Easter Island Heads Have Bodies?

KaiserElectric

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I'm genuinely suprised I didn't see anything about this until now. Very interesting.

Maybe this isn’t a newsflash to anyone but me, but, um, the Moai “heads” on Easter Island have bodies. Because some of the statues are set deep into the ground, and because the heads on the statues are disproportionately large, many people (myself included) tend to think of them as just big heads. But the bodies (generally not including legs, though there is at least one kneeling statue) are there — in many cases, underground. What’s even more interesting — there are petroglyphs (rock markings) that have been preserved below the soil level, where they have been protected from erosion. This research report has been making the rounds; it discusses recent progress by The Easter Island Statue Project to uncover, study, and catalogue two statues. It includes (among the dry details of the research) a day-by-day journal of the work, as well as remarkable photographs showing the petroglyphs and team members excavating. Above is an image from a previous excavation (source unknown) that shows you the scale of the statues, and how deep they were buried. (Note: visitors are prohibited from climbing on the Moai; the expedition pictured above appears to predate the EISP and the current practice of conservation.)

For more on the Easter Island statues, read more about the EISP, read their extensive research reports, and check out the Wikipedia page on Moai (which also discusses the fairly well-known fact that many of the statues used to have hats or possibly topknots, known as pukao). Also interesting is the back story of archaeology on Easter Island (also known as Rapa Nui); apparently the island has been the subject of archaeological research for 119 years.

http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/106129

Snopes has also confirmed this. Pretty cool!
 
LOL - this looks photoshopped. But if true, it would be interesting. However, I don't think it's true.
 
LOL - this looks photoshopped. But if true, it would be interesting. However, I don't think it's true.

Yeah, I bet all the archaeologists uncovering them are clearly saying in their reports and documents that "they are 'shopped because I've seen those pixels before."
 
That's cool Did not know.
 
Have they had the chance to compare the glyphs with the wooden boards found on the island? Last I heard nobody could decipher the boards yet...
 
Yeah, I've seen that before. Though I thought this was, like, very old news. Like '70s old.
 
I had no clue! Wow! I thought they were just heads!
 
I always pictured them with bodies myself TBH.

Isn't this sort of their iconic look?
AhuTongariki.JPG

article-1211673-065172A6000005DC-760_468x338.jpg


There are some different kinds, though. The smaller more intricate ones with hats and even inlaid eyes like the bottom picture, and large, elongated, more crude ones like the one in the OP article which tend to be half buried and/or incomplete.
 
I always pictured them with bodies myself TBH.

Isn't this sort of their iconic look?
AhuTongariki.JPG

article-1211673-065172A6000005DC-760_468x338.jpg

No, this is their iconic look:

MP-priorities.jpg


See? No visible bodies. Just heads.
 
No, this is their iconic look:

MP-priorities.jpg


See? No visible bodies. Just heads.

It does not really matter what their "iconic look" is. Both statues are similar so I'm sure many people made the logical assumption that perhaps the head statues had bodies buried underneath the surface.
 
but they were still designed for the bodies to be buried while others are free standing with their bodies exposed, maybe the only distinction was the terrain.
 
but they were still designed for the bodies to be buried while others are free standing with their bodies exposed, maybe the only distinction was the terrain.

Or any number of cultural reasoning's.

They don't even have to be from the same age. Could be different eras of Easter Island civilization. All we know is that Easter Island was settled sometime in the first millenia, quickly flourished as a civilization for a few centuries(and built the island heads), than after carelessly chopping off all the trees in the island and exhausting fresh water sources and local bird and fish populations, they collapsed and became a low population density tribal society.
 
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