Giant eagle filled the role of a predator on Kiwi island 750 years ago

Washington, September 12 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have determined that the role of a predator, before humans colonized New Zealand about 750 years ago, was filled by a giant, extinct raptor known as Haast’s eagle.

Although the bones of Haast’s eagle have been known for well over a century, the behavior of these giants has been a point of debate.

Owing to their large size – these eagles weighed up to 40 lbs., larger than any modern eagle – some scientists believe they were scavengers rather than predators.

The new study, by Paul Scofield of the Canterbury Museum in New Zealand and Ken Ashwell of the University of New South Wales, used computed axial tomography (CAT/CT) scans to reconstruct the size of the brain, eyes, ears and spinal cord of this ancient eagle.

These data were compared to values from modern predatory and scavenging birds to determine the habits of the extinct eagle.

The results indicated not only that Haast’s eagle was a fearsome predator that probably swooped on its prey from a high mountain perch, but also that it evolved over a relatively short period of time from a much smaller-bodied ancestor.

“This work is a great example of how rapidly evolving medical techniques and equipment can be used to solve ancient mysteries,” said Ashwell, co-author of the study.

It is also an example of how the oral traditions of ancient peoples and scientific research can sometimes reach the same conclusion.

“This science supports Maori (native New Zealander) mythology of the legendary pouakai or hokioi, a huge bird that could swoop down on people in the mountains and was capable of killing a small child,” said Paul Scofield, lead author of the study.

Haast’s eagle became extinct a mere 500 years ago, probably due to habitat destruction and the extinction of its prey species by early Polynesian settlers. (ANI)

New Zealand’s Maori people don’t have “warrior gene” that makes them violent

Wellington, September 11 (ANI): A new research has shown that despite being over-represented in New Zealand’s criminal fraternity and prison population, Maori do not have a “warrior gene” that makes them violent.

The Maori are the indigenous Polynesian people of New Zealand. The group probably arrived in southwestern Polynesia in several waves at some time before the year 1300.

According to a report carried out in www.stuff.co.nz, scientist Gary Hook’s review, ‘Warrior Genes and the Disease of Being Maori’, challenges the idea that Maori are genetically wired to commit acts of violence.

Three years ago, researchers Rod Lea and Geoffrey Chambers said high criminality among Maori was due to the monoamine oxidase, or “warrior”, gene.

But, Dr Hook said there was evidence they had made several serious flaws in their scientific reasoning.

Not only was the science criticised, but the ethics of claiming “genetic explanation for negative social and health statistics” had been questioned, Dr Hook said.

“While conviction rates for domestic violence of Maori exceed those of any other group there is no indication that the (monoamine oxidase gene) system carried by Maori functions any differently from that of any other ethnic group and certainly no evidence to indicate that it was anything to do with violent behaviour in Maori,” he added.

“Blaming domestic violence on genes simplified the problem and laid the blame on Maori themselves,” Dr Hook said.

Racial stereotyping, particularly by scientists, was “unethical and scandalous”, he said.

“Maori are not borderline psychotics, retarded, hyper aggressive, depressive, antisocial, impulsive, suicidal risk takers and to suggest otherwise is irresponsible and not supported by the facts,” he added.

According to Dr Hook, Maori nature was not the reason for high criminality rates.

“Perhaps, it was because of victimization during 160 years of colonisation or an “Eurocentric” justice system,” Dr Hook said. (ANI)

New Zealand’s Maori King to invite Obama

Wellington, Apr. 18 (ANI): President Barack Obama will be invited to visit New Zealand by the Maori king.

King Tuheitia, who is expected to lead a Tainui delegation to New York next week, would invite Obama to visit New Zealand, the New Zealand Herald reports.

King Tuheitia will join former Prime Minister Helen Clark for her welcome next week as head of the United Nations Development Programme.

King Tuheitia would then ask former United States President Bill Clinton to pass the invitation to Obama to visit his base, Turangawaewae.

Clinton met King Tuheitia’s mother, the late Maori Queen Dame Te Atairangikaahu in New Zealand in 1996.

