Why did Maori not go to Australia?

There would have been no more population pressure to migrate further, as had been the case in the much smaller islands of the Polynesian heartland. Due to their self-sufficiency, and with New Zealand being too isolated to maintain contact with the homeland, the Maori also ceased long range travel altogether.
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Why didnt Austronesians go to Australia?

Furthermore Australia is a large island, any subsequent waves of chance landings would have occurred far apart from each others and not making it possible for the austronesian to form meaningful numbers to compete against the aborigines as compared to uninhibited islands.
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Did the Polynesians ever go to Australia?

In short, it looks like the Polynesians didn't come to Australia because the Melanesian islands immediately to the north of Australia were already occupied, so they had to keep going to find unoccupied islands further out in the Pacific. the people from that region are a Polynesian and Melanesian mix.
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Did Maoris know about Australia?

There was no known prehistoric contact between Australian Aboriginal people and New Zealand Māori, although the Māori's Polynesian ancestors were accomplished navigators. The first Māori known to have visited Australia travelled to Sydney in European trading ships from 1795 onwards.
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Are Australian Aborigines related to Maoris?

Related Articles

Although the Maori of New Zealand and the Aboriginal people of Australia are sometimes conflated in the Western mind, their roots and histories are independent of one another. The ancestors of the Maori were most likely Polynesian explorers who settled the island over 1,000 years ago.
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Why Isn't New Zealand a Part of Australia? (Short Animated Documentary)



Who inhabited Australia first?

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are the first peoples of Australia, meaning they were here for thousands of years prior to colonisation.
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How did aboriginals get to Australia?

Aboriginal origins

Humans are thought to have migrated to Northern Australia from Asia using primitive boats. A current theory holds that those early migrants themselves came out of Africa about 70,000 years ago, which would make Aboriginal Australians the oldest population of humans living outside Africa.
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Is Japanese related to Austronesian?

A hypothesis that Japanese is a mix of Austronesian and Altaic. The theory of an Altaic superstratum and Austronesian substratum basically means that an Austronesian language was spoken in early Japan, but later on an Altaic language took over.
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Is Altaic Korean?

The Korean language is a part of Altaic languages, due to their common characteristics of grammar, sound, and history. The Altaic languages are from the branches of Turkish, Mongolic and Tungusic officially. Korean and Japanese are often considered as a part of Altaic family, but it is still on discussing.
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Are Polynesian and Japanese related?

R4: Japanese is in fact not a linguistic mixture of Korean and Polynesian. If anything (and this is dubious enough) it's related to either one of those (through either broad Altaic with Korean, or in super sketchy Japonic proposals as a member of Polynesian), but it's not a creole/pidgin/whatever of the two.
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What two language families are in China?

Sino-Tibetan languages, group of languages that includes both the Chinese and the Tibeto-Burman languages. In terms of numbers of speakers, they constitute the world's second largest language family (after Indo-European), including more than 300 languages and major dialects.
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What did Aboriginal Call Australia?

Local Indigenous Australian peoples named all of Australia in their languages before the invasion. Uluru is the Aboriginal name for this significant site in Central Australia which should be respected and recognised.
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Who are the oldest race in the world?

An unprecedented DNA study has found evidence of a single human migration out of Africa and confirmed that Aboriginal Australians are the world's oldest civilization.
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Who found Australia first?

James Cook was the first recorded explorer to land on the east coast in 1770. He had with him maps showing the north, west and south coasts based on the earlier Dutch exploration.
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What race are Australian Aboriginal?

Genetic studies have revealed that Aboriginal Australians largely descended from an Eastern Eurasian population wave, and are most closely related to other Oceanians, such as Melanesians.
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What was Australia called before Australia?

In 1804, the British navigator Matthew Flinders proposed the names Terra Australis or Australia for the whole continent, reserving "New Holland" for the western part of the continent. He continued to use Australia in his correspondence, while attempting to gather support for the term.
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Is indigenous Australian offensive?

3. Is it OK to call Indigenous Australians 'Aborigines'? 'Aborigine' is generally perceived as insensitive, because it has racist connotations from Australia's colonial past, and lumps people with diverse backgrounds into a single group.
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What color was the first human?

Color and cancer

These early humans probably had pale skin, much like humans' closest living relative, the chimpanzee, which is white under its fur. Around 1.2 million to 1.8 million years ago, early Homo sapiens evolved dark skin.
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What is the oldest DNA?

The oldest DNA sequenced from humans in Africa dates to about 15,000 years ago; in Europe, scientists have sequenced DNA from a Neanderthal that lived some 120,000 years ago. But the DNA of living things buried in permafrost can persist for much, much longer, as the deep freeze slows chemical degradation.
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What are the 3 human races?

The Geographic Isolation and the Three Great Human Races . In the last 5,000- 7,000 of years, the geographic barrier split our species into three major races (presented in Figure 9): Negroid (or Africans), Caucasoid (or Europeans) and Mongoloid (or Asians).
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What does the term Koori mean?

Koori (or Koorie)

Koori is a term denoting an Aboriginal person of southern New South Wales or Victoria. 'Koori' is not a synonym for 'Aboriginal'. There are many other Aboriginal groups across Australia (such as Murri, Noongar, Yolngu) with which Indigenous Australians may identify themselves.
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Why are Australians so tall?

By Josh Dye. Australia's population has grown taller and taller over the past century, thanks to improved healthcare, nutrition and hygiene. A global height analysis of 200 countries quite literally measured the average growth of global populations from 1914 to 2014, with every country recording an increase in height.
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Did Australian Aboriginal tribes fight each other?

Indigenous tribes often fought with each other rather than launch coordinated attacks against settlers. An alternative view comes from expert in indigenous history, Dr Ray Kerkhove, who has done new research on indigenous warfare in Queensland in the 19th century.
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What is the hardest language to learn?

1. Mandarin Chinese. Interestingly, the hardest language to learn is also the most widely spoken native language in the world. Mandarin Chinese is challenging for a number of reasons.
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Is Spanish a Germanic?

Although Germanic languages by most accounts affected the phonological development very little, Spanish words of Germanic origin are present in all varieties of Modern Spanish. Many of the Spanish words of Germanic origin were already present in Vulgar Latin, and so they are shared with other Romance languages.
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