Hey guys,
Well got into a discussion with a co-worker this week over Easter Island. He claims that we don't know how the statues were erected and that it's all a big mystery... that we with all our technology of the cranes we couldn't erect even one... he saw it on TV. I told him that we knew how they did it (using wood that used to grow on the island etc). He remains unconviced. Does anyone have a good credible link or something so that I can send it to him to show him that he is wrong? Some kind of video of people moving the statue? A consensus of the anthropologists and/or archaeologists on this issue?
All I have so far is a wiki link with: "It is not known exactly how the moai were moved but the process almost certainly required human energy, ropes, wooden sledges and/or rollers. Another theory is that the moai may have been "walked" by rocking them forward. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavel_PavelPavel Pavel and his successful experiment showed that only 17 people with ropes are needed for relatively fast transportation of the statues)."
Any help is appreciated
Well got into a discussion with a co-worker this week over Easter Island. He claims that we don't know how the statues were erected and that it's all a big mystery... that we with all our technology of the cranes we couldn't erect even one... he saw it on TV. I told him that we knew how they did it (using wood that used to grow on the island etc). He remains unconviced. Does anyone have a good credible link or something so that I can send it to him to show him that he is wrong? Some kind of video of people moving the statue? A consensus of the anthropologists and/or archaeologists on this issue?
All I have so far is a wiki link with: "It is not known exactly how the moai were moved but the process almost certainly required human energy, ropes, wooden sledges and/or rollers. Another theory is that the moai may have been "walked" by rocking them forward. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavel_PavelPavel Pavel and his successful experiment showed that only 17 people with ropes are needed for relatively fast transportation of the statues)."
Any help is appreciated