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  2. Moa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moa

    Palaeontologists working on moa bone deposits in the 'Graveyard', Honeycomb Hill Cave System: This cave is a closed scientific reserve. Bones are commonly found in caves or tomo (the Māori word for doline or sinkhole, often used to refer to pitfalls or vertical cave shafts). The two main ways that the moa bones were deposited in such sites ...

  3. Māori history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_history

    Measles, typhoid, scarlet fever, whooping cough and almost everything, except plague and sleeping sickness, have taken their toll of Maori dead". [63] A korao no New Zealand; or, the New Zealander's first book was written by missionary Thomas Kendall in 1815, and is the first book written in the Māori language.

  4. Wairau Bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wairau_Bar

    Bones from all five moa species located in the upper South Island were found. As well as the remains of numerous butchered moa, seals , porpoises , the extinct Haast's eagle , Eyles' harrier , New Zealand swan and New Zealand raven , kurī (Maori dogs), tuatara , kiore , shellfish such as pipi , pāua , cockles , and marine bones from eels ...

  5. Redcliffs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redcliffs

    The Moa Bone Point Cave (Te Ana o Hineraki) in Redcliffs was excavated under the direction of Julius von Haast in 1872, and numerous artefacts were found. [6] Many further investigations have been undertaken since that time. Artefacts found included moa bones and egg shells, bones of seals, birds and fish, shellfish and many Māori taonga. This ...

  6. List of New Zealand species extinct in the Holocene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_New_Zealand...

    They were hunted, and their bones are widespread in Māori middens, shaped into tools and ornaments. Estimates of moa remains in 1,200 open ovens and middens surveyed in the vicinity of the Waitaki River mouth during the 1930s range from 29,000 to 90,000. Moa chicks may have been eaten by Polynesian dogs.

  7. Kia Ora, New Zealand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kia_Ora,_New_Zealand

    The name is a common greeting in the Māori language and literally means "May you live". [2] The area was a location where a large amount of moa bones were discovered in 1930. [ 3 ]

  8. Taieri Mouth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taieri_Mouth

    There was a Māori occupation site at Taieri Mouth, with moa bones, indicating it was from the Moa Hunter (early) period of Māori culture. According to oral tradition in the early 18th century Tuwiriroa moved from Tititea on the Kawarau River near modern Queenstown and built a pa, Motupara, near Taieri Mouth.

  9. Kōauau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kōauau

    Kōauau from Museo Azzarini, Argentina. A kōauau is a small flute, ductless and notchless, four to eight inches (ten to twenty centimetres) long, open at both ends and having from three to six fingerholes placed along the pipe.