Existing archaeobotanical and palynological records of plant use in the northern New Guinea lowlands are reviewed in light of recent work at Kuk and theoretical refocusing on plant use practice. A practice-based approach is supported as the most useful way of investigating the highly problematical area of tropical plant food production. The existing direct record of past plant use in lowland New Guinea is considered woefully inadequate to achieve this task, as is that in Near Oceania and Island Southeast Asia. Archaeobotanical methods exist to fill the void, but full implementation requires a change in general archaeological and palaeoecological practice
ABSTRACT. Direct accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dating of anaerobically preserved plant remains...
The multi-disciplinary methods used to investigate early agriculture at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands o...
Phytoliths and micro-charcoal from the Yombon Airstrip archaeological site in central New Britain, P...
Pollen, phytolith and charcoal records from the archaeological wetland site of Kuk Swamp, Wahgi Vall...
Major cultural changes that appeared during the early to mid-Holocene (c.10,000 - 4000 years) are pr...
Archaeobotany is the study of plant remains from archaeological contexts. Despite Australasian resea...
Early agricultural and arboricultural practices in the Pacific are based on vegetative principles, n...
Archaeobotany is the study of plant remains from archaeological contexts. Despite Australasian resea...
Archaeobotany is the study of plant remains from archaeological contexts. Despite Australasian resea...
That pollen and sedimentological evidence can make a significant contribution to our understanding o...
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, ...
Kuk Swamp is a globally significant archaeological site of early agriculture in the highlands of Pap...
An integrated approach to the reconstruction of vegetation history and human land use during the Hol...
Claims for the early and independent origins of agriculture in New Guinea partially rest on the arch...
Recent multidisciplinary investigations document an independent emergence of agriculture at Kuk Swam...
ABSTRACT. Direct accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dating of anaerobically preserved plant remains...
The multi-disciplinary methods used to investigate early agriculture at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands o...
Phytoliths and micro-charcoal from the Yombon Airstrip archaeological site in central New Britain, P...
Pollen, phytolith and charcoal records from the archaeological wetland site of Kuk Swamp, Wahgi Vall...
Major cultural changes that appeared during the early to mid-Holocene (c.10,000 - 4000 years) are pr...
Archaeobotany is the study of plant remains from archaeological contexts. Despite Australasian resea...
Early agricultural and arboricultural practices in the Pacific are based on vegetative principles, n...
Archaeobotany is the study of plant remains from archaeological contexts. Despite Australasian resea...
Archaeobotany is the study of plant remains from archaeological contexts. Despite Australasian resea...
That pollen and sedimentological evidence can make a significant contribution to our understanding o...
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, ...
Kuk Swamp is a globally significant archaeological site of early agriculture in the highlands of Pap...
An integrated approach to the reconstruction of vegetation history and human land use during the Hol...
Claims for the early and independent origins of agriculture in New Guinea partially rest on the arch...
Recent multidisciplinary investigations document an independent emergence of agriculture at Kuk Swam...
ABSTRACT. Direct accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dating of anaerobically preserved plant remains...
The multi-disciplinary methods used to investigate early agriculture at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands o...
Phytoliths and micro-charcoal from the Yombon Airstrip archaeological site in central New Britain, P...