Across
- 5. Cook’s relationship with Māori got off to a __________ start when a Ngāti Oneone leader, Te Maro, was shot and killed by one of Cook’s men
- 12. Relations with Māori deteriorated and __ ______ and others from his ships were killed
- 13. Disassociated from the homeland for perhaps 500 years, elders, priests, chiefs and their people welcomed this heaven-sent chance to _______ their ancient past.
- 14. These ships, the Heemskerck and the Zeehaen, were commanded by the Dutch explorer _____ ______
- 16. Other French ships and ships from other nations, including ______ and Spain, followed
- 18. One of the captains remembered as voyaging to New Zealand was _____, of the Aotea canoe
- 19. It was only around 3000 years ago that people began heading _________ from New Guinea and the Solomon Islands into the Pacific Ocean.
- 20. As the ships weighed anchor and set sail, 11 ______ approached and were fired on, possibly causing injuries
- 22. A local man greeted Cook with a hongi, possibly on Toka-a-Taiau, a ______ ____ in the Tūranganui River
Down
- 1. Tupaia drew this image of Joseph Banks bartering with a Māori for a _________ during his journey around New Zealand on the Endeavour in 1769/70
- 2. In the left of the picture, the two _____ can be seen leaving after the attack, with one of the small boats towing another
- 3. Joseph Banks proposed that Tupaia and his servant ______ come with them to England, and offered to pay for their passage
- 4. Cook’s instructions from the ______ ___________ authorized him to annex ‘convenient situations’ on any ‘great continent’ he might discover
- 6. At ______ (Tolaga Bay) the Tahitian conversed at length with a local tohunga and also sketched and painted
- 7. Once their initial astonishment had passed, Māori dealt with the ________ much as they dealt with Māori of other tribal groups
- 8. Archaeologist Atholl Anderson argues that the double spritsail was the type of sailing rig most likely to have been used by the Polynesian ________ who reached New Zealand in the 13th century.
- 9. tribal groups trace their origins to the captains and crew of more than 40 legendary vessels, from the _________ at North Cape to the Uruao in the South Island
- 10. Cook’s visits heralded the beginning, within a few _______, of sustained contact, trade and cultural exchange between Māori, Europeans and others
- 11. Sometime between 1300 and 1550, Māori from ____ _______ settled on the Chatham Islands (Rēkohu), more than 750 km east of the mainland
- 15. Many New Zealand place names, preserved by later generations of _____ people, recall his journey.
- 17. After the ________ at Tūranganui-a-Kiwa, Cook sought to avoid conflict with local Māori as he traveled along the coast
- 21. Then on 8 _____ 1769, James Cook and others landed on the east side of the Tūranganui River, near present-day Gisborne
- 22. The Māori group called out to the ships’ occupants and blew on a _____ trumpet to challenge the intruders
