More Top Stories

Court
Economy
Economy
Economy
Economy
Education

The Maori Vision of Antarctica’s Future

Wednesday 7 July 2021 | Written by The New York Times | Published in Features, In Depth

Share

The Maori Vision of Antarctica’s Future
A handout photo shows Dan Hikuroa, a lecturer in Maori studies at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, while conducting his graduate research in Antarctica in the late 1990s. Hikuroa says he was not surprised to learn of the theory that Maori may have ventured to Antarctica centuries ago. (PHOTO: Daniel Hikuroa via The New York Times)

Maori may have been first to reach Antarctica, in the seventh century. But the past matters less than what lies ahead, Indigenous scholars say. By Sabrina Imbler from the New York Times.

Maori may have been first to reach Antarctica, in the seventh century. But the past matters less than what lies ahead, Indigenous scholars say. By Sabrina Imbler from the New York Times.


To continue reading this article and to support our journalism

CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE NOW
for as little as $11 per month.

- Up to date and breaking news
- Includes access to Premium content
- Videos and online classifieds

Already a subscriber, click here

Our people. Our news. First.