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by cgrealy
1304 days ago
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> Firstly, the article has zero example of the "native knowledge" in question. You mean apart from this link that specifically talks about use tradition harvesting practices and local knowledge to find the kōura to study? https://niwa.co.nz/our-science/freshwater/research-projects/... > Maori are not indigenous to New Zealand Completely untrue. They are absolutely indigenous to NZ. I'm so tired of this stupid myth being brought up again and again. Yes, Maori arrived in NZ. They were the first people to do so. They are the indigenous people of NZ. Unless you want to argue that to be "indigenous", you literally need to have evolved in that place, which is a nonsense argument as far as humans are concerned. |
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So you don't count as indigenous if you weren't the first? That's bad news for all the Clovis-descended peoples we now call Native Americans, since they were the second major wave of human migration. That is of course ridiculous, because time of inhabitation is a significant part of being indigenous. If it were discovered another group had beaten the Maori to New Zealand, would that suddenly make them not indigenous in your eyes?