the maori used to eat alot of things e.g huhu grubs sea life mussels and alot of things
I put a very detailed answer on a question like this one (how did the maori use to cook food) about the steps of hangi and the other types of cooking
James Cook was not one of the first settlers in Australia. He died nine years before the First Fleet came to Australia.
There were numerous explorers who came across Australian long before Cook. They included Willem Jansz (1606), Dirk Hartog (1616), Willem de Vlamingh (1696) and William Dampier (1688), among others.Abel Tasman was the first European explorer to discover Tasmania, the island state of Australia. He discovered the island in 1642, almost 130 years before James Cook came anywhere near the Australian continent.
Yes. The native Tahitians had been occupying the islands of Tahiti long before the first European communication and trade with the people in 1521. James Cook arrived another 248 years after the Europeans "discovered" Tahiti.
When Kupe and his boat crew came into New Zealand before Abel Tasman and James Cook. It is said they came from a place called Hawaiki
everywhere they could growfood, hunt and have water nearby
Meat, bread, and anything else they could get cheaply. And to the person who wrote the answer that this is replacing, Neolithic people did cook. Hell, Paleolithic people cooked food. Remember that until the Europeans came, most of the American Indian tribes were Neolithic groups, and they sure cooked food.
Meat, bread, and anything else they could get cheaply. And to the person who wrote the answer that this is replacing, Neolithic people did cook. Hell, Paleolithic people cooked food. Remember that until the Europeans came, most of the American Indian tribes were Neolithic groups, and they sure cooked food.
cook it before
The Maori people are Polynesians who are believed to have originated from eastern Polynesia, likely the islands of Tahiti or the Cook Islands, before migrating to New Zealand around 1300 CE. Their original homeland is thought to be in the vicinity of modern-day Taiwan and the Philippines.
Because he was an explorer and made maps that gave directions to parts of the world where Europeans had never been before. as a result of this many places were colonised by British interest's
James Cook had just completed a scientific mission in Tahiti, i.e. the observation of the transit of Venus across the sun. He was then under orders to sail west and try to find the unknown great southern continent which was believed to exist. On the way, he came across New Zealand which had already been discovered by Abel Tasman in 1642. Seeing the islands were unoccupied by Europeans, Cook took the oportunity to chart New zealand and claim it for England.