King Tuheitia was given a special seat during Clark’s valedictory speech in Parliament. (ANI)

New Zealand’s Maori King to invite Obama

Wellington, Apr. 18 (ANI): President Barack Obama will be invited to visit New Zealand by the Maori king.

King Tuheitia, who is expected to lead a Tainui delegation to New York next week, would invite Obama to visit New Zealand, the New Zealand Herald reports.

King Tuheitia will join former Prime Minister Helen Clark for her welcome next week as head of the United Nations Development Programme.

King Tuheitia would then ask former United States President Bill Clinton to pass the invitation to Obama to visit his base, Turangawaewae.

Clinton met King Tuheitia’s mother, the late Maori Queen Dame Te Atairangikaahu in New Zealand in 1996.

King Tuheitia was given a special seat during Clark’s valedictory speech in Parliament. (ANI)

New Zealand race relations better despite attack on Key

Wellington – New Zealand celebrates 169 years of partnership between its indigenous Maori people and European settlers Friday with relations between the races in a better state than they have been for years.

The development comes despite an attack Thursday on Prime Minister John Key by two dissidents waving a Maori sovereignty flag as he arrived at a meeting house at historic Waitangi in the Bay of Islands for celebrations on the eve of the country’s national day.

The protestors claimed that the government was not doing enough for the near-600,000 Maoris, who comprise about 15 per cent of the population, but Key dubbed them “glory seekers” and said, “They were out of step with what the majority of people think.”

He said Friday’s anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi by Maori chiefs and representatives of Britain’s Queen Victoria on February 6, 1840, would be a day of celebration and “dialogue and understanding each others’ points of view, not thumping each other.”

Key, who was shaken but unhurt, was grabbed around the chest and neck at the Te Tii Marae, Waitangi, which has long been a hotbed of protest by Maori militants who claim successive governments in the former British colony have failed to honour promises to safeguard the indigenous people’s rights, land, language and culture.

Key’s visit to the marae was the first by a prime minister since his predecessor Helen Clark was jostled and heckled by demonstrators in 2004. She continued to attend official celebrations on the treaty grounds on Waitangi Day, which is a national holiday, but refused to return to the marae, a sacred and ceremonial meeting place for Maoris.

Maoris traditionally supported Clark’s Labour Party, but relations soured during her 9-year leadership and a minister defected to form the Maori Party, which now has five seats in parliament.

Clark never made her peace with the defector, but Key made a power-sharing deal with the Maoris after winning November’s election and took their two co-leaders into his government.

One, Pita Sharples, was made minister of Maori affairs, a major breakthrough for the minority party and a signal to Maoris that they were valued by the government, Sharples said.

Of Waitangi Day, which has long been a focus for Maori dissent and protest, he said: “This is the day we celebrate the partnership that founded our nation, and we make known to each other how we think the relationship is going. Right now, I think it’s looking good.”

Clark consistently refused permission for the Maori sovereignty flag – a graphic symbol of protest – to be flown from public buildings. Key defused that, saying it may be flown next year – if all Maoris agree.

The tribes have never been united since the days they fought each other and the victors put the vanquished in their cooking pots. Currently, they do not agree on an alternative to the national flag, which has four stars depicting the Southern Cross constellation and Britain’s Union Jack.

Some tribes have refused to go to Waitangi for the annual national day celebrations for years because they did not want to be involved in anti-government protests.

They included the Tainui, who had not been represented since King Tuheitia’s mother, the late queen, visited at the same time as Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II 19 years ago.

On that occasion, a Maori protestor hurled a black T-shirt in the face of the British monarch as she drove past.

But Tuheitia did go to the Te Tii Marae Wednesday and almost every other tribe was also there, including elders who had long boycotted the place because of the volatile atmosphere.

“I think we’ve come of age in terms of our relationships with other iwi [tribes],” Hone Sadler, an elder of the Ngaphui tribe, told the New Zealand Herald this week.

“We’re all looking for unity.” (dpa)