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Mau Piailug

Pius "Mau" Piailug (pronounced /ˈpəs ˈm pˈləɡ/; 1932 – 12 July 2010) was a Micronesian navigator from the Carolinian island of Satawal, best known as a teacher of traditional, non-instrument wayfinding methods for open-ocean voyaging. Mau's Carolinian navigation system, which relies on navigational clues using the Sun and stars, winds and clouds, seas and swells, and birds and fish, was acquired through rote learning passed down through teachings in the oral tradition. He earned the title of master navigator (palu) by the age of eighteen, around the time the first American missionaries arrived in Satawal. As he neared middle age, Mau grew concerned that the practice of navigation in Satawal would disappear as his people became acculturated to Western values. In the hope that the navigational tradition would be preserved for future generations, Mau shared his knowledge with the Polynesian Voyaging Society (PVS). With Mau's help, PVS used experimental archaeology to recreate and test lost Hawaiian navigational techniques on the Hōkūleʻa, a modern reconstruction of a double-hulled Hawaiian voyaging canoe.

Mau Piailug
Born
Pius Piailug

1932
Weiso, Satawal, Yap, South Seas Mandate, Japan
Died12 July 2010(2010-07-12) (aged 78)
NationalityMicronesian
Other namesMau, Papa Mau
EducationWeriyeng school of navigation
Occupations
  • Navigator
  • canoe builder
  • teacher (kumu)
Years active1948–2007
Known forWayfinding, Polynesian navigation, Hawaiian Renaissance
SpouseNemwaeito (alt. sp. Nemoito)
Children16
Awards

The successful, non-instrument sailing of Hōkūleʻa to Tahiti in 1976 proved the efficacy of Mau's navigational system to the world. To academia, Mau's achievement provided evidence for intentional two-way voyaging throughout Oceania, supporting a hypothesis that explained the Asiatic origin of Polynesians. The success of the Micronesian-Polynesian cultural exchange, symbolized by Hōkūleʻa, had an impact throughout the Pacific. It contributed to the emergence of the second Hawaiian cultural renaissance and to a revival of Polynesian navigation and canoe building in Hawaii, New Zealand, Rarotonga and Tahiti. It also sparked interest in traditional wayfinding on Mau's home island of Satawal. Later in life, Mau was respectfully known as a grandmaster navigator, and he was called "Papa Mau" by his friends with great reverence and affection. He received an honorary degree from the University of Hawaii, and he was honored by the Smithsonian Institution and the Bishop Museum for his contributions to maritime history. Mau's life and work was explored in several books and documentary films, and his legacy continues to be remembered and celebrated by the indigenous peoples of Oceania.

Early life (1932–1974) edit

Satawal, Micronesia edit

Mau was born Pius Piailug in 1932 in the village of Weiso, on the small coral island of Satawal, in Yap State of the Caroline Islands, now a part of the Federated States of Micronesia.[1] Satawal is a wooded island with an area of 1.3 square kilometres (0.50 sq mi), located in the western Pacific Ocean about 800 kilometres (500 mi) south of Guam. Mau's personal connection to the sea began early in his life, when he was placed in tide pools in his infancy so he could feel the pull of the ocean.[2] At the age of four or five, Mau was chosen by his grandfather Raangipi to study as an apprentice navigator.[3] Mau initially protested his grandfather's teaching, preferring to spend his time playing on the beach with children his own age. Raangipi trained Mau as a young navigator for many years. Their day would begin at sunrise, when they would eat breakfast together and afterwards, take care of chores before they went fishing. During the evening, Mau would join the men in the canoe house as they drank, listening to their stories about navigation and sailing. Raangipi told the young boy that if he chose to become a navigator, Mau could gain respect from his community, eat well, and maintain a position in Satawalese society higher than that of a chief. Encouraged, Mau learned basic navigational clues regarding the "stars, swells, and birds" from Raangipi, but his grandfather died sometime before Mau was fourteen.[4]

After his grandfather died, Mau began training with his father, Orranipui. Mau learned more about navigating by stars (wofanu) from his father, and how to fish and build canoes. When his father died before he turned fifteen,[5] Mau was adopted by his aunt and uncle. Sometime around the age of eighteen,[6] Mau's aunt and uncle sent him to study with Angora, an acclaimed navigator.[7] His studies culminated in his initiation as a master navigator (palu) in the Weriyeng school of navigation[8] during the revered pwo ceremony presided over by Angora. It was to be the last pwo held on Satawal for the next fifty years. After the ceremony, Mau lived for a month in the canoe house where he received rigorous lessons from three navigators.[9] When the final training was complete, Mau made his first solo voyage of about 92 kilometres (57 mi).[10] Because he had a tendency to sail in all weather conditions, he was given the nickname "Mau", from the Satawalese word maumau, meaning "strong".[11] After becoming a navigator, Mau married Nemwaeito[12] with whom he raised ten boys and six girls.[13]

 
"Mau Piailug is from the island of Satawal. It's a mile and a half long and a mile wide. Population 600. Navigation's not about cultural revival, it's about survival. Not enough food can be produced on a small island like that. Their navigators have to go out to sea to catch fish so they can eat." (Nainoa Thompson)[14]

Daily life in Mau's village on Satawal involved harvesting taro and gathering breadfruit and coconut. The Satawalese people also raised chicken and pork[15] and caught fish, their primary source of protein.[14] A freshwater pond served as bathing facilities. Local materials were used to construct outrigger canoes called proa. The island's isolation helped preserve the lifestyle of the Satawalese people and Mau's role as a navigator.[16] Even with the arrival of the Germans (1890) and the Japanese (1914) in Micronesia, Satawalese culture remained intact. American missionaries who arrived after World War II[17] built the first church and school on Satawal.[18]

In the late 1960s, Mau attempted to verify his navigational knowledge of the wider Pacific by working as a seaman on an inter-island ship run by the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.[19] From 1969 to 1973, Mau became friends with Mike McCoy, a Peace Corps volunteer stationed on Satawal.[20] As well as marrying Mau's niece, McCoy sailed with Mau and they worked together on a project tagging turtles. McCoy became interested in Satawalese navigation, published several articles on the topic and kept in touch with the anthropologist Ben Finney, who was researching Polynesian navigation. When McCoy's assignment on Satawal ended, he asked Pialug if he wanted to come to Hawaii with him.[21]

Honolulu, Hawaii edit

Mau first visited Hawaii in 1973, and McCoy introduced him to Ben Finney. Later, Finney suggested to the Polynesian Voyaging Society that they should try to recruit Mau for their Hōkūleʻa project,[3] since no Hawaiian traditional navigators remained. The project goal was to test the hypothesis that Polynesians made intentional non-instrument voyages across the Pacific.[22] Tevake, a renowned Polynesian navigator, had died in 1970[23] and only six others were known.[24] Navigators were reluctant to release their sacred knowledge to "outsiders".[25] At the time, Mau was just 41 years old and the youngest navigator out of the group. Mau feared that traditional navigation would die in his own culture, just as it had in Hawaii. He had tried to teach the young men of Satawal the skills passed on to him, but he was not optimistic. The members of the younger generation were too busy with school and too attracted to Western culture to undertake the rigorous course of study and apprenticeship. Further, Mau's people did not seem to care that traditional navigation was dying and could be lost forever.[26]

Later life (1975–2010) edit

Hōkūleʻa edit

With Finney's help, Mau was awarded a special fellowship at the East–West Center.[27] Mau returned to Honolulu in April 1975 to begin work with the Hawaii-based Polynesian Voyaging Society, eventually navigating the double-hulled canoe Hōkūleʻa from Hawaii to Tahiti on its maiden voyage in 1976.[28] Mau trained and mentored Native Hawaiian navigator Nainoa Thompson, who would later become a master navigator.[29] David Henry Lewis, a scholar of Polynesian navigation, documented Mau's work.[30]

Mau Piailug's Voyages on Hōkūleʻa
 
Hōkūleʻa
Year Voyage Ports
1976
Inaugural Voyage Hawaii–Tahiti
1980
Tahiti Voyage Hawaii–Tahiti–Hawaii
1985–
1987
Voyage of Rediscovery Hawaii–Tahiti–Rarotonga;
Waitangi–Nukuʻalofa–Pago Pago–Tutuila–Aitutaki–Rarotonga–Tautira
1995
Nā ʻOhana Holo Moana Hilo–Papeʻete; Nuku Hiva–Hilo

Mau's first-hand knowledge of traditional navigation had been accumulated in Northern Hemisphere study and sailings, but the voyage to Tahiti required Mau to familiarise himself with the geography and night sky of the Southern Hemisphere. Of the preparation, Finney writes,

To prepare Mau Piailug for the voyage, David Lewis briefed him on the geography of the islands in this part of the Pacific and the winds and currents that could be expected along the way, all information that an early Polynesian navigator acquainted with this route would have carried in his head. In addition, to alert Mau of how the elevation of stars above the northern and southern horizons would change as the canoe sailed farther and farther south, we held training sessions in Honolulu's Bishop Museum planetarium to graphically show how, for example, as one sailed toward Tahiti[,] Polaris sank lower and lower on the northern horizon until it disappeared at the equator while the Southern Cross curved higher and higher in the sky. During his first few days of the voyage, Mau received further coaching on the pattern of winds and currents from Rodo Williams, a veteran Tahitian seaman on the crew who the year before had sailed a yacht from Tahiti to Hawaii and could therefore provide Mau with a firsthand account of what he could expect to encounter.[31]

