Tuanaki or Tuanahe is the name of an anecdotal vanished group of islets, once part of the Cook Islands. It was located south of Rarotonga[1] and within two days sail of Mangaia.[2]
In 1916, the Polynesian Society of Honolulu reprinted an account by a sailor who had visited there in 1842, spending six days among the natives. However this account added that two years later in 1844, a schooner of English missionaries had found nothing.[3] Some Tuanakians who had emigrated to Rarotonga allegedly survived.
The 1916 publication re-ignited interest in the flyaway islands, and explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton, when planning the Shackleton–Rowett Expedition of 1921–1922, proclaimed as one of his goals the rediscovery of Tuanaki. The explorer died in Antarctic waters before he was able to mount a serious search for the vanished archipelago.[4]
It was suggested in 1952 that the Haymet Rocks were a remnant of Tuanaki.[5] However, the existence of the Haymet Rocks at some point is unconfirmed as well.
References
edit- ^ Best, Elsdon (1923). Polynesian Voyagers. the Maori as a Deep-Sea Navigator, Explorer, and Colonizer. Wellington: Dominion Museum. New Zealand Texts Collection.
- ^ Ramsay, Raymond (1972). No Longer on the Map. New York: Viking Press. p. 213. ISBN 0-670-51433-0.
- ^ Gill, William Wyatt; Stephenson Percy Smith (1916). Rarotonga Records: Being Extracts from the Papers of the Late Rev. W. Wyatt Gill. The Polynesian Society. pp. 29–31.
- ^ "Shackleton, Antarctic Explorer, is Dead". The (Spokane) Spokesman-Review. February 3, 1922. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
- ^ "THE MYSTERY OF TUANAKI ISLAND", Pacific Islands Monthly, xxii (7): 104, 1952-02-01, ISSN 0030-8722