Mana Atua


Bringing together ancient wisdom with state-of-the art technology

E koekoe te tūī, e ketekete te kākā, e kūkū te kererū

Mana atua

As Māori, we frame the world through whakapapa, through which all things appear to us as connected and related to us as kin. Based on the law of utu, actions that we take that diminish the mana and mauri of the environment must in time be returned to us, diminishing our own mana and mauri. Within our culture, there is knowledge that allows us to understand the relationship balance we have with the realms of atua, whether forests, rivers, or cultivated lands. This balance is sensed through changes in environmental patterns, and this knowledge is passed down over generations through our karakia, pūrakau, waiata, and ways of being.

Today, we have new technologies emerging that can detect environmental changes in new ways. Satellites and drones carry sensors that scan the atmosphere, the earth’s surface, and penetrate the ground. Likewise, ground-based sensors can generate a myriad of environmental data. Artificial intelligence (AI) is being used to find patterns in this data, revealing connections and insights not seen before.

Mātauranga can be combined with these technologies guiding where and how sensors gather data and train AI, generating information that can assist in understanding the relationship balance we have with the atua. Moreover, advances in virtual reality and digital twins offer unique ways to present this information that align with Māori ways of understanding.  Bringing these technologies together with mātauranga Māori offers the opportunity of creating the Kaitiaki Intelligence Platform - an indigenised Environmental Sensing Network (ESN).