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1937 a young zoologist, Torah Heyerdal, and his wife traveled to the South Pacific to explore the fauna and flora of the distant Marquesas Islands. However, during his visit to Fatu Hiva, a small Polynesian island, the young Norwegian was increasingly admired by ancient civilizations. According to the theory of scientists at the time, Polynesia was inhabited by people from Southeast Asia from the west, but Hejerdal saw that trade routes across the Pacific Ocean went from the east.
His attention was focused on sweet potatoes, which are derived from the stone figures of Central and South America and Fatu Hiva, which were strikingly similar to the monoliths of ancient South American civilizations.
The physical similarities between the Polynesians and the South Americans, their myths and rituals, also did not escape the eyes of the Torah, and while they were sitting by the heat of the campfire and listening to a local sage, the legend about the demigod called Tiki, who brought his ancestors to the Polynesian islands from a great land in the Far East.
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