This paper reports on the ceramics from Squares A and B of Bogi 1, a newly excavated site at Caution Bay, south coast of mainland Papua New Guinea. A dense cultural horizon dated from c. 2150 to c. 2100 calBP and preceded by earlier cultural deposits contains previously undescribed ceramics of limited decorative variability almost exclusively focused on Anadara shell edge impressions below finger-grooved lips, which we term the Linear Shell Edge-Impressed Tradition. Here we present the chrono-stratigraphic evidence for this decorative tradition and how it relates to previously described shell-impressed ceramics from the broader region
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
Until the Caution Bay project, limited archaeological research in the Port Moresby region and, more ...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
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...
Excavations at Caution Bay along the southeast coast of mainland New Guinea have been undertaken in ...
Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of K...
The people living on the islands and the coastal fringe of eastern Papua New Guinea, the so called M...
The people living on the islands and the coastal fringe of eastern Papua New Guinea, the so called M...
In the early 1900s thirteen engraved Conus shell valuables were dug from prehistoric midden mounds i...
For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought...
For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought...
[Extract] Lapita ceramics have been found on islands across a vast stretch of the western Pacific Oc...
Seafaring ceramicists connected widely spaced communities along the expanse of PNG’s south coast for...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
Until the Caution Bay project, limited archaeological research in the Port Moresby region and, more ...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
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...
Excavations at Caution Bay along the southeast coast of mainland New Guinea have been undertaken in ...
Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of K...
The people living on the islands and the coastal fringe of eastern Papua New Guinea, the so called M...
The people living on the islands and the coastal fringe of eastern Papua New Guinea, the so called M...
In the early 1900s thirteen engraved Conus shell valuables were dug from prehistoric midden mounds i...
For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought...
For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought...
[Extract] Lapita ceramics have been found on islands across a vast stretch of the western Pacific Oc...
Seafaring ceramicists connected widely spaced communities along the expanse of PNG’s south coast for...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
Until the Caution Bay project, limited archaeological research in the Port Moresby region and, more ...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...