Friday, July 9, 2010

The Hawaiians were a brown-skinned people with straight or wavy black hair. They w.... hawaiian right

The Hawaiians were a brown-skinned people with straight or wavy black hair. Hawaiian society's basic unit of land, the ahupuaa, usually extended from the shore to the mountaintop, with rights in the adjoining sea waters, so that the occupants had the means of supplying all their wantsthe sea for fish; the littoral for coconuts; the valley for taro, their principal food; the lower slopes for sweet potatoes, yams, and bananas; and the mountain for wood. Within the ili were small areas, kuleanas, occupied by the common people, who also had certain rights of fishery, water, and mountain products. Elaborate systems of water rights were evolved. Without metals, pottery, or beasts of burden, the people made implements, weapons, and utensils of stone, wood, shell, teeth, and bone, and great skill was displayed in arts and industries. Houses were of wood frames and thatched, with stone floors covered with mats. Food was cooked in holes in the ground, called imus, by means of hot ston! es; but many foods, including fish, were often eaten raw. The Hawaiians excelled in athletics. The first indentured Chinese field hands arrived in 1851, and the first Japanese in 1868; these and other foreigners eventually overwhelmed the native Hawaiians. APA style: Hawaiian. hawaiian right

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