Their collaboration proved successful when, on the 31st day at sea on the 1976 voyage,[22] Mau stated soon they would see land, and the next day, Tahiti. A few hours later, they spotted land-based white terns (Gygis alba) followed by a diminution of the trade-wind swell. That night, they spotted Mataiva. After a brief stopover, with little more than another day's sailing they made landfall at Tahiti where they were welcomed by 17,000 people, half the population of Tahiti.[32]

Nainoa's ambition was to sail Hōkūleʻa to Tahiti as navigator by using recreated traditional techniques. He spent years training on his own and with Mau. Mau's training and mentoring helped Nainoa achieve that goal in the 1980 Tahiti voyage. It marked the first time in over 500 years that a Native Hawaiian had mastered the stars, the seas, the birds, and the winds to guide a sailing canoe from Hawaii to Tahiti and back.[33] The two men joined again for the 1985–1987 Voyage of Rediscovery to New Zealand, again with Nainoa as principal navigator and Mau as mentor. The voyage to New Zealand stoked Māori interest in cultural history, navigation techniques, and canoe building.[34] It also brought to life for Māori the stories in their folklore of the great canoe voyages of migration and settlement in Aotearoa (New Zealand). Describing a ceremony held at Waitangi to commemorate the Hawaii New Zealand voyage of Hōkūleʻa, Nainoa writes:

Sir James Henare, the most revered of the elders of Tai Tokerau, got up and said, "You've proven that it could be done. And you've also proven that our ancestors did it.... because the five tribes of Tai Tokerau trace their ancestry from the names of the canoes they arrived in, and because you people from Hawaiʻi came by canoe, therefore by our traditions, you must be the sixth tribe of Tai Tokerau.[35]

In 1995, Mau took part in the Nā ʻOhana Holo Moana voyage of Hōkūleʻa to Raiatea. Sailing with his son Sesario Sewralur, and Nainoa as sailing master, Mau watched as Nainoa's students Kaʻau McKenney and Keahi Omai served as navigators. Mau had seen Nainoa succeed in the 1980 and 1985–1987 voyages; finally, in this 1995 voyage, Mau saw proof that the knowledge was carried forward to the next generation.[36] The canoe landed successfully at Rarotonga, and the voyage resulted in the lifting of a six-centuries-old taboo on voyaging from Raʻiātea.[37][38] Hōkūleʻa had sailed from Hawaii with sisterships Hawaiʻiloa and Makaliʻi; the canoes rendez-voused at Taputapuatea with other voyaging canoes from across Oceania.[37]

Makaliʻi edit

To help preserve Hawaiian culture, Milton "Shorty" Bertelmann and his brother Clay established the nonprofit organization, Nā Kalai Waʻa Moku o Hawaiʻi[39] on the island of Hawaii in 1992. Beginning in 1994, the two brothers helped construct Makaliʻi,[40] a 54-foot voyaging canoe, launching it in 1995. From February to May 1999, "Shorty" Bertelmann navigated Makaliʻi to Satawal in a voyage known as "E Mau – Sailing the Master Home". The voyage was to pay homage to master navigator Mau Piailug and to thank him for his teachings. Mau sailed home aboard Makaliʻi as their honored guest. Makaliʻi continued her 1999 voyage through half the length of Micronesia. She was the first Hawaiian voyaging canoe to visit the far reaches of Micronesia and her appearance stimulated interest in Micronesians in their own cultural history.[41]

Alingano Maisu edit

On 18 March 2007 Mau presided over the first pwo ceremony for navigators in 56 years on the island of Satawal. Five Native Hawaiians and eleven other people were inducted into pwo as master navigators, including Nainoa Thompson and Mau's son, Sesario Sewralur. The Polynesian Voyaging Society, as part of the 2007 Hōkūleʻa "One Ocean, One People" voyage named "Kū Holo Mau", presented Mau with a canoe named the Alingano Maisu, a gift for his key role in reviving traditional wayfinding navigation in Hawaii. The canoe was built in Kawaihae, Hawaii under the nonprofit organization Nā Kalai Waʻa Moku O Hawaiʻi. The commitment to build this "gift" for Mau was made by Clay Bertelmann, captain of Makaliʻi and Hōkūleʻa. Maisu was given to Mau on behalf of all the voyaging families and organizations that actively continue to sail and practice the traditions taught by Mau Piailug.[42]

Death edit

After a long struggle with diabetes, Mau died on his home island of Satawal at 18:30 Micronesia time,[43] Monday, 12 July 2010.[44][45][46] As is the tradition on Satawal, travel between the islands was temporarily suspended in Mau's honour.[47] Because there is no morgue on the island, Mau was buried the following day, and a nightly rosary was held until the memorial service on 21 July at Santa Soledad Church. Mau's son Henry Yarofalpiy will continue teaching students about their culture, preserving the legacy of his father.[47]

Awards edit

Mau was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters in 1987 by the University of Hawaii.[48]

On 9 May 2000, he was honoured by the Smithsonian Institution at the National Museum of Natural History. At the ceremony, secretary Lawrence M. Small said, "The rebirth of non-instrument navigation came about largely due to this man, Mau Piailug".[49]

The Bishop Museum presented Mau with the Robert J. Pfeiffer Medal on 12 July 2008, honouring him for "exceptional dedication to the advancement of maritime affairs and the perpetuation of maritime heritage in Hawaii and the Pacific". Mau also was honored for his "devotion and outstanding civic leadership" and for exemplifying "the spirit and purpose of the Museum's founder Charles Reed Bishop".[50]

 
Mau's name carved into the back of the navigator's seat aboard Hokule'a

The Polynesian Voyaging Society recognized Mau's contributions in preserving the art of wayfinding by building and donating the voyaging canoe Alingano Maisu to Mau and the people of Satawal, and he is honored with his name carved into the rail aboard Hōkūleʻa behind his traditional seat on the port rear quarter of the vessel.

Legacy edit

The success of Mau's navigational feats sparked cultural pride in Tahitians, Māori, and Hawaiians and connected all Polynesians to stories their forebears told of similar voyages of generations past. The voyage of Hōkūleʻa attracted the interest of young students such as Milton "Shorty" Bertelmann and later Nainoa Thompson.[51] Mau not only led Hōkūleʻa to Tahiti, but reconnected the people of the Pacific to their cultural roots. Revived interest in preserving traditional culture and navigation methods reinvigorated the art of canoe building and cultural studies in Hawaii, New Zealand, Rarotonga, and Tahiti,[52] as well as Mau's homeland of Satawal.[47]

 
A projection of the Polynesian triangle on the globe. Taiwan is circled in the upper left corner.

Two centuries before Mau and the Hōkūleʻa, Captain James Cook, with the help of Tupaia,[53] gained knowledge that otherwise would have been closely held. Before his death in 1779, Cook hypothesized that Polynesians shared common ancestry; he even pinned their origin to Asia. However, Cook's theory did not prevent debate among scholars. Before the Hōkūleʻa voyage in 1976, academic debate about the settlement of Polynesia was divided between several schools of thought.[54]

Norwegian ethnographer Thor Heyerdahl hypothesized that the Pacific was settled by voyages from South America and set out to prove that with his Kon-Tiki expedition.[55] Scholars did not take Heyerdahl's hypothesis seriously. New Zealander Andrew Sharp proposed the accidental voyaging hypothesis in 1957, which (erroneously) argued that Oceania was too vast to have been settled by intentional voyaging so migrations must have happened by accidental drift voyages.[56] Sharp granted that Polynesians likely settled the Pacific from Asia, but held the opinion that their crude vessels and navigational tools were not reliable for intentional sailing from Tahiti to Hawaii or New Zealand. He stated that voyages of more than 300 miles were likely accidental voyages, with landfall at the mercy of wind and current.[57] A 1973 study and computer simulation by Levison, Ward, and Web investigated the probability of Sharp's hypothesis but found it improbable.[58]

Finney disagreed with the accidental voyaging portion of Sharp's hypothesis. To investigate the problem, he founded the Polynesian Voyaging Society with Herb Kane and Tommy Holmes in 1973, intent on building a voyaging canoe to sail from Hawaii to Tahiti to test whether intentional two-way voyaging throughout Oceania could be replicated.[59] With the help of Mau's navigational knowledge guiding Hōkūleʻa, the Polynesian Voyaging Society demonstrated that intentional voyaging was not only possible, but also the ancestors of the Polynesians could have settled the Pacific on similar voyages using non-instrument wayfinding techniques such as Mau's.[60] Finally, linguistic[61] and archaeological evidence suggests that the history of the Polynesian people does not originate in the East Pacific but in the West.[62] Recent developments in the field of DNA analysis have unequivocally settled the debate of Polynesian origin. They prove Polynesians share common ancestry with indigenous Taiwanese and East Asians.[63]

Wayfinding and navigation edit

Training edit

Navigator training was historically interwoven with culture and ritual. Great discretion had to be shown in candidate selection so that the knowledge preserved through oral tradition would have the greatest chance of survival. A master navigator's rank was equal or superior to a village chief's rank. Prudent navigation relies on no single technique but instead synthesizes position from multiple inputs. Underway, this constant synthesis makes it easy to spot the navigator, he being the one with red eyes from sleep deprivation.[64]

Mau Piailug's Star Compass[65]
 

