An easy source of food mostly.
The Māori used the moa, a large flightless bird native to New Zealand, as a food source. They hunted and consumed the moa for its meat, eggs, and feathers. The moa played an important role in the Māori diet and cultural practices.
In Maori, "good night sweet dreams" can be translated to "po marie, moe moa."
Maori traditionally hunted for food, resources, and cultural practices throughout their history in New Zealand, prior to European colonization. Hunting was a significant aspect of their subsistence lifestyle, primarily targeting various bird species, seals, and the now extinct moa bird.
If the Maori culture were to disappear, the world would lose a rich and ancient indigenous heritage that includes unique customs, language, art, and traditions. Additionally, Maori knowledge about sustainability and connection to the land could be lost, impacting global efforts towards environmental conservation. The Maori people also contribute to the diversity of the world's cultures and perspectives.
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.
To say "toilet" in MΔori, you would use the word "tioata."
Moa is a native Maori name, first attested in 1842.
Maori hunters and the haast eagle.
The Moa lived in parts of New Zealand, which the Maori used to hunt them, kill them and eat them.But nowadays the flightless Moa is extinct.
everything including the eyes
Actually, the Polynesians were not held responsible for the extinction of the moa, which was a large bird. The moa was mostly hunted in prehistoric times in its native New Zealand by the Maori.
manu is the Maori word for a generic bird.I understand that moa was a name for chickens in older Polynesia.
It used to be the Moa before it was hunted to extinction by Maori.
The maori people found the moa. Sorry that is all I know. This is a good website: www.teara.govt.nz Well I hope I helped
They probably ate them. Also, when the first Maori arrived in New Zealand, there were huge birds there called moas. The Maori could easily have used moa eggshells for bowls and, or used fragments to make ornaments, like the Africans do with ostrich eggs.
The various species of Moa native to New Zealand existed up until the 1400 when Maori tribesmen hunted them to extinction. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moa#Extinction
the giant moa i think
Due to lack in their main food, moa. Killed along with moas by the Maori.