Pre-European In pre-European times, the bodies of chiefs from parts of
Te I'i were taken to Eiao for burial. Eiao was once home to a
Marquesan tribe called the Tuametaki. Archaeological investigations have discovered workshops for the production of
stone tools, especially
adzes, made from local
basalt. These tools have been found in archaeological sites on other islands as far as
Kiribati, providing evidence for prehistoric inter-island voyaging within this island group.
Post-European Contact The first non-Polynesian encounter with the island was in 1791 by the
American sea captain
Joseph Ingraham, who named it
Knox Island in honour of
Henry Knox, then
US Secretary of War. Other names given to this island by Western explorers include
Masse,
Fremantle, and
Robert. The island was uninhabited at the time of its "discovery" by Europeans. Oral traditions and legends about the island include a story of a Peruvian treasure hidden there by some Spaniards. Other stories tell that during World War II, a German submarine arrived there secretly to hide a Nazi treasure. These stories lack credibility. ==Climate==