People carrying the Lapita culture, which first appeared in the Bismarck archipelago c. 3300 BP, were the first colonists of Remote Oceania. While over 200 Lapita sites have been identified throughout the Pacific, very few contain any skeletal remains. The scarcity of burials has limited insight into Lapita mortuary practices, actions that bring forth the most complete representation of an individual’s biological, social and cultural identities. This research taphonomically examines the skeletal remains from three sites around the Pacific, of which two are Lapita. Taphonomic analysis can provide insights into the mortuary practices employed, including the timing and methods of bone removal and manipulation, both of which have previously bee...
International audienceBurial practices provide a window into cultural practices, beliefs, and cross-...
There is much remaining to be discovered about the first people in the western tropical Pacific Isla...
<div><p>Remote Oceania was colonized ca. 3000 BP by populations associated with the Lapita Cultural ...
People carrying the Lapita culture, which first appeared in the Bismarck archipelago c. 3300 BP, wer...
With a cultural and linguistic origin in Island Southeast Asia the Lapita expansion is thought to ha...
The human colonization of Near Oceania has an antiquity of over 40,000 years but colonization of Rem...
After 1,550 bce, Austronesian-speaking people arrived in the Bismarck Archipelago in northeast New G...
The discovery of a cemetery at Teouma on the island of Efate in Vanuatu dated to c. 3000 years ago i...
Very little is known about the nature of the first humans to occupy the western South Pacific island...
Very little is known about the nature of the first humans to occupy the western South Pacific Island...
During archaeological excavations investigating Lapita period sites on the islands of Uripiv and Vao...
In 2003 the authors discovered and excavated a Lapita site at Naitabale close to the southern end of...
This paper describes a well-preserved and burned human bone assemblage that represent at least four ...
New discoveries and previously-unpublished data on burials from south, central, and north Vanuatu ar...
Ancestral Polynesian Society has been argued to represent a formative stage in Polynesian ethnogenes...
International audienceBurial practices provide a window into cultural practices, beliefs, and cross-...
There is much remaining to be discovered about the first people in the western tropical Pacific Isla...
<div><p>Remote Oceania was colonized ca. 3000 BP by populations associated with the Lapita Cultural ...
People carrying the Lapita culture, which first appeared in the Bismarck archipelago c. 3300 BP, wer...
With a cultural and linguistic origin in Island Southeast Asia the Lapita expansion is thought to ha...
The human colonization of Near Oceania has an antiquity of over 40,000 years but colonization of Rem...
After 1,550 bce, Austronesian-speaking people arrived in the Bismarck Archipelago in northeast New G...
The discovery of a cemetery at Teouma on the island of Efate in Vanuatu dated to c. 3000 years ago i...
Very little is known about the nature of the first humans to occupy the western South Pacific island...
Very little is known about the nature of the first humans to occupy the western South Pacific Island...
During archaeological excavations investigating Lapita period sites on the islands of Uripiv and Vao...
In 2003 the authors discovered and excavated a Lapita site at Naitabale close to the southern end of...
This paper describes a well-preserved and burned human bone assemblage that represent at least four ...
New discoveries and previously-unpublished data on burials from south, central, and north Vanuatu ar...
Ancestral Polynesian Society has been argued to represent a formative stage in Polynesian ethnogenes...
International audienceBurial practices provide a window into cultural practices, beliefs, and cross-...
There is much remaining to be discovered about the first people in the western tropical Pacific Isla...
<div><p>Remote Oceania was colonized ca. 3000 BP by populations associated with the Lapita Cultural ...