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Maoris eat roast pig for breakfast. Malays gave up esting it. And in taiwan, no chance to get babi hutan as chinese will get it first.only thing is that the Maori are more heavily built than taiwainese and malays. maybe lived in a colder clikmate
they went on rafts and paddled from asian continent to islands in south pacific, and as each succeeding generation and cohort sexplored islands further out, only the very strong and tough ones survived and passed their genes down. by the time they got to kiwiland, only the big strong ones survived as they fought for territories and mating rights. they carried the same big strong genes on island hopping conquests to fiji, tahiti, samoa, tonga, and finally hawaii. fat ones remain in outer islands as they need sextra fat to survive very long sea journeys. this is why samoans, tahitians, hawaiians are majority fat. i believe some hawaiians tried further journeys to the american continent but they died out before reaching land. the polynesian cultural museum in honolulu tells stories and displays sexhibits to map the sexploits of these seafarers.only thing is that the Maori are more heavily built than taiwainese and malays. maybe lived in a colder clikmate
Has the kon tiki theory been officially debunked?they went on rafts and paddled from asian continent to islands in south pacific, and as each succeeding generation and cohort sexplored islands further out, only the very strong and tough ones survived and passed their genes down. by the time they got to kiwiland, only the big strong ones survived as they fought for territories and mating rights. they carried the same big strong genes on island hopping conquests to fiji, tahiti, samoa, tonga, and finally hawaii. fat ones remain in outer islands as they need sextra fat to survive very long sea journeys. this is why samoans, tahitians, hawaiians are majority fat. i believe some hawaiians tried further journeys to the american continent but they died out before reaching land. the polynesian cultural museum in honolulu tells stories and displays sexhibits to map the sexploits of these seafarers.
debunked by an overwhelming majority of scientists, historians, archaelogists, marine sexperts as there’s no evidence to confirm an america-polynesian sexploration (from south america to the pacific islands). the asia-polynesian theory is supported by archaelogical, cultural, linguistic, and most important and conclusive of all, genetic evidence.Has the kon tiki theory been officially debunked?
and you've proven again that there's not a single thing that I know about that you don't already know better.they went on rafts and paddled from asian continent to islands in south pacific, and as each succeeding generation and cohort sexplored islands further out, only the very strong and tough ones survived and passed their genes down. by the time they got to kiwiland, only the big strong ones survived as they fought for territories and mating rights. they carried the same big strong genes on island hopping conquests to fiji, tahiti, samoa, tonga, and finally hawaii. fat ones remain in outer islands as they need sextra fat to survive very long sea journeys. this is why samoans, tahitians, hawaiians are majority fat. i believe some hawaiians tried further journeys to the american continent but they died out before reaching land. the polynesian cultural museum in honolulu tells stories and displays sexhibits to map the sexploits of these seafarers.
did you know that babi is one of the few truly malay words? from a cultural touchstone to a forbidden food. *sigh* ideologies of invaders.Maoris eat roast pig for breakfast. Malays gave up esting it. And in taiwan, no chance to get babi hutan as chinese will get it first.
interestingly, it’s not a fringe subject for me. i actually spent time combing through archives and evidence on polynesia during my research on ww2 in the pacific. there’s a wealth of material and resources collected by american troops when they cleared out jap strongholds island by island during ww2. for example, the documentary on how the japs searched and recovered the body of yamamoto from a downed plane near panguna, bougainville plus later sexploration by americans to find the fusilage and remains of the wreck remains very vivid in my mind. i’m also very intrigued by dancing, music, songs, costumes of various polynesian islands. you can see the progression of floral and feather brilliance in dancers’ headwear and clothing in a lu’au show starting usually from fiji, then to tonga, samoa, maori in nz, tahiti, and finally hawaii. costumes were dull and minimal in fiji, then got brighter and more colorful as they progress to tahiti and hawaii. the best and most beautiful is from tahiti, possibly from the large colorful plumes plucked from a variety of birds there. the other subject of interest for me are the spice islands of indonesia. must sail the indon seas visiting these islands on a luxury yacht before i kaput. bucket list.and you've proven again that there's not a single thing that I know about that you don't already know better.
I'M NOT WORTHY!!!
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That does not explain how they missed australia.they went on rafts and paddled from asian continent to islands in south pacific, and as each succeeding generation and cohort sexplored islands further out, only the very strong and tough ones survived and passed their genes down. by the time they got to kiwiland, only the big strong ones survived as they fought for territories and mating rights. they carried the same big strong genes on island hopping conquests to fiji, tahiti, samoa, tonga, and finally hawaii. fat ones remain in outer islands as they need sextra fat to survive very long sea journeys. this is why samoans, tahitians, hawaiians are majority fat. i believe some hawaiians tried further journeys to the american continent but they died out before reaching land. the polynesian cultural museum in honolulu tells stories and displays sexhibits to map the sexploits of these seafarers.
that is very interesting!interestingly, it’s not a fringe subject for me. i actually spent time combing through archives and evidence on polynesia during my research on ww2 in the pacific. there’s a wealth of material and resources collected by american troops when they cleared out jap strongholds island by island during ww2. for example, the documentary on how the japs searched and recovered the body of yamamoto from a downed plane near panguna, bougainville plus later sexploration by americans to find the fusilage and remains of the wreck remains very vivid in my mind. i’m also very intrigued by dancing, music, songs, costumes of various polynesian islands. you can see the progression of floral and feather brilliance in dancers’ headwear and clothing in a lu’au show starting usually from fiji, then to tonga, samoa, maori in nz, tahiti, and finally hawaii. costumes were dull and minimal in fiji, then got brighter and more colorful as they progress to tahiti and hawaii. the best and most beautiful is from tahiti, possibly from the large colorful plumes plucked from a variety of birds there. the other subject of interest for me are the spice islands of indonesia. must sail the indon seas visiting these islands on a luxury yacht before i kaput. bucket list.
wow! those guys sure did some travelling!according to map, png (mainly east timor) and nearby melanesia (of which bougainville is one of the islands) was the launching pad for countless sea journeys into the south pacific. it was fated that yamamoto would die there.
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Well, they seemed to have a thing for islands and the sea. Australia may have been too much land for them.That does not explain how they missed australia.
Plus maoris should stop hugging chinese from taiwan and malaysia like it's their long lost relatives.
arsetralia was already populated by aborigines who migrated out of africa and found their way thru’ south east asia, most likely using southern tip of malaya (pulau blakang mati) as springboard to indon islands and arsetralia. later migrations by seafarers from taiwan and failippines missed arsetralia because they were going eastwards not southwards as seasonal winds and currents might be factors in drifting rafts into south pacific. they were also not very interested in dominating png and borneo, large islands that could be sub continents by themselves. perhaps, exiles, refugees, and sexplorers alike in their rafts were only looking for “virgin” islands to populate, as a result of conflicts back in their home islands?That does not explain how they missed australia.
Plus maoris should stop hugging chinese from taiwan and malaysia like it's their long lost relatives.
excellent!arsetralia was already populated by aborigines who migrated out of africa and found their way thru’ south east asia, most likely using southern tip of malaya (pulau blakang mati) as springboard to indon islands and arsetralia. later migrations by seafarers from taiwan and failippines missed arsetralia because they were going eastwards not southwards as seasonal winds and currents might be factors in drifting rafts into south pacific. they were also not very interested in dominating png and borneo, large islands that could be sub continents by themselves. perhaps, exiles, refugees, and sexplorers alike in their rafts were only looking for “virgin” islands to populate, as a result of conflicts back in their home islands?