Legend
Satawalese name Traditional name Astronomical name
Tupul Setting West
Tan Rising East
Wuliwulifasmughet North star Polaris
Mailapailefung Little Dipper Ursa Minor
Wylur Big Dipper Ursa Major
Igulig ("Whale") 1) Cassiopeia (head of whale)
2a) Almach &
2b) Mirach (body of whale)
3a) Hamal &
3b) Sharatan (whale's tail)
1) Cassiopeia
2a) Gamma Andromedae &
2b) Beta Andromedae
3a) Alpha Arietis &
3b) Beta Arietis
Murn Vega Vega
Marigaht Seven Sisters Pleiades
Uul Aldebaran Alpha Tauri
Paiifung Tarazed Gamma Aquilae
Mailap Altair Alpha Aquilae
Paiyur Alshain Beta Aquilae
Earlier Orion Orion
Sarapool Corvus Corvus
Tumur Scorpius (Top 6 stars) Scorpius
Mesario 1a) Shaula &
1b) Antares
1a) Lambda Scorpii &
1b) Alpha Scorpii
Luubw Southern Cross
(rising or setting)
Crux
Machemeias Southern Cross
(at 45° over SE horizon)
Crux
Wuliwuliluubw Southern Cross
(upright)
Crux
Machemelito Southern Cross
(at 45° over SW horizon)
Crux

For a traditionally trained navigator, these inputs include physical signals from the sea, skies, and stars, memory signals from his knowledge of star, swell, and wind compasses; and cultural knowledge recorded in chants, dances, and stories. Examples of physical signals include the color, temperature, and taste (salinity) of seawater; floating plant debris; sightings of land-based seabirds flying out to fish; cloud type, color, and movement; wind direction, speed, and temperature; the direction and nature of ocean swells and waves; the position of stars in the sky, and his estimation of the speed, current set, and leeway of his sailing craft. The "compass" he carried was not magnetic but a mental model of where islands are located and the star points that one could use to navigate between them. This mental model would have taken years of study to build; dances, chants (rong),[66] and stories helped him to recall complex relationships of geography and location. The stars gave him highly reliable position information when visible, but navigators such as Mau manage to keep their position and tracks in mind even when blocked by clouds, using other references such as wind and swell as proxies.[14]

Mau's Carolinian star compass (pictured) is the basis for Nainoa's modern Hawaiian star compass. Apart from the bulk of training, which happens at sea, historically boys were taught in the men's house with pebbles, shells, or pieces of coral, representing stars, laid on the sand in a circular pattern. The bits of shell or coral that are chosen to represent which star or constellation is arbitrary, but generally, larger pieces are used for points of the compass while smaller pieces represent important stars between those points. In Mau's star compass, these points are not necessarily equidistant. The outer circular formation represents the horizon, with the canoe its center point. The eastern half of the circle depicts reference stars' rising points on the horizon (tan) while the western half depicts their setting points (tupul). Swell patterns of prevailing trade winds are represented by sticks (not depicted here) overlaying the star compass in the form of a square. All knowledge is retained by memory with the help of dances, chants, and stories, wherein the stars are enumerated as people or characters in the stories.[67]

Technique edit

One aspect of the Carolinian method of estimating longitude on inter-island sailings is to visualize the target island relative to a second reference island's alignment with a succession of selected stars, points of the star compass. It is a refined system of dead reckoning whereby the navigator constantly synthesizes his position relative to the reference island's location in his mental model. The most remarkable thing is that the reference island (lu pongank)[68] may be over the horizon, unseen, even imaginary.[69]

In its simplest form the star compass describes 32 points at which key stars rise on the eastern horizon and set on the western horizon. North latitude is fairly easy to determine because the North Pole has a zenith star easily seen with the naked eye, called Polaris (Wuliwulifasmughet).[70] Polaris' height above the horizon indicates the viewer's southward displacement from Polaris' nadir, the North Pole. When one travels further north, Polaris appears higher in the sky. Only at the true north pole is Polaris directly overhead at nearly 90 degrees altitude.[71] When one travels south toward the equator, Polaris appears to descend toward the northern horizon. At 45 degrees north latitude, Polaris is 45 degrees above the northern horizon. Near the equator, Polaris' altitude approaches zero degrees, but for the viewer just further south, Polaris will have disappeared below the northern horizon.

Continuing south from the equator, though Polaris is no longer visible, Crux (Luubw),[70] the "Southern Cross", will have risen above the southern horizon. Travelling further southward, Crux rises higher in the sky. Through Crux's longest axis, an imaginary line bisecting Gacrux and Acrux points southward toward the southern celestial pole. However, the South Pole has no true zenith star from which direct readings of south latitude may be taken. As a proxy, the southern celestial pole lies at the end of that imaginary line extended southward through Gacrux and Acrux, at a distance about 4.5 times the distance between them.[72] Nainoa Thompson notes that at Hawaiʻi's latitude, the distance between Gacrux and the southerly Acrux is equal to Acrux's altitude above the southern horizon.[73]

To steer the canoe in mid-ocean on a consistent course, the navigator selects a star and keeps the canoe pointed toward it. Should it become cloud-blocked, or rise too high in the sky, he selects another star but offsets his reference to remain true to the first, or steers at the same relative angle to the swell as when steering toward the star.[74]

Piailug was most likely autistic. John Elder Robison, a popular writer and analyst with Asperger's syndrome, writes that intense sensory sensitivity, attention to detail, hyperfocus, visual memory, and pattern recognition, all of which are autistic traits, are necessary to Pacific-style wayfinding.[75] Additionally, Piailug had unusual communicative patterns which are typically associated with autism, such as monotonous speech and lack of eye contact.[75]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The New York Times 1995, p. A12 and Rosen 2008, Part One, Chapter 6, "Mau & His Brother".
  2. ^ The Economist 2010, p. 84 and Kawaharada 2010a, §5
  3. ^ a b Finney & Low 2007, p. 170.
  4. ^ Thomas 1987, pp. 117–119. Mau was between the ages of eleven and fourteen when his grandfather died.
  5. ^ Mau was between the ages of thirteen and fifteen when his father died.
  6. ^ Metzgar 1991, p. 231 Sources vary as to Mau's age at the time of his pwo initiation on Satawal. Lewis 1978, p. 134 suggests a time around 1950 and Thomas 1987, p. 118 between 1947 and 1948. Metzgar suggests that the years between 1950 and 1952 are more likely.
  7. ^ Thomas 1987, pp. 117–119.
  8. ^ Lewis 1978, p. 135 The Weriyeng navigation school is an ancient institution, which began on Pollap Island many centuries ago. Weriyeng and the Fanur school are the only two schools of navigation left in Micronesia. Also, see Woodward 1998, p. 470
  9. ^ Thomas 1987, pp. 118–119.
  10. ^ Rosen 2008, Part One, Chapter 4, "Talk Canoe", 20:27.
  11. ^ Ferrar 2006, p. 12 "The people on my island, they put my name as Mau because when I was young I no like stay long time on the land. When I come from the ocean, two or three days, then I go back again. Even when the storm is come, I still stay out on the ocean. That's why my people they call me Mau." According to Thomas (1987), Mau was named after the hawksbill turtle, known as mau in Satawalese. See Jaynes & Raffipiy 2010: According to Mau's nephew, Tom Raffipiy: "In his native Satawalese vernacular 'mau' means strong, strength, hard, hardened, and mature, among other definitions. Truly, Pius 'Mau' Piailug lived up to the nickname given to him in his early adulthood. The name was supposedly given to him to describe his uncanny physique which was then thought of as a physical defect. The ripples of muscles on his back were likened to the rough shells of hawksbill turtles. However he got the nickname 'Mau' one can be certain that it was given out of love and affection as was the normal practice. Probably no one realized how the name would shape the character of the man who defied cultural belief to safeguard a dying art of Oceania – non-instrumental navigation."
  12. ^ Also spelled Nemoito.
  13. ^ Thomas 1987, p. 45.
  14. ^ a b c Thompson 2007.
  15. ^ Fosberg 1969, p. 2.
  16. ^ Low 2011.
  17. ^ Mau's brother Urupoa believes that missionaries arrived or were established on Satawal sometime around 1948. See Rosen 2008, Event occurs at 29:13.
  18. ^ Rosen 2008, Part One, Chapter 6, "Mau & His Brother".
  19. ^ Rosen 2008, Part Three, Extra Features, "Mike McCoy on Mau's Navigation".
  20. ^ Finney 1979, p. 61.
  21. ^ Rosen 2008, Part One, Chapter 7, "Hokuleʻa Voyage – 1976".
  22. ^ a b Vermillion, Stephanie. "Polynesia's master voyagers who navigate by nature". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  23. ^ Lewis 1994, pp. 335–336 and Kyselka 1987, p. 37
  24. ^ Gordon 2006, p. B1.
  25. ^ The Economist 2010, p. 84.
  26. ^ Lewis 1978, p. 134.
  27. ^ Finney 1979, pp. 64–65.
  28. ^ To follow the course of the maiden voyage by the Hōkūleʻa, see the 1976 color map.
  29. ^ U.S. Department of the Interior 2007.
  30. ^ Kyselka 1987, pp. 17–18.
  31. ^ Finney 1994, p. 76.
  32. ^ Finney 1994, p. 69.
  33. ^ Finney 1992.
  34. ^ Taonui 2009a.
  35. ^ Thompson 2010.
  36. ^ Taonui 2009b.
  37. ^ a b Finney 2000.
  38. ^ Finney, "Sin at Awarua" on Polynesian Voyaging web site.
  39. ^ "Nā Kālai Waʻa | Makaliʻi Voyaging Ohana". Nā Kālai Waʻa. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  40. ^ "Makali'i". archive.hokulea.com. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  41. ^ Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010c. See Krauss 2004: "The journey of the Hawaiian voyaging canoe in 1999 went through half the length of Micronesia. The first Hawaiian voyaging canoe to visit those far-flung islands and atolls created a resurgence of interest in voyaging among Micronesians. Alsen Kelen, project manager for the sailing canoe program at Majuro in the Marshall Islands, named his daughter Makaliʻi".
  42. ^ Malama Hawaii News 2007.
  43. ^ Micronesia time for Satawal is UTC+10:00.
  44. ^ KITV 2010.
  45. ^ "Pacific Giant Mau Piailug Dies on Satawal". www.doi.gov. 17 June 2015. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  46. ^ "Master Navigator "Mau" Piailug Dies on July 12, 2010". www.fsmgov.org. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  47. ^ a b c David 2010.
  48. ^ UH Board of Regents 2010, §1980–1989, Lal 2000, p. 81.
  49. ^ Brown 2010, p. B7.
  50. ^ Bernice P. Bishop Museum 2008.
  51. ^ Theroux 2002, Finney 1979, pp. 206–207, and Low 2007, p. 186.
  52. ^ Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010a.
  53. ^ See Druett, Joan (2010). Tupaia: Captain Cook's Polynesian Navigator. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-313-38748-7.
  54. ^ Finney 1979, Kyselka 1987, pp. 12–14 and Finney 1994
  55. ^ See Heyerdahl, Thor (1953). American Indians in the Pacific: The Theory Behind the Kon-Tiki Expedition. Chicago: Rand McNally.
  56. ^ See Sharp, Andrew (1957). Ancient Voyagers in the Pacific. Penguin Books.
  57. ^ Evenari 1996.
  58. ^ Callaghan 1999, p. 12. See Levison, Michael; Ward, R. Gerard; Webb, John W. (1973). The Settlement of Polynesia: A Computer Simulation. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-81-660661-0.
  59. ^ See PVS founders and PVS mission.
  60. ^ Finney 1994, p. 70: "... Mau Piailug had dramatically demonstrated how wrong Sharp had been in limiting navigated voyages to only 300 miles. This navigational feat, plus the performance of the canoe in gaining enough easting to reach Tahiti and then in speeding back to Hawaiʻi to complete the roundtrip, effectively demolished Sharp's artificial limits on Polynesian voyaging capabilities."
  61. ^ See Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian languages
  62. ^ Finney 1996.
  63. ^ Wilford 2008, p. 6.
  64. ^ Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010c and Thompson 1987
  65. ^ Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010b and Ryman 1993
  66. ^ Metzgar 1991, p. 231.
  67. ^ Lewis 1978, pp. 134–135.
  68. ^ Woodward 1998.
  69. ^ Thomas & Goodenough 1997.
  70. ^ a b Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010b.
  71. ^ Kawaharada & Thompson 2010b: Polaris' declination is 89.3°, meaning it is within one degree of the zenith at the North Pole.
  72. ^ Hisco 1996.
  73. ^ Thompson 2010b: "At the latitude of Hawaiʻi, the distance from the top star to the bottom star is the same distance from that bottom star to the horizon, about 6 degrees. This configuration only occurs at the latitude of Hawaiʻi."
  74. ^ Finney 1994, pp. 51–65.
  75. ^ a b "Autism in the South Pacific: A Different Way of Seeing? | Psychology Today New Zealand". www.psychologytoday.com. Retrieved 11 February 2023.

