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- Fatu-liva abstract "The Fatu-liva is a fictional species of bird invented by George S. Chappell in his travel parody The Cruise of the Kawa: Wanderings in the South Seas, by Walter E. Traprock (1921). Fatu-liva were said to be found only in the fictional "Filbert Islands" in the South Pacific Ocean where they laid cube-like, black-spotted eggs that were very similar in appearance to dice. The bird's nest was described in the book as:"...a semi-spheric bowl of closely woven grass in which lay four snow-white, polka-dotted cubes, the marvelous square eggs of the fatu-liva."Additionally, a black-and-white photograph of what was supposedly the bird's dice-like eggs was provided. Its caption read:"This is without question the most extraordinary picture which has ever been taken of any natural history subject. It corroborates in most convincing manner the author's claim to the discovery of the wonderful fatu-liva bird with its unique gift of laying square eggs. Here we see the eggs themselves in all the beauty of their cubical form and quaint marking; here we see the nest itself, made of delicately woven haro and brought carefully from the tree's summit by its discoverer, Babai-Alova-Babai. An extremely interesting feature of the picture is the presence in the nest of lapa or signal-feather. By close observation, Mr. Whinney, the scientist of the expedition, discovered that whenever the mother-bird left the nest in search of food she always decorated her home with one of her wing feathers which served as a signal to her mate that she would return shortly, which she invariably did. Skeptics have said that it would be impossible to lay a square egg. To which the author is justly entitled to say: 'The camera never lies.'"The name "Fatu-liva" probably derives from the real island of Fatu Hiva, sometimes spelled Fatu Iva. The name Fatu Hiva means "strange rock" in the Marquesan language. "Fatu-liva" is a theoretically possible transcription of terms like fatu riva ("encircled rock") in some Polynesian languages.".
- Fatu-liva thumbnail Kawa1.jpg?width=300.
- Fatu-liva wikiPageExternalLink crskw10.txt.
- Fatu-liva wikiPageExternalLink metadata-tei-TreMaor.html.
- Fatu-liva wikiPageID "12892314".
- Fatu-liva wikiPageRevisionID "436977582".
- Fatu-liva hasPhotoCollection Fatu-liva.
- Fatu-liva subject Category:20th-century_hoaxes.
- Fatu-liva subject Category:Hoaxes_in_science.
- Fatu-liva subject Category:Legendary_birds.
- Fatu-liva type 20th-centuryHoaxes.
- Fatu-liva type Abstraction100002137.
- Fatu-liva type Act100030358.
- Fatu-liva type Activity100407535.
- Fatu-liva type Deception100752431.
- Fatu-liva type Event100029378.
- Fatu-liva type Falsification100751145.
- Fatu-liva type Fraud100753685.
- Fatu-liva type HoaxesInScience.
- Fatu-liva type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Fatu-liva type Trickery100752954.
- Fatu-liva type Wrongdoing100732746.
- Fatu-liva type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Fatu-liva comment "The Fatu-liva is a fictional species of bird invented by George S. Chappell in his travel parody The Cruise of the Kawa: Wanderings in the South Seas, by Walter E. Traprock (1921). Fatu-liva were said to be found only in the fictional "Filbert Islands" in the South Pacific Ocean where they laid cube-like, black-spotted eggs that were very similar in appearance to dice.".
- Fatu-liva label "Fatu-liva".
- Fatu-liva sameAs m.02xb65j.
- Fatu-liva sameAs Q5438019.
- Fatu-liva sameAs Q5438019.
- Fatu-liva sameAs Fatu-liva.
- Fatu-liva wasDerivedFrom Fatu-liva?oldid=436977582.
- Fatu-liva depiction Kawa1.jpg.
- Fatu-liva isPrimaryTopicOf Fatu-liva.