Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Coconut pollen found on remote Hawaiian islands

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Coconut pollen found on remote Hawaiian islands

Coconut pollen found on Laysan

 

By Jan TenBruggencate

 

Honolulu Advertiser Science Writer

 

 

Archaeologist Stephen Athens has found coconut pollen deep in the

sediments of the salt lake on Laysan Island in the Northwestern

Hawaiian Islands — an unexpected find that has excited the Hawai'i

scientific and cultural communities.

 

One plant, numerous uses

 

Cocos nucifera is known in Hawaiian as niu.

 

The coconut is the classic tree of Polynesia, and one of the most

important plants to residents of the islands. It grows in brackish to

near full-salty conditions. The wood of very old trees is quite hard

and has been used for flooring. Its fronds can be used for thatching

and weaving. The fibrous husk around the nut can be twisted and

braided into cordage, called sennit. The hard shell of the seed makes

containers and can be shaped into implements and buttons. Inside the

seed is fresh drinking liquid, even on the smallest islands where no

fresh water is available. The meat of the seed can be eaten, dried,

or scraped and pressed to generate a fat-rich milk. The dried coconut

meat, called copra, can be pressed for oil that can be used as a skin

lotion, for soap-making and in cooking.

 

 

Sources: "A Tropical Garden Flora,La'au Hawai'i: Traditional

Hawaiian Uses of Plants"

 

If the coconut got to remote Laysan — 930 miles northwest of

Honolulu — on its own, it is the first evidence coconuts ever made it

to Hawai'i without human help.

 

 

If Hawaiians brought it, it is the first physical evidence that

Hawaiians ventured that far up the archipelago. The only

archaeological evidence of Polynesian visits to what some

 

 

call the Kupuna Islands is stonework and artifacts found on the

nearest ones — Nihoa and Necker, or Mokumanamana, the latter 460

miles northwest of Honolulu.

 

 

"It is fascinating. I wonder how they got there," said Hawai'i

botanist Derral Herbst, co-author of a new book about the plants

cultivated in the Islands, "A Tropical Garden Flora."

 

 

Athens said he is sure the coconut pollen was deposited sometime

between 5,500 years ago and the time of the first European visits to

the Islands — but because of the quality of the sediment, he can't

date it for certain more closely than that.

 

 

"It is so deep that it seems that it could be a natural introduction,

but it is plausible they were planted," Athens said.

 

 

Either alternative is big news in the scientific world. Athens has

not yet published the report in a scientific journal, but his

findings are in a report to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,

entitled "Holocene Paleoenvironment of Laysan Island."

 

 

Athens did his work under contract with the Fish and Wildlife

Service, which hopes to revegetate Laysan with the native plants

present before Western contact, when firewood harvesting, guano

collection, the introduction of rabbits and other activities denuded

the place.

 

 

Laysan is roughly rectangular in shape, less than two miles long and

just a mile wide. A large depression in its center contains a super-

salty lake. Since water can preserve pollen, Athens hoped to find

clues to the former vegetation in the sediment layers at the lake's

bottom.

 

 

In the summer of 2003, he plunged a coring device into the sediment,

which continued down for 70 feet before it hit rock. The cores were

studied by Jerome Ward, a palynologist, or pollen expert, who also

found that ancient Laysan had a dense forest of Pritchardia palms, or

loulu; 'ilima bushes; an unidentified hibiscus; and an aquatic plant

whose presence proved that Laysan's lake was once brackish.

 

 

The first botanical survey of the island in the late 1800s found,

among other plants, sandalwood, a few remnant loulu, sedges and

clumping grasses, as well as a fragrant, night-blooming shrub known

in Hawai'i as maiapilo. But no coconuts.

 

 

Athens said the oldest part of the core, dating as far back as 7,000

years ago, does not have coconut pollen, suggesting the species had

not yet arrived there that early. He said the previous work done by

him and other researchers show that coconuts were moving into the

Pacific during that period. Pollen samples on Guam have found

coconuts were there long before humans — as early as 9,000 years ago.

 

 

University of Hawai'i archaeologist Terry Hunt said that work in the

Cook Islands found evidence that coconuts were present there before

humans were, as well.

 

 

"These findings are consistent with their (coconuts') biology," Hunt

said.

 

 

Coconuts are uniquely suited to survive for a period of time on the

ocean. University of Hawai'i ethnobotanist Isabella Abbott said she

can recall finding sprouting coconuts washing ashore in Hawai'i when

she was a child. And her book, "La'au Hawai'i: Traditional Hawaiian

Uses of Plants," cites research that coconuts could still sprout

after being in salt water for as long as four months.

 

 

Laysan has a small grove of coconuts now, which was planted in the

modern age. Athens said the uppermost — therefore most recent — parts

of the lakebed core sample contain pollen believed to be from these

trees.

 

 

"This is an interesting natural history phenomenon," said Sheila

Conant, a University of Hawai'i biologist who has studied extensively

on Laysan and other Northwestern Hawaiian islands. "My first thought

was that when we're doing restoration, now, we can leave those

coconut trees."

 

 

But if early Hawaiians were voyaging between the distant islands

northwest of Kaua'i and O'ahu, it is likely they could have been a

source for the coconut. Cultural historian Kepa Maly said his

conversations with

 

 

Ni'ihau elders found that they recalled discussions in which coconuts

were named among the items brought on long voyages.

 

 

"It seems logical that if kanaka had traveled there, they would have

carried coconuts with them," Maly said.

 

 

He said that there is plenty of evidence in chants and traditions

that Hawaiians knew about the multiple islands beyond the main

Hawaiian islands. Maly, in fact, suggests that Necker Island, also

known as Mokumanamana, may be misnamed. Some old sources use the term

Namokumanamana, which may be translated "the fragmented pinnacle

islands," and Namoku'aha, or "the line of islands."

 

 

These may be terms that show that early Hawaiians knew the many

islands beyond Kaua'i and Ni'ihau.

 

 

"There is a good enough body of native tradition of traveling to

those islands," Maly said.

 

 

Athens said he would like to do additional core samples in Laysan's

lake to try to better tie down the dates when coconuts were present.

He said he would also like to do core samples at the neighboring

island, Lisianski. Lisianski had a lake like Laysan's, but when

rabbits ate all the island's vegetation in the first decades of the

1900s, the resulting sand storms filled it. It could tell whether

there once were coconuts on that island as well.

 

 

Botanist and Hawaiian cultural expert Sam Gon III said that whether

the coconuts got deep into the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands

naturally or were brought by Hawaiians, the finding from a scientific

point of view is "a fun, exciting thing." He further muddied the

theory on the pollen's origins by suggesting still another

alternative route for the tree — that early Polynesians could have

brought them to the main Hawaiian Islands, and that they drifted on

their own from there to Laysan.

 

 

Regards,

Paul Kekai Manansala

Sacramento

http://sambali.blogspot.com/2005/05/coconut-pollen-found-on-

remote.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...