Abora: Difference between revisions
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| Ship name = '''Abora''' |
| Ship name = '''Abora''' |
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| Ship owner = |
| Ship owner = marius maud er søt |
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| Ship ordered = |
| Ship ordered = |
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| Ship builder = [[Aymara ethnic group|Aymara Indians]], Huatajata, [[Lake Titicaca]], Bolivia |
| Ship builder = [[Aymara ethnic group|Aymara Indians]], Huatajata, [[Lake Titicaca]], Bolivia |
Revision as of 08:20, 29 August 2012
Abora project display and Dominique Goerlitz
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Name | Abora |
Owner | marius maud er søt |
Builder | Aymara Indians, Huatajata, Lake Titicaca, Bolivia |
General characteristics | |
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Class and type | Totora reed boat |
Length | 32.8 ft (10 m) |
Sail plan | Square rig with bipod mast, steering oar, and leeboards[1] |
Abora is the name of an ancestal solar deity of La Palma (Canary Islands) and a traditional god of the Guanches, and of two reed boats.
Abora, reed boat
Abora was a Bolivian-made reed boat, designed in 2002, to travel more than 450 nautical miles (518 mi; 833 km) between Egypt, Lebanon and Cyprus.[2] This was an attempt to prove a theory that there were no boundaries to the travels of ancient sailors, defying modern estimations of limited exploration by prehistoric man. The idea was inspired by Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl, who sailed from South America to Polynesia on the Kon-Tiki balsa raft in 1947.
Abora III
A similar boat, the Abora III, was launched in 2007 for a transatlantic crossing. Due to damage from several storms, the expedition was abandoned 550 miles (478 nmi; 885 km) away from the Azores.[3]
Supreme being
Abora (Ibru[4]) is also the name of the supreme being of the religion of the Guanches on the island of La Palma. In Guanche mythology of the island of Tenerife, the supreme god was called Achamán.
References
- ^ Allen, J M. "Abora III building and history". Retrieved 23 April 2010.
- ^ The Abora project CNN
- ^ Abora III Diary Abora III Diary
- ^ Garrison Brinton, Daniel (1901). Races and Peoples: Lectures on the Science of Ethnography. D. McKay. p. 122.
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External links
public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}
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