Dendroglyphs of the Chatham Islands

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History

The dendroglyphs (tree carvings) of the Chatham Islands were first cataloged in depth by Christina Jefferson between 1947 and 1956 at the urging of her advisor at the Canterbury Museum. Jefferson attempted the first complete record of these dwindling artifacts of Morioriculture.

The Moriori were a Polynesian people who migrated to the Chatham Islands sometime before 1500 and adapted a hunter-gatherer lifestyle and a culture unique to the island chain. Part of their culture included the art of momori rakau, or tree-carving, where human or other natural features were portrayed via incisions into the trunks of live kopi (karaka) trees.
Topographical map of the Chatham Islands
The purpose of these carvings is unknown, but a popular speculation is that the carvings were to commemorate ancestors or communicate with otherworldly spirits. A substantial number of the dendroglyphs survive in the JM Barker (Hapupu) Historic Reserve, where they are protected from livestock grazing and souvenir hunters. Still, the carvings are being lost to tree growth and weathering, so the record of these artifacts is all that will survive for future generations.

Jefferson's Record

Christina Jefferson began cataloging the dendroglyphs in 1947 and continued writing on the subject until 1956. In this time, she cataloged 450 previously unrecorded glyphs from many different locations on the island and in 1955, she published "The Dendroglyphs of the Chatham Islands" in the Journal of the Polynesian Society.
An example of a Moriori dendroglyph
In this paper, she grouped the carvings into four general categories:
  • Human figures
  • Zoomorphic representations
  • Trees
  • Weapons and fashioned objects
Two glyphs in the Canterbury Museum

Of these categories, the human figure is the most common. Their purpose was thought to be commemorative, though the evidence for this is sparse this theory does not explain the plant and animal representations.