yes the maori did use the seals.
the seals were the main source of food for the coastal tribes!
i hope this helps ♥
Pounamu was a highly prized material. It was greatly valued for its hardness and its beauty and was used by Maori to make some of their most treasured possessions including jewellery, weapons and tools.
Maori do not wear masks.
Maori was indeed the first lnguage in New Zealand, being spoken by the indigenous peoples, the Maori. Maori is already one of the three official languages of New Zealand, English, Maori, and New Zealand Sign Language. Though Maori is the language of the first nations people, the Maori, it is not spoken by the majority of the peoples of the country. And English is a widely spoken language internationally.
No
the maori affected several parts of new zealand. they stole food and raped women in taranaki. The maori were very racist and even ate people. European settlers shot maori for game hunting.
Pakeha. Anyone or anything that is not Maori is called Pakeha.
Pellgun oil by Crosman. Do not use anything else. It will ruin the seals.
Yes they do Lepard Seals eat just about anything.
Seals are a group of marine mammals. The niche for seals are the sea in cold waters. Seals are predators and eat anything from fish, mollusks, and crustaceans.
Until the arrival the Europeans, Maori did not use or need to use a collective name for themselves. By the 1830's, they had come to use the word 'Maori' meaning 'normal' or 'natural' people.
You can find a Maori translator at the related link below.
The plants they used was harakeke (maori word for Flax)
Yes. The word 'kiwi' is a Maori word. It is the name the Maori use for the small flightless birds belonging to the family Apterygidae.
Maoris have not died out there are plenty or maori in New Zealand if you would like to know anything about maoris please ask me on my message board
Man
For defence.
Yes, you can use websites like Google Translate or Maori Dictionary for Maori sentence translation. These websites can provide you with translation of words and sentences from English to Maori and vice versa.