everything
The New Zealand National Library states they arrived on Sunday, June 21 1964 and left on June 28 1964.
The settlers founded a new village by the river.The settlers have arrived.
for about 15-20 years
The ancestors of the Maori people arrived in New Zealand as a small group or in a number of small groups from eastern Polynesia. There were no people here when they arrived, and there is no clear evidence that there had ever been people here. There is a myth of a pre-Maori people which was promoted as fact by some 19th century writers but there is no credible evidence of this. There is strong support from archeology for the conclusion that there was no one here when Maori arrived. There is also support from linguistic and genetic studies. There are all sorts of fringe hypotheses put forward about Celts and other ancient peoples in New Zealand, but it is more credible and interesting to believe in the Easter Bunny.
On December 26, 1963, "I Want to Hold Your Hand" sold 1 million copies, becoming a number 1 hit in the US by mid-January. By the time the Beatles arrived in the US February 7, 1964 they were a huge success.
Before the Maori arrived in New Zealand, the region was inhabited by the Moriori people in the Chatham Islands and possibly other early Polynesian settlers. The Moriori had a distinct culture and language from the Maori.
Considering the beatles haven't been active since the 70s there is no 'new' drummer
No. Titanic was due in New York but never arrived there.
Considering The Beatles haven't been active since the 70s there is no 'new' drummer
they arrived in about 1759
The Beatles.
They played the music they enjoyed; they had an advantage in living in Liverpool - the transatlantic liners to dock in Liverpool and merchant seamen brought records from the USA. Another factor was the desire to be "different"; when a new record arrived, the local bands would cover it, but the Beatles would cover the B side - so they'd stand out from the other bands.