The island is best known for its preservation of traditional navigational techniques without the use of instruments, based on indigenous astronomical and maritime concepts. Despite its small population, Satawal has continued to produce ocean-going canoes and expert navigators versed in these traditions. The best-known of the Satawal master navigators (
paliuw),
Mau Piailug, served as mentor and teacher to the founding members of the
Polynesian Voyaging Society. The daily life of Satawal is documented in the
Steve Thomas book
The Last Navigator, which also treats Mau Piailug's traditional navigation system in some depth. Sanford J. Low produced
The Navigators: Pathfinders of the Pacific, a documentary film about Mau Piailug and communal life on Satawal including food preparation, fishing and boat building. Mau Piailug led a successful experimental expedition from
Maui to
Tahiti in a replica voyaging canoe in 1976. On March 18, 2007, Piailug presided over the first
Pwo ceremony for navigators on Satawal in 56 years. At the event five native
Hawaiians and eleven others were inducted into Pwo as master navigators. The Polynesian Voyaging Society presented Piailug a canoe, the
Alingano Maisu, as a gift for his key role in reviving traditional
wayfinding navigation in
Hawaii. ==References==