Vocabulary
Cultures
Materials
Artworks
Miscellaneous
100

Another name for Tapa, cloth that was important to the Polynesian people.

Hiapo

100

Nan Madol

Micronesia
100

Made of wood, these were meant as offerings to spirtits or ancestors.

Female Diety

100

Built as living quarters for the king so he could keep a watchful eye on his subjects.

Nan Madol

100

Inner life force

Mana

200

A large, column-like, wooden stick placed upright in a village to represent the community mana.

Staff God

200

Moai on platform (ahu)

Polynesia (Easter Island)

200

The three materials that generally made a navigation chart.

Sticks (palm leaf), shells, coconut fiber

200

Inspired artworks by Henry Moore and Alberto Giacometti

Female Diety

200

Women's roles vs. Men's roles in the Pacific Islands

Women work with soft materials, men work with hard materials

300

A dark, hard ingenious rock used for Moai

Basalt

300

Malagan display and mask

Melanesia

300

Consists of coconut fiber, feathers from rare birds

Ahu'ula feather cape

300

The purpose of the seashells in the navigation charts.

Plotting islands

300

Three purposes for the Hiapo (tapa cloth)

currency, protect staff god, status symbol, clothing, bedding, worn for events/ceremonies

400
An island consisting of a circular coral reef surrounding a lagoon

atoll

400

Navigation Map

Micronesia

400

Origin of Hiapo Cloth

Bark from Mulberry Tree
400

The reason Staff Gods were wrapped in Tapa fibers

Protect the mana

400

Greenstone earring, Kiwi feather cloak, Staff weapon, and facial tattoos

Indicators of chief's mana in Tamati Waka Nene

500

A Fijian Ceremony to bring together the community.

Kava Ceremony
500

Ahu'ula' feathered cape

Polynesian (Hawaii)

500

Turtle shells, feathers, raffia and sea shells make up this artwork

Buk Mask

500
Worn during ceremonies and designed specifically for the wearer, these reflected ancestry and clan.

Ahu'ula (feather cape)

500

Used to "awaken" the Maoi

White coral eyes