Rapa Nui National Park

Dublin Core

Title

Rapa Nui National Park

Subject

Culture,Immovable Culture Heritage,Tourism

Description

Much has been written about what is considered "the most island island", due to its remote location in the Pacific Ocean. The gigantic volcanic stone statues, known as moai, the still undeciphered writing of the Rongo Rongo symbols, and the history of some inhabitants who were about to disappear, have originated the myth of Easter Island. The island was discovered on Easter Sunday in 1722, and taken over by Chile in 1888. Its fame and World Heritage status arise from the 887 extant stone statues known by the name "moai", whose creation is attributed to the early Rapa Nui people who inhabited the island around 300 AD. The moai in the park are of varying height from 2 to 20 meters (6 to 65 ft). The volcanic rock formations quarried for sculpting are a distinctive yellow-brown volcanic tuff found only at the Ranu Raraku on the southeast side of the island. Some of the moai were also carved from red scoria. The ceremonial shrines where they are erected for offering worship are known as "ahu". Of impressive size and form, they are normally built close to the coast and parallel to it.

Source

isfiveoneonezero,worldheritagelayer

Contributor

jcbo1

Type

Site

Identifier

321

Date Submitted

19/05/2021

Extent

cm x cm x cm

Spatial Coverage

current,-27.12595935,-109.349576422058;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

Rapa Nui National Park

Object

https://chile.travel/en/where-to-go/rapa-nui

Europeana Type

TEXT

Site Item Type Metadata

Institutional nature

Place Name

Prim Media

463

Status

public

Condition

1

Contact

jcbo1@st-andrews.ac.uk

Citation

“Rapa Nui National Park,” STAGE, accessed December 13, 2025, https://stage.openvirtualworlds.org/omeka/items/show/464.

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