The waka was discovered in August 2024 by Vincent Dix and his son Nikau Dix on a beach on the northern coast of Chatham Island, after a nearby creek had been flooded by heavy rains. Beachcombing for timber, Nikau Dix collected some from the beach and took it back to their property. On inspection, he and his father discovered that the aged wood appeared to partially resemble a vessel. They returned to the area and making their way up a creek that drained onto the beach, and discovered more pieces of timber, some which showing signs of having been worked with tools. The authorities were alerted to the find. The site was partially excavated and the timber was determined to be that of an oceangoing waka. Analysis of the timbers indicates that they are from a , used for passage on the ocean. It was constructed from a series of planks, a method of assembly used for vessels in the Pacific prior to 1400. After that time, in New Zealand, the size of trees meant that waka could be made from hollowed-out logs rather than the more complex planked technique. The initial report produced by researchers notes that the discovered waka may predate the divergence of the Moriori and Māori cultures, and be from a period when extensive ocean voyages were still taking place. One fibre sample was even older, dating to about 1415, and the material of the bottle gourd was assessed as being grown around 1400. It is likely that the rope fibres are much more contemporaneous with the last usage of the waka; therefore the waka itself may be older. At least some of the timber is New Zealand
podocarp, but it has not been tested as of December 2025. Permission has not been granted for it to be radiocarbon dated as this involves destruction of the material being sampled. As of May 2025, no other oceangoing waka with a comparable age to that of the Chatham Island has been found. The find is significant with implications for the understanding of the migration of Polynesian people across East Polynesia through to New Zealand. ==Ownership==