just would never be able to walk to,β said co-author Carl Lipo of Binghamton University. βWe can say, βHere, go look at it.β If you want to see the different kinds of carving, fly around and see stuff there. Weβre documenting something that really has needed to be documented, but in a way thatβs really comprehensive and shareable.β
Lipo is one of the foremost experts on the Easter Island moai. In October, we reported on Lipoβs experimental confirmationβbased on 3D modeling of the physics and new field tests to re-create that motionβthat Easter Islandβs people transported the statues in a vertical position, with workers using ropes to essentially βwalkβ the moai onto their platforms. To explain the presence of so many moai, the assumption has been that the island was once home to tens of thousands of people.


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