References edit

  • Bernice P. Bishop Museum (2008). . Bernice P. Bishop Museum. Archived from the original on 10 October 2010.
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  • Finney, Ben; Low, Sam (2007). "Navigation". In Howe, K. R. (ed.). Vaka Moana: Voyages of the Ancestors. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. pp. 154–197. ISBN 978-0-8248-3213-1.
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  • Kawaharada, Dennis; Thompson, Nainoa, eds. (2010b). "The Celestial Sphere". Wayfinding: Modern Methods and Techniques of Non-Instrument Navigation, Based on Pacific Traditions. Polynesian Voyaging Society. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
  • KITV.com (12 July 2010). . KITV Honolulu News. Archived from the original on 8 September 2011. Retrieved 22 July 2010.
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  • Low, Sam (2011). "Mau Piailug". Hawaiʻiki Rising. University of Hawaii Press.
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  • Polynesian Voyaging Society (2010c). "Milton "Shorty" Bertelmann". Polynesian Voyaging Society. from the original on 18 May 2011.
  • Rosen, Alan (writer, producer, director) (2008), Mau Voyager: Mau Piailug in Hawaiʻi 2001–2006, Na Kalai Waʻa Moku o Hawaii{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Ryman, Anders (1993). "Yapese Grandson Learning Traditional Navigation". Satawal, Federated States of Micronesia: Corbis Images. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
  • Taonui, Rāwiri (2009a). "Canoe navigation - Recent voyaging". Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage.
  • Taonui, Rāwiri (2009b). "Decline and renaissance of canoe voyaging". Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage.
  • Theroux, Paul (December 2002). "Hawaii". National Geographic. 11 (6). National Geographic Society.
  • Thomas, Steven D. (1987). The Last Navigator. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0-8050-0096-8.
  • Thomas, Steve; Goodenough, Ward H. (1997). "Traditional Navigation in the Western Pacific". Keeping Track. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
  • Thompson, Nainoa (1987). "The Wayfinder: The 1980 Voyage Home". An Ocean in Mind. Polynesian Voyaging Society. from the original on 10 December 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
  • Thompson, Nainoa (2007). "Kū Holo Mau: 2007 Voyage for Mau". Polynesian Voyaging Society. from the original on 18 May 2011.
  • Thompson, Nainoa (2010). "Recollections". Voyage of Rediscovery: 1985-1987. Polynesian Voyaging Society. from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  • Thompson, Nainoa (2010b). "On Wayfinding". Polynesian Voyaging Society. from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
  • UH Board of Regents (2010). "Honorary degrees conferred by the University of Hawaii". University of Hawaii. from the original on 25 December 2010. Mau Piailug, navigator and explorer, 1987 (DH)
  • U.S. Department of the Interior (11 April 2007). . OIA Press Release. Office of Insular Affairs. Archived from the original on 4 June 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
  • Wilford, John Noble (18 January 2008). "Pacific Islanders' Ancestry Emerges in Genetic Study". The New York Times. p. 6. Archived from the original on 29 July 2010.
  • Woodward, David (1998). History of Cartography. University of Chicago Press. p. 470. ISBN 0-226-90728-7. Retrieved 4 August 2010.

Further reading edit

  • Baybayan, Chad Kalepa (29 July 2010). . Island Voices. Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Archived from the original on 1 August 2010.
  • Downes, Lawrence (18 July 2010). . The New York Times. p. 7. Archived from the original on 2 May 2018.
  • Jack-Hinton, Colin (December 1995). "We the Navigators: The Ancient Art Landfinding in the Pacific". Oceania. 66 (2). University of Sydney.
  • Kubota, Gary T. (2007). To Honor Mau: Voyage of the Hokuleʻa through Micronesia, 23 January – 7 April 2007. Pacific Renaissance Press. ISBN 978-0-9799467-0-7.
  • Miller, Stephen (15 July 2010). . Wall Street Journal. p. 13. Archived from the original on 8 November 2012.
  • Woodward, David; G. Malcolm Lewis, eds. (1998). The History of Cartography. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-90728-7. Provides extensive explication of Carolinian navigation.

External links edit

  • Maiden Voyage Productions (1999). Polynesian seafaring - history and Hawaiian re-creation (Excerpt on YouTube from VHS tape). originally published Durham, NC: YouTube.com.
  • Piailug, Mau. Grand Master Mau Piailug And His Star Compass. YouTube. Archived from the original on 17 November 2021. Retrieved 22 July 2010.
  • Piailug, Mau (2005). The Canoe is the People: Indigenous Navigation in the Pacific (CD-ROM). UNESCO LINKS.
  • Thomas, Steve. "Steve Thomas Traditional Micronesian Navigation Collection". University of Hawaii at Manoa, UH Manoa Library, Pacific Collection. Mau Pialug collection

