Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Ancestral Footsteps: Te Heke ki Korotuaheka
View through CrossRef
Retracing one’s ancestral roots and routes has been a growing point of interest for many, but with the additional support of ancestral websites such as AncestryDNA and Ancestry.com, genetic curiosity is gathering personal, familial and global momentum. For Indigenous communities whose lives have been disrupted by colonisation, these hīkoi (treks) are an important process of reclaiming ancestral linkages, reconnecting with ancestral whenua (land), reawakening Indigenous knowledge and thus reigniting intergenerational interest. In Aotearoa, there is also a growing desire to follow tīpuna foosteps throughout the whenua, to gain an insight and experience the challenges of their tīpuna journeys. In December 2016, several trekkers documented their experiences through whānau journals as they followed the return ancestral trails of the last prophet and tohuka of Te Wai Pounamu (South Island) Te Maihāroa (1800-1886) and his people on Te Heke ki Te Ao Mārama, The Migration to Ōmārama (1877-79).
Title: Ancestral Footsteps: Te Heke ki Korotuaheka
Description:
Retracing one’s ancestral roots and routes has been a growing point of interest for many, but with the additional support of ancestral websites such as AncestryDNA and Ancestry.
com, genetic curiosity is gathering personal, familial and global momentum.
For Indigenous communities whose lives have been disrupted by colonisation, these hīkoi (treks) are an important process of reclaiming ancestral linkages, reconnecting with ancestral whenua (land), reawakening Indigenous knowledge and thus reigniting intergenerational interest.
In Aotearoa, there is also a growing desire to follow tīpuna foosteps throughout the whenua, to gain an insight and experience the challenges of their tīpuna journeys.
In December 2016, several trekkers documented their experiences through whānau journals as they followed the return ancestral trails of the last prophet and tohuka of Te Wai Pounamu (South Island) Te Maihāroa (1800-1886) and his people on Te Heke ki Te Ao Mārama, The Migration to Ōmārama (1877-79).
Related Results
Retracing Ancestral Footsteps
Retracing Ancestral Footsteps
In Aotearoa New Zealand, retracing the footsteps of famous Maori tipuna or ancestral trails is not a new phenomena, but the availability of social media has enabled this informatio...
Archaeological Discovery and Research into the Layout of the
Palaces and Ancestral Shrines of Han Dynasty Chang'an –A
Comparative Essay on the Capital Cities of Ancient Chinese
Archaeological Discovery and Research into the Layout of the
Palaces and Ancestral Shrines of Han Dynasty Chang'an –A
Comparative Essay on the Capital Cities of Ancient Chinese
The principal function of the ancient Chinese royal capital
city was political. From the perspective of archaeology, the
...
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
The survival effect in memory refers to the memory enhancement for materials encoded in reference to a survival scenario compared to those encoded in reference to a control scenari...
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
The survival effect in memory refers to the memory enhancement for materials encoded in reference to a survival scenario compared to those encoded in reference to a control scenari...
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
<p>The survival effect in memory refers to the memory enhancement for materials encoded in reference to a survival scenario compared to those encoded in reference to a contro...
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
The Survival Effect in Memory: Does It Hold into Old Age and Non-Ancestral Scenarios?
<p>The survival effect in memory refers to the memory enhancement for materials encoded in reference to a survival scenario compared to those encoded in reference to a contro...
Common Goods in Uncommon Times: Water, Droughts, and the Sustainability of Ancestral Pueblo Communities in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico, AD 1100-1700
Common Goods in Uncommon Times: Water, Droughts, and the Sustainability of Ancestral Pueblo Communities in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico, AD 1100-1700
Adapting our infrastructure and institutions to climate change is a crucial dilemma for modern society. Archaeologists should be well positioned to address this issue with examples...
Abstract 1668: Understanding cancer associated SNPs in the TERT-CLPTM1L locus through population genetics
Abstract 1668: Understanding cancer associated SNPs in the TERT-CLPTM1L locus through population genetics
Abstract
Telomeres form the ends of eukaryotic chromosomes and are vital in maintaining genetic integrity. TERT encodes the telomerase reverse transcriptase, which i...

