Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of Keveoki 1 allows us to characterise the nature and antiquity of ancestral hiri trade ceramics around 450-500 cal BP in the recipient Vailala River-Kea Kea villages of the Gulf Province of the southern coast of Papua New Guinea. This paper reports on the decorated ceramics from Keveoki 1, where a drainage channel cut in 2004 revealed a short-lived village site with a rich, stratified ceramic assemblage. It represents a rare account of the ceramic assemblage from a short duration village on a relic beach ridge in southern Papua New Guinea, and contributes to ongoing attempts to refine ceramic sequences in the recipient (western) end of the hiri ...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The last five decades of research into Papua New Guinean archaeology have revealed a variety of rapi...
Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of K...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
The Port Moresby region of the south coast of mainland Papua New Guinea (PNG) is well known ethnogra...
The ethnographically-described hiri has long raised questions concerning the history and origins of ...
Seafaring ceramicists connected widely spaced communities along the expanse of PNG’s south coast for...
Since the 1970s the site of Emo (aka 'Samoa', 'OAC') in the Gulf Province of Papua New Guinea has be...
Since the 1970s the site of Emo (aka 'Samoa', 'OAC') in the Gulf Province of Papua New Guinea has be...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
International audienceSince the 1970s the site of Emo (aka ‘Samoa', ‘OAC') in the Gulf Province of P...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The last five decades of research into Papua New Guinean archaeology have revealed a variety of rapi...
Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of K...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
The Port Moresby region of the south coast of mainland Papua New Guinea (PNG) is well known ethnogra...
The ethnographically-described hiri has long raised questions concerning the history and origins of ...
Seafaring ceramicists connected widely spaced communities along the expanse of PNG’s south coast for...
Since the 1970s the site of Emo (aka 'Samoa', 'OAC') in the Gulf Province of Papua New Guinea has be...
Since the 1970s the site of Emo (aka 'Samoa', 'OAC') in the Gulf Province of Papua New Guinea has be...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
International audienceSince the 1970s the site of Emo (aka ‘Samoa', ‘OAC') in the Gulf Province of P...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The last five decades of research into Papua New Guinean archaeology have revealed a variety of rapi...