piailug, pius, piailug, pronounced, 1932, july, 2010, micronesian, navigator, from, carolinian, island, satawal, best, known, teacher, traditional, instrument, wayfinding, methods, open, ocean, voyaging, carolinian, navigation, system, which, relies, navigatio. Pius Mau Piailug pronounced ˈ p aɪ e s ˈ m aʊ p iː ˈ aɪ l e ɡ 1932 12 July 2010 was a Micronesian navigator from the Carolinian island of Satawal best known as a teacher of traditional non instrument wayfinding methods for open ocean voyaging Mau s Carolinian navigation system which relies on navigational clues using the Sun and stars winds and clouds seas and swells and birds and fish was acquired through rote learning passed down through teachings in the oral tradition He earned the title of master navigator palu by the age of eighteen around the time the first American missionaries arrived in Satawal As he neared middle age Mau grew concerned that the practice of navigation in Satawal would disappear as his people became acculturated to Western values In the hope that the navigational tradition would be preserved for future generations Mau shared his knowledge with the Polynesian Voyaging Society PVS With Mau s help PVS used experimental archaeology to recreate and test lost Hawaiian navigational techniques on the Hōkuleʻa a modern reconstruction of a double hulled Hawaiian voyaging canoe Mau PiailugBornPius Piailug1932Weiso Satawal Yap South Seas Mandate JapanDied12 July 2010 2010 07 12 aged 78 Satawal Yap Federated States of MicronesiaNationalityMicronesianOther namesMau Papa MauEducationWeriyeng school of navigationOccupationsNavigatorcanoe builderteacher kumu Years active1948 2007Known forWayfinding Polynesian navigation Hawaiian RenaissanceSpouseNemwaeito alt sp Nemoito Children16AwardsSpecial fellowship East West Center 1976 Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters UH 1987 Robert J Pfeiffer Medal 2008 The successful non instrument sailing of Hōkuleʻa to Tahiti in 1976 proved the efficacy of Mau s navigational system to the world To academia Mau s achievement provided evidence for intentional two way voyaging throughout Oceania supporting a hypothesis that explained the Asiatic origin of Polynesians The success of the Micronesian Polynesian cultural exchange symbolized by Hōkuleʻa had an impact throughout the Pacific It contributed to the emergence of the second Hawaiian cultural renaissance and to a revival of Polynesian navigation and canoe building in Hawaii New Zealand Rarotonga and Tahiti It also sparked interest in traditional wayfinding on Mau s home island of Satawal Later in life Mau was respectfully known as a grandmaster navigator and he was called Papa Mau by his friends with great reverence and affection He received an honorary degree from the University of Hawaii and he was honored by the Smithsonian Institution and the Bishop Museum for his contributions to maritime history Mau s life and work was explored in several books and documentary films and his legacy continues to be remembered and celebrated by the indigenous peoples of Oceania Contents 1 Early life 1932 1974 1 1 Satawal Micronesia 1 2 Honolulu Hawaii 2 Later life 1975 2010 2 1 Hōkuleʻa 2 2 Makaliʻi 2 3 Alingano Maisu 2 4 Death 3 Awards 4 Legacy 5 Wayfinding and navigation 5 1 Training 5 2 Technique 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life 1932 1974 editSatawal Micronesia edit Mau was born Pius Piailug in 1932 in the village of Weiso on the small coral island of Satawal in Yap State of the Caroline Islands now a part of the Federated States of Micronesia 1 Satawal is a wooded island with an area of 1 3 square kilometres 0 50 sq mi located in the western Pacific Ocean about 800 kilometres 500 mi south of Guam Mau s personal connection to the sea began early in his life when he was placed in tide pools in his infancy so he could feel the pull of the ocean 2 At the age of four or five Mau was chosen by his grandfather Raangipi to study as an apprentice navigator 3 Mau initially protested his grandfather s teaching preferring to spend his time playing on the beach with children his own age Raangipi trained Mau as a young navigator for many years Their day would begin at sunrise when they would eat breakfast together and afterwards take care of chores before they went fishing During the evening Mau would join the men in the canoe house as they drank listening to their stories about navigation and sailing Raangipi told the young boy that if he chose to become a navigator Mau could gain respect from his community eat well and maintain a position in Satawalese society higher than that of a chief Encouraged Mau learned basic navigational clues regarding the stars swells and birds from Raangipi but his grandfather died sometime before Mau was fourteen 4 After his grandfather died Mau began training with his father Orranipui Mau learned more about navigating by stars wofanu from his father and how to fish and build canoes When his father died before he turned fifteen 5 Mau was adopted by his aunt and uncle Sometime around the age of eighteen 6 Mau s aunt and uncle sent him to study with Angora an acclaimed navigator 7 His studies culminated in his initiation as a master navigator palu in the Weriyeng school of navigation 8 during the revered pwo ceremony presided over by Angora It was to be the last pwo held on Satawal for the next fifty years After the ceremony Mau lived for a month in the canoe house where he received rigorous lessons from three navigators 9 When the final training was complete Mau made his first solo voyage of about 92 kilometres 57 mi 10 Because he had a tendency to sail in all weather conditions he was given the nickname Mau from the Satawalese word maumau meaning strong 11 After becoming a navigator Mau married Nemwaeito 12 with whom he raised ten boys and six girls 13 nbsp Mau Piailug is from the island of Satawal It s a mile and a half long and a mile wide Population 600 Navigation s not about cultural revival it s about survival Not enough food can be produced on a small island like that Their navigators have to go out to sea to catch fish so they can eat Nainoa Thompson 14 Daily life in Mau s village on Satawal involved harvesting taro and gathering breadfruit and coconut The Satawalese people also raised chicken and pork 15 and caught fish their primary source of protein 14 A freshwater pond served as bathing facilities Local materials were used to construct outrigger canoes called proa The island s isolation helped preserve the lifestyle of the Satawalese people and Mau s role as a navigator 16 Even with the arrival of the Germans 1890 and the Japanese 1914 in Micronesia Satawalese culture remained intact American missionaries who arrived after World War II 17 built the first church and school on Satawal 18 In the late 1960s Mau attempted to verify his navigational knowledge of the wider Pacific by working as a seaman on an inter island ship run by the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands 19 From 1969 to 1973 Mau became friends with Mike McCoy a Peace Corps volunteer stationed on Satawal 20 As well as marrying Mau s niece McCoy sailed with Mau and they worked together on a project tagging turtles McCoy became interested in Satawalese navigation published several articles on the topic and kept in touch with the anthropologist Ben Finney who was researching Polynesian navigation When McCoy s assignment on Satawal ended he asked Pialug if he wanted to come to Hawaii with him 21 Honolulu Hawaii edit Mau first visited Hawaii in 1973 and McCoy introduced him to Ben Finney Later Finney suggested to the Polynesian Voyaging Society that they should try to recruit Mau for their Hōkuleʻa project 3 since no Hawaiian traditional navigators remained The project goal was to test the hypothesis that Polynesians made intentional non instrument voyages across the Pacific 22 Tevake a renowned Polynesian navigator had died in 1970 23 and only six others were known 24 Navigators were reluctant to release their sacred knowledge to outsiders 25 At the time Mau was just 41 years old and the youngest navigator out of the group Mau feared that traditional navigation would die in his own culture just as it had in Hawaii He had tried to teach the young men of Satawal the skills passed on to him but he was not optimistic The members of the younger generation were too busy with school and too attracted to Western culture to undertake the rigorous course of study and apprenticeship Further Mau s people did not seem to care that traditional navigation was dying and could be lost forever 26 Later life 1975 2010 editHōkuleʻa edit With Finney s help Mau was awarded a special fellowship at the East West Center 27 Mau returned to Honolulu in April 1975 to begin work with the Hawaii based Polynesian Voyaging Society eventually navigating the double hulled canoe Hōkuleʻa from Hawaii to Tahiti on its maiden voyage in 1976 28 Mau trained and mentored Native Hawaiian navigator Nainoa Thompson who would later become a master navigator 29 David Henry Lewis a scholar of Polynesian navigation documented Mau s work 30 Mau Piailug s Voyages on Hōkuleʻa nbsp Hōkuleʻa Year Voyage Ports 1976 Inaugural Voyage Hawaii Tahiti 1980 Tahiti Voyage Hawaii Tahiti Hawaii 1985 1987 Voyage of Rediscovery Hawaii Tahiti Rarotonga Waitangi Nukuʻalofa Pago Pago Tutuila Aitutaki Rarotonga Tautira 1995 Na ʻOhana Holo Moana Hilo Papeʻete Nuku Hiva Hilo Mau s first hand knowledge of traditional navigation had been accumulated in Northern Hemisphere study and sailings but the voyage to Tahiti required Mau to familiarise himself with the geography and night sky of the Southern Hemisphere Of the preparation Finney writes To prepare Mau Piailug for the voyage David Lewis briefed him on the geography of the islands in this part of the Pacific and the winds and currents that could be expected along the way all information that an early Polynesian navigator acquainted with this route would have carried in his head In addition to alert Mau of how the elevation of stars above the northern and southern horizons would change as the canoe sailed farther and farther south we held training sessions in Honolulu s Bishop Museum planetarium to graphically show how for example as one sailed toward Tahiti Polaris sank lower and lower on the northern horizon until it disappeared at the equator while the Southern Cross curved higher and higher in the sky During his first few days of the voyage Mau received further coaching on the pattern of winds