Money: Chilean pesos, Euro, American Dollars. Some places work also with Visa, Dinner and American Express credit cards.
How to arrive: The only commercial airline that flights to Eastern Island is LAN
Rapa Nui Nacional Park was declared World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1995. Eastern Island is considered the biggest museum in the open air. The islets in front of the cliff of the Rano Kau or Kari Kari volcanoes are protected as a Nature Sanctuary from 1976.
Banks: The only bank there is, is “Banco Estado”, it has two cash points and works with any bank of the Redbanc chain of Chile; for foreigners it works with Cirrus and Master cards. One is placed outside the bank and is available 24 hours a day; the other one is in the service station and is available only in office hours.
BRIEF STORY
Te Pito o te Henua, was the vernacular denomination given to this beautiful territory by the ancestors of the current population. Its mean is based on the conception of being the spiritual center of the Polynesia, literally “The world's navel”, its own world, the Polynesian world geographically, emerged from the conjunction of three volcanoes. The oldest is Poike, 3 millions years old; the second is Rano Kau, 2,5 million years old; and the most recent is Maunga Terevaka, about 12.000 to 10.000 years old. “From the multiple eruptions of these three volcanoes and from the lava emissions, structures the main body of this island, attaching the volcanoes as their extremes”. The island is considered the oriental vertex of the Polynesia triangle and is under Chilean sovereignty since September 1888:
It is estimated that the first inhabitants arrived to Rapa Nui in the VI century A.D approximately, on board of two catamaran, guided by the Ariki Hotu Matu 'a and his sister Ariki Vi'eAva Rei Púa, following the instructions given by the real Councilor envoy Haumaka.
For the Occident, Rapa Nui was discovered by the Dutchman Jacob Roggenberg in 1722, who narrates us about his first impression, from his ship. He says it was a land of big people, as he confused the Moais with persons and writes of its inhabitants as a subtle town of beautiful women and of kind men.
The landscape of the island wonders with its megalithic religious centers, politician dedicated to the spirits of the ancestors, who were designed as deities and were represented as megalithic statues or Moai. More than 900 Moai and 207 Ahu or altars decorate all the coastal edge and transubstantiate part of the interior terrains. |