International recognition for Maori Scientists
International recognition for Ngâ Pae o te
Mâramatanga and Mâori scientists
13 November
2007
AUCKLAND, New Zealand
The current issue of
one of the world's top two science magazines has hailed New
Zealand scientist Professor Michael Walker's groundbreaking
discoveries in animal navigation and profiled the unique
role of the Mâori Centre of Research Excellence, Ngâ Pae o
te Mâramatanga, in creating a "home for Mâori
science".
Science says Professor Walker's work on
how birds and other animals detect and use magnetic fields
to navigate over vast distances has shaped research in the
field.
US researcher Joseph Kirschvink of the
California Institute of Technology told Science: "If there
is ever a Nobel Prize for magnetic field perception,
Walker's name will be on it."
The magazine also
reports the success of Ngâ Pae o te Mâramatanga, of which
Professor Walker is a founding joint director, in supporting
Mâori scientists and helping boost the numbers of Mâori
PhD students from a handful in 2002 to over
500.
Professor Walker, who is also a member of the
School of Biological Sciences at The University of Auckland,
said the recognition of the science and of a distinctively
Mâori contribution from such a prestigious journal was
highly welcome.
"Every culture brings its own value
and perspective to research. At Ngâ Pae o te Mâramatanga
we are tapping into the currently very under-used potential
of the Mâori contribution, and we are delighted to see how
strongly this is growing."
Discoveries on differing
rates of evolution in the tropics by another scientist, Dr
Shane Wright, whose work was fully funded by the CoRE, were
reported this year in The Economist and the Guardian and
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences in the United
States.
Ends