and currents from Rodo Williams a veteran Tahitian seaman on the crew who the year before had sailed a yacht from Tahiti to Hawaii and could therefore provide Mau with a firsthand account of what he could expect to encounter 31 Their collaboration proved successful when on the 31st day at sea on the 1976 voyage 22 Mau stated soon they would see land and the next day Tahiti A few hours later they spotted land based white terns Gygis alba followed by a diminution of the trade wind swell That night they spotted Mataiva After a brief stopover with little more than another day s sailing they made landfall at Tahiti where they were welcomed by 17 000 people half the population of Tahiti 32 Nainoa s ambition was to sail Hōkuleʻa to Tahiti as navigator by using recreated traditional techniques He spent years training on his own and with Mau Mau s training and mentoring helped Nainoa achieve that goal in the 1980 Tahiti voyage It marked the first time in over 500 years that a Native Hawaiian had mastered the stars the seas the birds and the winds to guide a sailing canoe from Hawaii to Tahiti and back 33 The two men joined again for the 1985 1987 Voyage of Rediscovery to New Zealand again with Nainoa as principal navigator and Mau as mentor The voyage to New Zealand stoked Maori interest in cultural history navigation techniques and canoe building 34 It also brought to life for Maori the stories in their folklore of the great canoe voyages of migration and settlement in Aotearoa New Zealand Describing a ceremony held at Waitangi to commemorate the Hawaii New Zealand voyage of Hōkuleʻa Nainoa writes Sir James Henare the most revered of the elders of Tai Tokerau got up and said You ve proven that it could be done And you ve also proven that our ancestors did it because the five tribes of Tai Tokerau trace their ancestry from the names of the canoes they arrived in and because you people from Hawaiʻi came by canoe therefore by our traditions you must be the sixth tribe of Tai Tokerau 35 In 1995 Mau took part in the Na ʻOhana Holo Moana voyage of Hōkuleʻa to Raiatea Sailing with his son Sesario Sewralur and Nainoa as sailing master Mau watched as Nainoa s students Kaʻau McKenney and Keahi Omai served as navigators Mau had seen Nainoa succeed in the 1980 and 1985 1987 voyages finally in this 1995 voyage Mau saw proof that the knowledge was carried forward to the next generation 36 The canoe landed successfully at Rarotonga and the voyage resulted in the lifting of a six centuries old taboo on voyaging from Raʻiatea 37 38 Hōkuleʻa had sailed from Hawaii with sisterships Hawaiʻiloa and Makaliʻi the canoes rendez voused at Taputapuatea with other voyaging canoes from across Oceania 37 Makaliʻi edit To help preserve Hawaiian culture Milton Shorty Bertelmann and his brother Clay established the nonprofit organization Na Kalai Waʻa Moku o Hawaiʻi 39 on the island of Hawaii in 1992 Beginning in 1994 the two brothers helped construct Makaliʻi 40 a 54 foot voyaging canoe launching it in 1995 From February to May 1999 Shorty Bertelmann navigated Makaliʻi to Satawal in a voyage known as E Mau Sailing the Master Home The voyage was to pay homage to master navigator Mau Piailug and to thank him for his teachings Mau sailed home aboard Makaliʻi as their honored guest Makaliʻi continued her 1999 voyage through half the length of Micronesia She was the first Hawaiian voyaging canoe to visit the far reaches of Micronesia and her appearance stimulated interest in Micronesians in their own cultural history 41 Alingano Maisu edit On 18 March 2007 Mau presided over the first pwo ceremony for navigators in 56 years on the island of Satawal Five Native Hawaiians and eleven other people were inducted into pwo as master navigators including Nainoa Thompson and Mau s son Sesario Sewralur The Polynesian Voyaging Society as part of the 2007 Hōkuleʻa One Ocean One People voyage named Ku Holo Mau presented Mau with a canoe named the Alingano Maisu a gift for his key role in reviving traditional wayfinding navigation in Hawaii The canoe was built in Kawaihae Hawaii under the nonprofit organization Na Kalai Waʻa Moku O Hawaiʻi The commitment to build this gift for Mau was made by Clay Bertelmann captain of Makaliʻi and Hōkuleʻa Maisu was given to Mau on behalf of all the voyaging families and organizations that actively continue to sail and practice the traditions taught by Mau Piailug 42 Death edit After a long struggle with diabetes Mau died on his home island of Satawal at 18 30 Micronesia time 43 Monday 12 July 2010 44 45 46 As is the tradition on Satawal travel between the islands was temporarily suspended in Mau s honour 47 Because there is no morgue on the island Mau was buried the following day and a nightly rosary was held until the memorial service on 21 July at Santa Soledad Church Mau s son Henry Yarofalpiy will continue teaching students about their culture preserving the legacy of his father 47 Awards editMau was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters in 1987 by the University of Hawaii 48 On 9 May 2000 he was honoured by the Smithsonian Institution at the National Museum of Natural History At the ceremony secretary Lawrence M Small said The rebirth of non instrument navigation came about largely due to this man Mau Piailug 49 The Bishop Museum presented Mau with the Robert J Pfeiffer Medal on 12 July 2008 honouring him for exceptional dedication to the advancement of maritime affairs and the perpetuation of maritime heritage in Hawaii and the Pacific Mau also was honored for his devotion and outstanding civic leadership and for exemplifying the spirit and purpose of the Museum s founder Charles Reed Bishop 50 nbsp Mau s name carved into the back of the navigator s seat aboard Hokule a The Polynesian Voyaging Society recognized Mau s contributions in preserving the art of wayfinding by building and donating the voyaging canoe Alingano Maisu to Mau and the people of Satawal and he is honored with his name carved into the rail aboard Hōkuleʻa behind his traditional seat on the port rear quarter of the vessel Legacy editSee also Micronesian navigation and Polynesian navigation The success of Mau s navigational feats sparked cultural pride in Tahitians Maori and Hawaiians and connected all Polynesians to stories their forebears told of similar voyages of generations past The voyage of Hōkuleʻa attracted the interest of young students such as Milton Shorty Bertelmann and later Nainoa Thompson 51 Mau not only led Hōkuleʻa to Tahiti but reconnected the people of the Pacific to their cultural roots Revived interest in preserving traditional culture and navigation methods reinvigorated the art of canoe building and cultural studies in Hawaii New Zealand Rarotonga and Tahiti 52 as well as Mau s homeland of Satawal 47 nbsp A projection of the Polynesian triangle on the globe Taiwan is circled in the upper left corner Two centuries before Mau and the Hōkuleʻa Captain James Cook with the help of Tupaia 53 gained knowledge that otherwise would have been closely held Before his death in 1779 Cook hypothesized that Polynesians shared common ancestry he even pinned their origin to Asia However Cook s theory did not prevent debate among scholars Before the Hōkuleʻa voyage in 1976 academic debate about the settlement of Polynesia was divided between several schools of thought 54 Norwegian ethnographer Thor Heyerdahl hypothesized that the Pacific was settled by voyages from South America and set out to prove that with his Kon Tiki expedition 55 Scholars did not take Heyerdahl s hypothesis seriously New Zealander Andrew Sharp proposed the accidental voyaging hypothesis in 1957 which erroneously argued that Oceania was too vast to have been settled by intentional voyaging so migrations must have happened by accidental drift voyages 56 Sharp granted that Polynesians likely settled the Pacific from Asia but held the opinion that their crude vessels and navigational tools were not reliable for intentional sailing from Tahiti to Hawaii or New Zealand He stated that voyages of more than 300 miles were likely accidental voyages with landfall at the mercy of wind and current 57 A 1973 study and computer simulation by Levison Ward and Web investigated the probability of Sharp s hypothesis but found it improbable 58 Finney disagreed with the accidental voyaging portion of Sharp s hypothesis To investigate the problem he founded the Polynesian Voyaging Society with Herb Kane and Tommy Holmes in 1973 intent on building a voyaging canoe to sail from Hawaii to Tahiti to test whether intentional two way voyaging throughout Oceania could be replicated 59 With the help of Mau s navigational knowledge guiding Hōkuleʻa the Polynesian Voyaging Society demonstrated that intentional voyaging was not only possible but also the ancestors of the Polynesians could have settled the Pacific on similar voyages using non instrument wayfinding techniques such as Mau s 60 Finally linguistic 61 and archaeological evidence suggests that the history of the Polynesian people does not originate in the East Pacific but in the West 62 Recent developments in the field of DNA analysis have unequivocally settled the debate of Polynesian origin They prove Polynesians share common ancestry with indigenous Taiwanese and East Asians 63 Wayfinding and navigation editTraining edit Navigator training was historically interwoven with culture and ritual Great discretion had to be shown in candidate selection so that the knowledge preserved through oral tradition would have the greatest chance of survival A master navigator s rank was equal or superior to a village chief s rank Prudent navigation relies on no single technique but instead synthesizes position from multiple inputs Underway this constant synthesis makes it easy to spot the navigator he being the one with red eyes from sleep deprivation 64 Mau Piailug s Star Compass 65 nbsp Legend Satawalese name Traditional name Astronomical name Tupul Setting West Tan Rising East Wuliwulifasmughet North star Polaris Mailapailefung Little Dipper Ursa Minor Wylur Big Dipper Ursa Major Igulig Whale 1 Cassiopeia head of whale 2a Almach amp 2b Mirach body of whale 3a Hamal amp 3b Sharatan whale s tail 1 Cassiopeia2a Gamma Andromedae amp 2b Beta Andromedae3a Alpha Arietis amp 3b Beta Arietis Murn Vega Vega Marigaht Seven Sisters Pleiades Uul Aldebaran Alpha Tauri Paiifung Tarazed Gamma Aquilae Mailap Altair Alpha Aquilae Paiyur Alshain Beta Aquilae Earlier Orion Orion Sarapool Corvus Corvus Tumur Scorpius