They do. After excavation it was found that many had entire bodies completely buried.
Yes they do! Archaeologists studying the hundreds of stone statues on the Pacific Island excavated two of the figures, revealing full torsos, which measure as high as 33 feet.
The giant stone heads on Easter Island are called moai. These statues were carved by the Rapa Nui people between 1400 and 1650 AD and are believed to represent ancestral chiefs. Some of the moai statues weigh as much as 80 tons and are known for their distinct large heads and elongated bodies.
They cut down all of the tree's so they could build Moai but they ran out of food so they had to eat each other instead then the last person died of hunger because there was nothing else to eat!
The population rose so high that they ran out of natural resources and good land to farm on. They were forced into cannibals and consumed the weak and elderly. There was a short war and most of the people left had gone insane from ergot poisoning. The reason there are no bodies today is that the rats ate the remaining bodies. Even the teeth had eroded away as the island was pelted with salty winds. Eroding the topsoil into the ocean. Nothing had time to fossilize or bury cause of the fierce wet ocean winds. The statues were built in the beginning in hopes of being rescued or saved from a passing ship. The people of Easter Island were most likely expelled from their native land for some reason.
dead bodies and animal statues
under bodies of water
A body of water stored in an underground space is an aquifer.
A body of water stored in an underground space is an aquifer.
By solidification of felsic plutonic bodies underground.
"subsurface water"
Moai (or mo'ai) are monolithic human figures carved from rock on the Polynesian island of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) between 1250 and 1500 CE. Nearly half are still at Rano Raraku, the main moai quarry, but hundreds were transported from there and set on stone platforms called Ahu around the island's perimeter. Almost all moai have overly large heads three-fifths the size of their bodies. The moai are chiefly the 'living faces' (aringa ora) of deified ancestors.The statues still gazed inland across their clan lands when Europeans first visited the island, but most would be cast down during later conflicts between clans.
Islands exist in both bodies of saltwater and bodies of freshwater.