For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought evidence for early ceramics and its relationship with Lapita wares of Island Melanesia. Failing to find any such evidence of pottery more than 2000 BP, and largely based on the excavation of eight early pottery-bearing sites during the late 1960s into the early 1970s, synchronous colonization some 2000 BP along 500km of the south Papuan coastline by post-Lapita ceramic manufacturers has been posited. This paper presents conclusive evidence for the presence of Lapita ceramics along the Papuan south coast between c. 2500 and 2900 cal. BP, thereby indicating that current models of colonization by ceramicists for the region need to be rethought....
Pottery has long been the artefact of choice for establishing migrations in the West Pacific, as dem...
Austronesian speaking peoples left Southeast Asia and entered the Western Pacific c.4000-3000 years ...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought...
Dates for the appearance of Lapita pottery suggest a rapid expansion from the Bismarck Archipelago i...
The Lapita expansion took Austronesian seafaring peoples with distinctive pottery eastward from the ...
Expansion of Austronesianspeaking peoples from the Bismarck Archipelago out into the Pacific commenc...
Recent research in southern New Guinea, Torres Strait and north-eastern Australia suggests that Lapi...
Expansion of Austronesian-speaking peoples from the Bismarck Archipelago out into the Pacific commen...
seafaring peoples with distinctive pottery eastward from the Bismarck Archipelago to western Polynes...
We thank all the commentators for their thoughtful comments, and especially Jim Specht for initiatin...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
Insights into Austronesian environmental impacts on the New Guinea mainland are negligible, as until...
[Extract] Lapita ceramics have been found on islands across a vast stretch of the western Pacific Oc...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
Pottery has long been the artefact of choice for establishing migrations in the West Pacific, as dem...
Austronesian speaking peoples left Southeast Asia and entered the Western Pacific c.4000-3000 years ...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought...
Dates for the appearance of Lapita pottery suggest a rapid expansion from the Bismarck Archipelago i...
The Lapita expansion took Austronesian seafaring peoples with distinctive pottery eastward from the ...
Expansion of Austronesianspeaking peoples from the Bismarck Archipelago out into the Pacific commenc...
Recent research in southern New Guinea, Torres Strait and north-eastern Australia suggests that Lapi...
Expansion of Austronesian-speaking peoples from the Bismarck Archipelago out into the Pacific commen...
seafaring peoples with distinctive pottery eastward from the Bismarck Archipelago to western Polynes...
We thank all the commentators for their thoughtful comments, and especially Jim Specht for initiatin...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
Insights into Austronesian environmental impacts on the New Guinea mainland are negligible, as until...
[Extract] Lapita ceramics have been found on islands across a vast stretch of the western Pacific Oc...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
Pottery has long been the artefact of choice for establishing migrations in the West Pacific, as dem...
Austronesian speaking peoples left Southeast Asia and entered the Western Pacific c.4000-3000 years ...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...