Top 6 stars Scorpius Mesario 1a Shaula amp 1b Antares 1a Lambda Scorpii amp 1b Alpha Scorpii Luubw Southern Cross rising or setting Crux Machemeias Southern Cross at 45 over SE horizon Crux Wuliwuliluubw Southern Cross upright Crux Machemelito Southern Cross at 45 over SW horizon Crux For a traditionally trained navigator these inputs include physical signals from the sea skies and stars memory signals from his knowledge of star swell and wind compasses and cultural knowledge recorded in chants dances and stories Examples of physical signals include the color temperature and taste salinity of seawater floating plant debris sightings of land based seabirds flying out to fish cloud type color and movement wind direction speed and temperature the direction and nature of ocean swells and waves the position of stars in the sky and his estimation of the speed current set and leeway of his sailing craft The compass he carried was not magnetic but a mental model of where islands are located and the star points that one could use to navigate between them This mental model would have taken years of study to build dances chants rong 66 and stories helped him to recall complex relationships of geography and location The stars gave him highly reliable position information when visible but navigators such as Mau manage to keep their position and tracks in mind even when blocked by clouds using other references such as wind and swell as proxies 14 Mau s Carolinian star compass pictured is the basis for Nainoa s modern Hawaiian star compass Apart from the bulk of training which happens at sea historically boys were taught in the men s house with pebbles shells or pieces of coral representing stars laid on the sand in a circular pattern The bits of shell or coral that are chosen to represent which star or constellation is arbitrary but generally larger pieces are used for points of the compass while smaller pieces represent important stars between those points In Mau s star compass these points are not necessarily equidistant The outer circular formation represents the horizon with the canoe its center point The eastern half of the circle depicts reference stars rising points on the horizon tan while the western half depicts their setting points tupul Swell patterns of prevailing trade winds are represented by sticks not depicted here overlaying the star compass in the form of a square All knowledge is retained by memory with the help of dances chants and stories wherein the stars are enumerated as people or characters in the stories 67 Technique edit One aspect of the Carolinian method of estimating longitude on inter island sailings is to visualize the target island relative to a second reference island s alignment with a succession of selected stars points of the star compass It is a refined system of dead reckoning whereby the navigator constantly synthesizes his position relative to the reference island s location in his mental model The most remarkable thing is that the reference island lu pongank 68 may be over the horizon unseen even imaginary 69 In its simplest form the star compass describes 32 points at which key stars rise on the eastern horizon and set on the western horizon North latitude is fairly easy to determine because the North Pole has a zenith star easily seen with the naked eye called Polaris Wuliwulifasmughet 70 Polaris height above the horizon indicates the viewer s southward displacement from Polaris nadir the North Pole When one travels further north Polaris appears higher in the sky Only at the true north pole is Polaris directly overhead at nearly 90 degrees altitude 71 When one travels south toward the equator Polaris appears to descend toward the northern horizon At 45 degrees north latitude Polaris is 45 degrees above the northern horizon Near the equator Polaris altitude approaches zero degrees but for the viewer just further south Polaris will have disappeared below the northern horizon Continuing south from the equator though Polaris is no longer visible Crux Luubw 70 the Southern Cross will have risen above the southern horizon Travelling further southward Crux rises higher in the sky Through Crux s longest axis an imaginary line bisecting Gacrux and Acrux points southward toward the southern celestial pole However the South Pole has no true zenith star from which direct readings of south latitude may be taken As a proxy the southern celestial pole lies at the end of that imaginary line extended southward through Gacrux and Acrux at a distance about 4 5 times the distance between them 72 Nainoa Thompson notes that at Hawaiʻi s latitude the distance between Gacrux and the southerly Acrux is equal to Acrux s altitude above the southern horizon 73 To steer the canoe in mid ocean on a consistent course the navigator selects a star and keeps the canoe pointed toward it Should it become cloud blocked or rise too high in the sky he selects another star but offsets his reference to remain true to the first or steers at the same relative angle to the swell as when steering toward the star 74 Piailug was most likely autistic John Elder Robison a popular writer and analyst with Asperger s syndrome writes that intense sensory sensitivity attention to detail hyperfocus visual memory and pattern recognition all of which are autistic traits are necessary to Pacific style wayfinding 75 Additionally Piailug had unusual communicative patterns which are typically associated with autism such as monotonous speech and lack of eye contact 75 Notes edit The New York Times 1995 p A12 and Rosen 2008 Part One Chapter 6 Mau amp His Brother The Economist 2010 p 84 and Kawaharada 2010a 5 a b Finney amp Low 2007 p 170 Thomas 1987 pp 117 119 Mau was between the ages of eleven and fourteen when his grandfather died Mau was between the ages of thirteen and fifteen when his father died Metzgar 1991 p 231 Sources vary as to Mau s age at the time of his pwo initiation on Satawal Lewis 1978 p 134 suggests a time around 1950 and Thomas 1987 p 118 between 1947 and 1948 Metzgar suggests that the years between 1950 and 1952 are more likely Thomas 1987 pp 117 119 Lewis 1978 p 135 The Weriyeng navigation school is an ancient institution which began on Pollap Island many centuries ago Weriyeng and the Fanur school are the only two schools of navigation left in Micronesia Also see Woodward 1998 p 470 Thomas 1987 pp 118 119 Rosen 2008 Part One Chapter 4 Talk Canoe 20 27 Ferrar 2006 p 12 The people on my island they put my name as Mau because when I was young I no like stay long time on the land When I come from the ocean two or three days then I go back again Even when the storm is come I still stay out on the ocean That s why my people they call me Mau According to Thomas 1987 Mau was named after the hawksbill turtle known as mau in Satawalese See Jaynes amp Raffipiy 2010 According to Mau s nephew Tom Raffipiy In his native Satawalese vernacular mau means strong strength hard hardened and mature among other definitions Truly Pius Mau Piailug lived up to the nickname given to him in his early adulthood The name was supposedly given to him to describe his uncanny physique which was then thought of as a physical defect The ripples of muscles on his back were likened to the rough shells of hawksbill turtles However he got the nickname Mau one can be certain that it was given out of love and affection as was the normal practice Probably no one realized how the name would shape the character of the man who defied cultural belief to safeguard a dying art of Oceania non instrumental navigation Also spelled Nemoito Thomas 1987 p 45 a b c Thompson 2007 Fosberg 1969 p 2 Low 2011 Mau s brother Urupoa believes that missionaries arrived or were established on Satawal sometime around 1948 See Rosen 2008 Event occurs at 29 13 Rosen 2008 Part One Chapter 6 Mau amp His Brother Rosen 2008 Part Three Extra Features Mike McCoy on Mau s Navigation Finney 1979 p 61 Rosen 2008 Part One Chapter 7 Hokuleʻa Voyage 1976 a b Vermillion Stephanie Polynesia s master voyagers who navigate by nature www bbc com Retrieved 26 October 2022 Lewis 1994 pp 335 336 and Kyselka 1987 p 37 Gordon 2006 p B1 The Economist 2010 p 84 Lewis 1978 p 134 Finney 1979 pp 64 65 To follow the course of the maiden voyage by the Hōkuleʻa see the 1976 color map U S Department of the Interior 2007 Kyselka 1987 pp 17 18 Finney 1994 p 76 Finney 1994 p 69 Finney 1992 Taonui 2009a Thompson 2010 Taonui 2009b a b Finney 2000 Finney Sin at Awarua on Polynesian Voyaging web site sfn error no target CITEREFFinney Sin at Awarua on Polynesian Voyaging web site help Na Kalai Waʻa Makaliʻi Voyaging Ohana Na Kalai Waʻa Retrieved 26 October 2022 Makali i archive hokulea com Retrieved 26 October 2022 Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010c See Krauss 2004 The journey of the Hawaiian voyaging canoe in 1999 went through half the length of Micronesia The first Hawaiian voyaging canoe to visit those far flung islands and atolls created a resurgence of interest in voyaging among Micronesians Alsen Kelen project manager for the sailing canoe program at Majuro in the Marshall Islands named his daughter Makaliʻi Malama Hawaii News 2007 sfn error no target CITEREFMalama Hawaii News2007 help Micronesia time for Satawal is UTC 10 00 KITV 2010 sfn error no target CITEREFKITV2010 help Pacific Giant Mau Piailug Dies on Satawal www doi gov 17 June 2015 Retrieved 26 October 2022 Master Navigator Mau Piailug Dies on July 12 2010 www fsmgov org Retrieved 26 October 2022 a b c David 2010 UH Board of Regents 2010 1980 1989 Lal 2000 p 81harvnb error no target CITEREFLal2000 help Brown 2010 p B7 Bernice P Bishop Museum 2008 Theroux 2002 Finney 1979 pp 206 207 and Low 2007 p 186 Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010a See Druett Joan 2010 Tupaia Captain Cook s Polynesian Navigator Praeger ISBN 978 0 313 38748 7 Finney 1979 Kyselka 1987 pp 12 14 and Finney 1994 See Heyerdahl Thor 1953 American Indians in the Pacific The Theory Behind the Kon Tiki Expedition Chicago Rand McNally See Sharp Andrew 1957 Ancient Voyagers in the Pacific Penguin Books Evenari 1996 sfn error no target CITEREFEvenari1996 help Callaghan 1999 p 12 See Levison Michael Ward R Gerard Webb John W 1973 The Settlement of Polynesia A Computer Simulation Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 81 660661 0 See PVS founders and PVS mission Finney 1994 p 70 Mau Piailug had dramatically demonstrated how wrong Sharp had been in limiting navigated voyages to only 300 miles This