Linked e-resources
Details
Table of Contents
Part I. Transpacific voyaging and settlement
Chapter 1. Ex oriente lux? Amerindian seafaring and Easter Island contact revisited
Chapter 2. Commensals/domesticates on Rapa Nui: what can their phlogeographic patterns tell us about the discovery and settlement of the island
Chapter 3. Sweet potato on Easter Island: insights from a monographic study of the genus Ipomoea
Chapter 4. Pre-European contact sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) at Rapa Nui: macrobotanical evidence from recent excavations in Rano Raraku quarry, Rapa Nui
Chapter 5. Anakena Re-visited: new perspectives on old problems at Anakena, RapaNui
Part II. The ancient Rapanui culture
Chapter 6. A behavioralassessment of refuge caves (ana kionga) on Rapa Nui
Chapter 7. Vinapu area revisited
Chapter 8. Undelivered moai or unidentified monument?
Chapter 9. Platforms in motion: a genealogical architecture
Part III. Climatic and environmental change
Chapter 10. Climatology of Rapa Nui (Isla de Pascua, Easter Island)
Chapter 11. Prehistoric paleoecology of Easter Island
Chapter 12. Geological and climatic features, processes and interplay determining the human occupation and habitation of Easter Island
Part IV. Deforestation and extinctions
Chapter 13. The flora and vegetation of Easter Island past and present
Chapter 14. Palms for the archaeologist
Chapter 15. Spatio-temporal patterns of deforestation, settlement and land use on Easter Island prior to European arrivals
Chapter 16. Economic causes and consequences of deforestation on Easter Island
Chapter 17. Palm forests to gardens and grassland: a study of environmental and geomorphological changes of the Te Niu, Rapa Nui landscape
Part V. Collapse or resilience?
Chapter 18. Environmental change and cultural continuity extraordinary achievements of the Rapa Nui society after deforestation
Chapter 19. Ecology limits population, but culture determines it: carrying capacity on Rapa Nui
Chapter 20. Population principles, climate change and the "collapse" of the Rapa Nui society
Chapter 21. Claims and evidence in the population history of Rapa Nui (Easter Island)
Part VI. European contact
Chapter 22. The Human Giants of Easter Island (Rapa Nui). Eighteenth century fake news and its significance for understanding the persistence of present-day myths.
Chapter 1. Ex oriente lux? Amerindian seafaring and Easter Island contact revisited
Chapter 2. Commensals/domesticates on Rapa Nui: what can their phlogeographic patterns tell us about the discovery and settlement of the island
Chapter 3. Sweet potato on Easter Island: insights from a monographic study of the genus Ipomoea
Chapter 4. Pre-European contact sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) at Rapa Nui: macrobotanical evidence from recent excavations in Rano Raraku quarry, Rapa Nui
Chapter 5. Anakena Re-visited: new perspectives on old problems at Anakena, RapaNui
Part II. The ancient Rapanui culture
Chapter 6. A behavioralassessment of refuge caves (ana kionga) on Rapa Nui
Chapter 7. Vinapu area revisited
Chapter 8. Undelivered moai or unidentified monument?
Chapter 9. Platforms in motion: a genealogical architecture
Part III. Climatic and environmental change
Chapter 10. Climatology of Rapa Nui (Isla de Pascua, Easter Island)
Chapter 11. Prehistoric paleoecology of Easter Island
Chapter 12. Geological and climatic features, processes and interplay determining the human occupation and habitation of Easter Island
Part IV. Deforestation and extinctions
Chapter 13. The flora and vegetation of Easter Island past and present
Chapter 14. Palms for the archaeologist
Chapter 15. Spatio-temporal patterns of deforestation, settlement and land use on Easter Island prior to European arrivals
Chapter 16. Economic causes and consequences of deforestation on Easter Island
Chapter 17. Palm forests to gardens and grassland: a study of environmental and geomorphological changes of the Te Niu, Rapa Nui landscape
Part V. Collapse or resilience?
Chapter 18. Environmental change and cultural continuity extraordinary achievements of the Rapa Nui society after deforestation
Chapter 19. Ecology limits population, but culture determines it: carrying capacity on Rapa Nui
Chapter 20. Population principles, climate change and the "collapse" of the Rapa Nui society
Chapter 21. Claims and evidence in the population history of Rapa Nui (Easter Island)
Part VI. European contact
Chapter 22. The Human Giants of Easter Island (Rapa Nui). Eighteenth century fake news and its significance for understanding the persistence of present-day myths.