Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Pacific Explorers :: essays research papers fc
 Andrew Sharp claims in his Ancient Voyagers in the Pacific  published in 1956 that the Pacific Islanders did not possess  the necessary navigational and sailing technology to  deliberately navigate the distances between islands of the  Pacific when colonizing these islands. He claims  colonization was random and accidental. However, more  recent studies from 1972 on of Pacific navigation suggest  deliberate navigation and colonization was possible and did  take place. These studies have been supported by  reenactments of voyages, computer simulations, and newly  acquired information regarding preparation for distant  voyages. Andrew Sharp supports his claim of accidental  colonization by citing numerous examples of lost voyagers  landing on populated islands, their testimony or second  hand information recorded by Captain Cook. Sharp claims  the only distant voyages were confined to "Western  Polynesia-Fiji and the Tahiti-Tuamotu archipelago" (Sharp  1956:2). He states that the longest offshore voyages made  without landing on intermediate islands included distances  of up to three hundred miles, separating Tonga, Fiji,  Samoa, Rotuma and the Ellice Islands, and distances up to  two-hundred and thirty miles, separating Tahiti from the  Tuamotu islands. Sharp refers to an account by Captain  Cook's interpreter, Omai, who discovered three of his own  countrymen from Tahiti, who landed on Atiu, six hundred  miles away. They were the sole survivors of twenty people,  blown off course in a sudden gale while attempting to  voyage from Tahiti to Raiatea, one hundred miles away.  Sharp relies on generalizations given in Cook's logs  referring to colonization of the remote islands of Polynesia.  Cook refers to the accidental voyage to Atiu stating "this  will serve to explain, better than a thousand conjectures of  speculative reason, how the detached parts of the earth,  and in particular, how the South Seas, may have been  peopled; especially those that lie remote from any inhabited  continent, or from each other." (Sharp 1956:4) Sharp uses  examples procured from Cook's log book, citing  observations of Anderson, ship surgeon in charge of natural  history observations. "The knowledge they have of other  islands is no doubt, traditional; and has been communicated  to them by the natives of those islands, driven accidentally  upon their coasts, who besides giving them the names,  could easily inform them of the direction in which the places  lie from whence they came, and of the number of days they  had upon the sea." (Sharp 1956:7) Sharp discusses the  navigational technology of the Tongans, with most of his  knowledge based on Cook's observations. "The sun is their  guide by day and the stars at night. When these are  obscured, they have recourse to the points from which the  winds and waves come upon the vessel. If during the  obstruction the winds and waves should shift. .  					  Pacific Explorers  ::  essays research papers  fc   Andrew Sharp claims in his Ancient Voyagers in the Pacific  published in 1956 that the Pacific Islanders did not possess  the necessary navigational and sailing technology to  deliberately navigate the distances between islands of the  Pacific when colonizing these islands. He claims  colonization was random and accidental. However, more  recent studies from 1972 on of Pacific navigation suggest  deliberate navigation and colonization was possible and did  take place. These studies have been supported by  reenactments of voyages, computer simulations, and newly  acquired information regarding preparation for distant  voyages. Andrew Sharp supports his claim of accidental  colonization by citing numerous examples of lost voyagers  landing on populated islands, their testimony or second  hand information recorded by Captain Cook. Sharp claims  the only distant voyages were confined to "Western  Polynesia-Fiji and the Tahiti-Tuamotu archipelago" (Sharp  1956:2). He states that the longest offshore voyages made  without landing on intermediate islands included distances  of up to three hundred miles, separating Tonga, Fiji,  Samoa, Rotuma and the Ellice Islands, and distances up to  two-hundred and thirty miles, separating Tahiti from the  Tuamotu islands. Sharp refers to an account by Captain  Cook's interpreter, Omai, who discovered three of his own  countrymen from Tahiti, who landed on Atiu, six hundred  miles away. They were the sole survivors of twenty people,  blown off course in a sudden gale while attempting to  voyage from Tahiti to Raiatea, one hundred miles away.  Sharp relies on generalizations given in Cook's logs  referring to colonization of the remote islands of Polynesia.  Cook refers to the accidental voyage to Atiu stating "this  will serve to explain, better than a thousand conjectures of  speculative reason, how the detached parts of the earth,  and in particular, how the South Seas, may have been  peopled; especially those that lie remote from any inhabited  continent, or from each other." (Sharp 1956:4) Sharp uses  examples procured from Cook's log book, citing  observations of Anderson, ship surgeon in charge of natural  history observations. "The knowledge they have of other  islands is no doubt, traditional; and has been communicated  to them by the natives of those islands, driven accidentally  upon their coasts, who besides giving them the names,  could easily inform them of the direction in which the places  lie from whence they came, and of the number of days they  had upon the sea." (Sharp 1956:7) Sharp discusses the  navigational technology of the Tongans, with most of his  knowledge based on Cook's observations. "The sun is their  guide by day and the stars at night. When these are  obscured, they have recourse to the points from which the  winds and waves come upon the vessel. If during the  obstruction the winds and waves should shift. .  					    
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