|
Captain Cook and the Pacific Islands
The Proceedings of the Third Annual Pacific Islands Studies Conference
University of Hawaii
March 31 and April 1, 1978
edited by Jane N Hurd and Michiko Kodama
CPIS Occasional Paper 14
EDITORS' INTRODUCTION
Jane N Hurd and Hichiko Kodama
FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1978
OPENING REMARKS
Carl J Daeufer
HAWAII
FOUNDATION FOR HISTORY AND THE HUMANITIES
William J Bonk
THE
ROLE OF THE BISHOP MUSEUM IN THE PACIFIC
Edward C Creutz
SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1978
INTRODUCTORY REMARKS
Jane N Hurd
FIRST SESSION
THE YORKSHIRE HAUNTS OF CAPTAIN COOK
John Charles
SOME HISTORICAL MATERIALS THAT RELATE TO THE PRE-CAPTAIN COOK PACIFIC
IN CONTINENTAL EUROPEAN INSTITUTIONS
Richard Mayer
SOME BRITISH SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON VOYAGES TO HAWAII, 1786-1820
Bruce Palmer
SECOND SESSION
THE SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE OF COOK'S THIRD VOYAGE
Char1es H Lamoureux
THE CONSEQUENCES OF COOK'S HAWAIIAN CONTACTS ON THE LOCAL POPULATION
Peter N D Pirie
AGRICULTURAL PATTERN AND NUTRITIONAL STATUS OF PEOPLE IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC
COUNTRIES
Yeuh-Heng Yang
THIRD SESSION
CAPTAIN
COOK AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS: "ALL IMAGINABLE HUMANITY"?
Timothy J Macnaught
MENTAL HEALTH IN THE PACIFIC
Kenneth O Sanborn
INTERESTS AND DEPENDENCIES: THE PACIFIC AFTER COOK
Craig Severence
SUMMATION AND CLOSING REMARKS
James McCutcheon
COMPLETE
DOCUMENT (11.78 MB)
oceania | academic
programs | people | outreach | resources | publications
news & events | about
the center | contact | home | text
only site
© 2005, UHM, Center for Pacific
Island Studies. | Site Credits |