Visitors to Nikumaroro: Difference between revisions

From Ameliapedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:
* We do not know who left their [[bones|bones on the island]] prior to the bones being discovered in 1940.
* We do not know who left their [[bones|bones on the island]] prior to the bones being discovered in 1940.
* The ''[[Yankee]]'' was in the vicinity in 1940.
* The ''[[Yankee]]'' was in the vicinity in 1940.
* Evidence of unauthorized visits was seen in the 1960s by [[Eni Etuati]].
* Evidence of unauthorized visits was seen in the 1960s by [[Eni Etuati]]: "It was on his single visit that an old gun and knife were found on the beach somewhere between the blasted channel and the village. He thinks the gun may have been a .38 revolver. Both the gun and the knife were 'all rotten.' Some of the men thought the gun was just a toy." 
* Etuati himself was on the island as part of a routine patrol--and we do not have a log of all such visits by colonial or post-colonial agents.
* [[Etuati]] himself was on the island as part of a routine patrol--and we do not have a log of all such visits by colonial or post-colonial agents.
* A [http://tighar.org/Projects/Earhart/Archives/Research/Bulletins/08_Labelfrag/08_Labelfrag.html fragment of a label with a Universal Product Code on it] provides evidence of a post-colonial visit.
* A [http://tighar.org/Projects/Earhart/Archives/Research/Bulletins/08_Labelfrag/08_Labelfrag.html fragment of a label with a Universal Product Code on it] provides evidence of a post-colonial visit.
* [http://tighar.org/Publications/TTracks/2001Vol_17/words.pdf A salvage tug] retrieved a piece of metal from the ''[[Norwich City]]'' in 2001.
* [http://tighar.org/Publications/TTracks/2001Vol_17/words.pdf A salvage tug] retrieved a piece of metal from the ''[[Norwich City]]'' in 2001.

Revision as of 23:01, 24 June 2012

Nikumaroro is a remote island, but we know that it has been visited often. When trying to make a reasonable guess about the source of a particular artifact, the possibility that it came from unrecorded visitors is not negligible.