navigational feat plus the performance of the canoe in gaining enough easting to reach Tahiti and then in speeding back to Hawaiʻi to complete the roundtrip effectively demolished Sharp s artificial limits on Polynesian voyaging capabilities See Central Eastern Malayo Polynesian languages Finney 1996 Wilford 2008 p 6 Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010c and Thompson 1987 Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010b and Ryman 1993 Metzgar 1991 p 231 Lewis 1978 pp 134 135 Woodward 1998 Thomas amp Goodenough 1997 a b Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010b Kawaharada amp Thompson 2010b Polaris declination is 89 3 meaning it is within one degree of the zenith at the North Pole Hisco 1996 Thompson 2010b At the latitude of Hawaiʻi the distance from the top star to the bottom star is the same distance from that bottom star to the horizon about 6 degrees This configuration only occurs at the latitude of Hawaiʻi Finney 1994 pp 51 65 a b Autism in the South Pacific A Different Way of Seeing Psychology Today New Zealand www psychologytoday com Retrieved 11 February 2023 References editBernice P Bishop Museum 2008 Bishop Museum Honors Navigator Kamehameha Schools CEO Bernice P Bishop Museum Archived from the original on 10 October 2010 Brown Emma 21 July 2010 Mau Piailug Micronesian who sailed by navigating sun and stars dies at 78 The Washington Post Archived from the original on 11 November 2012 Callaghan Richard T 1999 Computer Simulations of Ancient Voyaging PDF The Northern Mariner 9 2 Canadian Nautical Research Society 11 22 doi 10 25071 2561 5467 628 David Clarissa 19 July 2010 Sons of Mau Piailug talk about the master navigator Saipan Tribune Archived from the original on 23 July 2010 Retrieved 22 July 2010 The Economist 24 July 2010 Obituary Mau Piailug The Economist Vol 396 no 8692 p 84 Archived from the original on 29 July 2010 Evenari Gail David Neiman 1996 Polynesian History and Origin Heyerdahl and Sharp Wayfinders A Pacific Odyssey PBS Archived from the original on 29 April 2010 Retrieved 3 August 2010 Ferrar Derek March 2006 Papa Mau s Legacy PDF Ka Wai Ola O OHA 23 3 Office of Hawaiian Affairs 12 13 Archived from the original PDF on 15 June 2011 Finney Ben 1979 Hōkuleʻa the Way to Tahiti New York Dodd Mead ISBN 0 396 07719 6 Finney Ben 1992 Voyaging into Polynesia s Past From Sea to Space The Macmillan Brown Lectures 1989 Palmerston North New Zealand Massey University pp 5 65 ISBN 0 908665 59 8 Finney Ben 1994 Voyage of Rediscovery A Cultural Odyssey through Polynesia Illustrations by Richard Rhodes University of California Press ISBN 0 520 08002 5 Finney Ben 1996 Ask Finney Wayfinders A Pacific Odyssey PBS Archived from the original on 17 April 2009 Retrieved 4 August 2010 Finney Ben 2000 The Sin at Awarua In Hanlon David L Geoffrey Miles White eds Voyaging through the Contemporary Pacific Pacific Formations Rowman amp Littlefield pp 298 332 ISBN 0 7425 0045 4 Finney Ben Sin at Awarua Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 24 October 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2010 Finney Ben Low Sam 2007 Navigation In Howe K R ed Vaka Moana Voyages of the Ancestors Honolulu University of Hawaii Press pp 154 197 ISBN 978 0 8248 3213 1 Fosberg F R 15 August 1969 Plants of Satawal Island Caroline Islands PDF Smithsonian Atoll Research Bulletin No 132 Washington D C Gordon Mike 14 November 2006 New canoe a tribute to Piailug The Honolulu Advertiser p B1 ISSN 1072 7191 Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 Retrieved 1 August 2010 Hisco John September 1996 Finding the South Celestial Pole SCP PDF South Australian Space School Archived from the original PDF on 16 February 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2010 Jaynes Bill Raffipiy Tom 2010 Legendary Master Navigator Pius Mau Piailug sails on Kaselehlie Press Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 23 September 2010 Kawaharada Dennis 2010a Voyaging Chiefs of Kaneʻohe Bay Traditions of Oʻahu Stories of an Ancient Island Kapiolani Community College Archived from the original on 9 June 2010 Kawaharada Dennis Thompson Nainoa eds 2010b The Celestial Sphere Wayfinding Modern Methods and Techniques of Non Instrument Navigation Based on Pacific Traditions Polynesian Voyaging Society Retrieved 1 August 2010 KITV com 12 July 2010 Master Navigator Mau Piailug Dies KITV Honolulu News Archived from the original on 8 September 2011 Retrieved 22 July 2010 Krauss Bob 2004 Clay Bertelmann Makaliʻi builder dead at 57 Honolulu Advertiser Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 Retrieved 23 September 2010 Kyselka Will 1987 An Ocean in Mind University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 1112 9 Lal Brij V Kate Fortune 2000 The Pacific Islands An Encyclopedia University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 2265 X Lewis David 1977 Mau Piailug s Navigation of Hokulea from Hawaii to Tahiti In Richard W Brislin Michael P Hamnett eds Topics in Culture Learning Vol 5 Honolulu Hawaii Culture Learning Institute East West Center pp 1 23 Lewis David 1978 The Voyaging Stars Secrets of the Pacific Island Navigators William Collins Publishers Pty Ltd Sydney ISBN 0 393 03226 4 Lewis David 1994 We the Navigators 2nd ed University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 1582 0 Low Sam 2007 Nainoa Thompson s Path to Knowledge How Hōkuleʻa s Navigator Finds His Way In Howe K R ed Vaka Moana Voyages of the Ancestors Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 186 ISBN 978 0 8248 3213 1 Low Sam 2011 Mau Piailug Hawaiʻiki Rising University of Hawaii Press Malama Hawaii News New Voyaging Canoe for Mau Piailug Malama Hawaiʻi News 2007 Voyage to Micronesia and Japan Malama Hawaiʻi Retrieved 23 September 2008 Metzgar Eric Harold 1991 Traditional Education in Micronesia A Case Study of Lamotrek Atoll with Comparative Analysis of the Literature on the Trukic Continuum PDF Ph D University of California Los Angeles Retrieved 27 July 2010 The New York Times 13 February 1995 Canoes Take to Pacific Guided by Stars and Sun The New York Times p A12 Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010a History of the Polynesian Voyaging Society 1973 1998 Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 10 December 2010 Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010b Star Compasses Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 24 October 2011 Polynesian Voyaging Society 2010c Milton Shorty Bertelmann Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 18 May 2011 Rosen Alan writer producer director 2008 Mau Voyager Mau Piailug in Hawaiʻi 2001 2006 Na Kalai Waʻa Moku o Hawaii a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ryman Anders 1993 Yapese Grandson Learning Traditional Navigation Satawal Federated States of Micronesia Corbis Images Retrieved 22 September 2010 Taonui Rawiri 2009a Canoe navigation Recent voyaging Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Taonui Rawiri 2009b Decline and renaissance of canoe voyaging Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Theroux Paul December 2002 Hawaii National Geographic 11 6 National Geographic Society Thomas Steven D 1987 The Last Navigator New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0 8050 0096 8 Thomas Steve Goodenough Ward H 1997 Traditional Navigation in the Western Pacific Keeping Track University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology Thompson Nainoa 1987 The Wayfinder The 1980 Voyage Home An Ocean in Mind Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 10 December 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2010 Thompson Nainoa 2007 Ku Holo Mau 2007 Voyage for Mau Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 18 May 2011 Thompson Nainoa 2010 Recollections Voyage of Rediscovery 1985 1987 Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 18 May 2011 Retrieved 29 July 2010 Thompson Nainoa 2010b On Wayfinding Polynesian Voyaging Society Archived from the original on 18 May 2011 Retrieved 24 September 2010 UH Board of Regents 2010 Honorary degrees conferred by the University of Hawaii University of Hawaii Archived from the original on 25 December 2010 Mau Piailug navigator and explorer 1987 DH U S Department of the Interior 11 April 2007 Hokulea 2007 Voyage to Micronesia Bearing Gift for Mau Piailug OIA Press Release Office of Insular Affairs Archived from the original on 4 June 2010 Retrieved 25 July 2010 Wilford John Noble 18 January 2008 Pacific Islanders Ancestry Emerges in Genetic Study The New York Times p 6 Archived from the original on 29 July 2010 Woodward David 1998 History of Cartography University of Chicago Press p 470 ISBN 0 226 90728 7 Retrieved 4 August 2010 Further reading editBaybayan Chad Kalepa 29 July 2010 Piailug s greatest lesson is that we are a single people Island Voices Honolulu Star Advertiser Archived from the original on 1 August 2010 Downes Lawrence 18 July 2010 Star Man The New York Times p 7 Archived from the original on 2 May 2018 Jack Hinton Colin December 1995 We the Navigators The Ancient Art Landfinding in the Pacific Oceania 66 2 University of Sydney Kubota Gary T 2007 To Honor Mau Voyage of the Hokuleʻa through Micronesia 23 January 7 April 2007 Pacific Renaissance Press ISBN 978 0 9799467 0 7 Miller Stephen 15 July 2010 Pacific Navigator Kept Sailing Techniques Afloat Wall Street Journal p 13 Archived from the original on 8 November 2012 Woodward David G Malcolm Lewis eds 1998 The History of Cartography University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 90728 7 Provides extensive explication of Carolinian navigation External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mau Piailug nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Mau Piailug Maiden Voyage Productions 1999 Polynesian seafaring history and Hawaiian re creation Excerpt on YouTube from VHS tape originally published Durham NC YouTube com Piailug Mau Grand Master Mau Piailug And His Star Compass YouTube Archived from the original on 17 November 2021 Retrieved 22 July 2010 Piailug Mau 2005 The Canoe is the People Indigenous Navigation in the Pacific CD ROM UNESCO LINKS Thomas Steve Steve Thomas Traditional Micronesian Navigation Collection University of Hawaii at Manoa UH Manoa Library Pacific Collection Mau Pialug collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mau Piailug amp oldid 1191528704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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