An integrated approach to the reconstruction of vegetation history and human land use during the Holocene on Garua Island, Papua New Guinea analysed sediments and plant microfossils (phytoliths and starch granules) together with archaeological data. The long-term record is punctuated by a series of volcanic disasters, where repeated cycles of massive destruction were followed by differing cycles of forest regeneration. The plant microfossil record shows that instead of long-term forest recovery, the overall pattern of regeneration was progressively more disrupted. Through time regeneration was halted earlier in the sequence and then reverted to increasingly open plant communities dominated by grasses. The temporal patterns of burning, stone...
Major cultural changes that appeared during the early to mid-Holocene (c.10,000 - 4000 years) are pr...
The mid- to late-Holocene palaeoenvironmental history of a low island adjacent to the southern Papua...
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, ...
This paper reviews recent fossil phytolith analysis from wet tropical West New Britain (Papua New Gu...
The Holocene Period for the province of West New Britain, Papua New Guinea, is characterised by peri...
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...
In the highlands of New Guinea, the development of agriculture as an indigenous innovation during th...
A series of monoliths collected from Ambra Crater in the Upper Wahgi valley, Papua New Guinea have b...
Aim: To track the peopling of the South Pacific and assess their impact on terrestrial and aquatic e...
Early agricultural and arboricultural practices in the Pacific are based on vegetative principles, n...
The southern lowlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG) are biogeographically distinct. Vast tracts of savan...
Earlier palynological studies of lake sediments from Easter Island suggest that the island underwent...
That pollen and sedimentological evidence can make a significant contribution to our understanding o...
v. ill. 23 cm.QuarterlyThe role of natural disasters has been largely overlooked in studies of South...
Major cultural changes that appeared during the early to mid-Holocene (c.10,000 - 4000 years) are pr...
The mid- to late-Holocene palaeoenvironmental history of a low island adjacent to the southern Papua...
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, ...
This paper reviews recent fossil phytolith analysis from wet tropical West New Britain (Papua New Gu...
The Holocene Period for the province of West New Britain, Papua New Guinea, is characterised by peri...
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...
In the highlands of New Guinea, the development of agriculture as an indigenous innovation during th...
A series of monoliths collected from Ambra Crater in the Upper Wahgi valley, Papua New Guinea have b...
Aim: To track the peopling of the South Pacific and assess their impact on terrestrial and aquatic e...
Early agricultural and arboricultural practices in the Pacific are based on vegetative principles, n...
The southern lowlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG) are biogeographically distinct. Vast tracts of savan...
Earlier palynological studies of lake sediments from Easter Island suggest that the island underwent...
That pollen and sedimentological evidence can make a significant contribution to our understanding o...
v. ill. 23 cm.QuarterlyThe role of natural disasters has been largely overlooked in studies of South...
Major cultural changes that appeared during the early to mid-Holocene (c.10,000 - 4000 years) are pr...
The mid- to late-Holocene palaeoenvironmental history of a low island adjacent to the southern Papua...
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, ...