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EURASIAN /
POLYNESIAN CONTACTS [Contacts] In Polynesia,
including the areas of Hawaii, Samoa & Tahiti, there are widespread
legends of pre-Bronze Age contacts and mixing of peoples from Eurasia via
North America with the people living in Polynesia at that time. One case of such kinship is through Chief
Mauga Sai of American Samoa. The
legend relates how after the biblical flood, the families Erik, Leif,
Pomerenia, Rollo, V’e, Vili Vani and Vana met an Asian tribe and
intermingled. These names exist in
Polynesia and the offspring were said to be Caucasian with blond or red hair.
The early American natives that occupied Alaska were believed to have encountered
white, blond people. Those people had
reached Alaska from northern Asia and eventually spread down the coast and,
in some cases, out to the far Pacific Islands. The legends also maintain that some of these adventurers
continued down to South America.
Indeed, the recent discovery of Asian chicken bones in PreColumbian
archeological sites along the west coast supports these legends. Recently legal claims have been filed by
Polynesians to the body of “Kennewick” man that was unearthed in Washington
State (Joseph B. Frazier, The Associated Press, 26 Jul 2001). When the Tahitians reached Hawaii for the
first time, the legends hold that there were white blond and red-haired
people already present in the area. These people provided the newcomers with
food and drink before they returned to Tahiti. Subsequent voyages from Tahiti by warrior groups then succeeded
in conquering most of the indigenous residents whilst setting up their own
domination of the area. It is
believed that the Ainu of northern Japan especially
made these voyages. The language that
these early voyagers spoke are thought to have resembled modern Basque, as
the meanings of the names of major islands and sites in the Pacific may be
translated with the Basque dictionary (see Saharan
language). The precursor of Basque
was Saharan that was a widely spoken language before the Christian Era
(see Nyland),
Later the Igbo Language
of West Africa was found to predate Saharan. For further details please see Fellview. |