New Guinea was host to some of the most complex maritime interaction networks in the tropics. We take a multi-proxy approach to investigate the foodways at the heart of the extensive Madang exchange network, in the last millennium before the present: 1) invertebrate zooarchaeological analysis identifies the dependence on shellfish collecting from the coral reef and sandy floor littoral zone; 2) examination of vertebrate remains demonstrates the rearing and consumption of key domesticated animals (pigs and perhaps dogs), alongside reef fish, birds, and possibly snakes; 3) human dental calculus analysis distinguishes that marine plants, palm, betelnut, and probably banana were consumed; 4) pottery residue analysis suggests that a variety of s...
The environmental extremes of the Last Glacial Maximum and the subsequent warming and sea-level rise...
The mid-Holocene period (ca.7000-3000 BP) in the southwestern Pacific witnessed the activation of wi...
Seafaring ceramicists connected widely spaced communities along the expanse of PNG’s south coast for...
New Guinea was host to some of the most complex maritime interaction networks in the tropics. We tak...
Shell valuable exchange in the New Guinea Highlands has been a key interest in anthropology, providi...
Coasts, islands, and marine resources played a central role in the dispersal of people into and acro...
The vast Asia-Pacific region, spanning from the islands of Indonesia and Borneo in the west through ...
Accounts of New Guinea’s recent past are replete with both archaeological and ethnographic evidence ...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
This article presents archaeological data critical to our understanding of the pre-colonial past alo...
This paper investigates how coastal mobility and a community’s place within regional trade networks ...
The research presented here is primarily concerned with human-environment interactions on the tropic...
Insights into Austronesian environmental impacts on the New Guinea mainland are negligible, as until...
Expansion of Austronesianspeaking peoples from the Bismarck Archipelago out into the Pacific commenc...
The environmental extremes of the Last Glacial Maximum and the subsequent warming and sea-level rise...
The mid-Holocene period (ca.7000-3000 BP) in the southwestern Pacific witnessed the activation of wi...
Seafaring ceramicists connected widely spaced communities along the expanse of PNG’s south coast for...
New Guinea was host to some of the most complex maritime interaction networks in the tropics. We tak...
Shell valuable exchange in the New Guinea Highlands has been a key interest in anthropology, providi...
Coasts, islands, and marine resources played a central role in the dispersal of people into and acro...
The vast Asia-Pacific region, spanning from the islands of Indonesia and Borneo in the west through ...
Accounts of New Guinea’s recent past are replete with both archaeological and ethnographic evidence ...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
This article presents archaeological data critical to our understanding of the pre-colonial past alo...
This paper investigates how coastal mobility and a community’s place within regional trade networks ...
The research presented here is primarily concerned with human-environment interactions on the tropic...
Insights into Austronesian environmental impacts on the New Guinea mainland are negligible, as until...
Expansion of Austronesianspeaking peoples from the Bismarck Archipelago out into the Pacific commenc...
The environmental extremes of the Last Glacial Maximum and the subsequent warming and sea-level rise...
The mid-Holocene period (ca.7000-3000 BP) in the southwestern Pacific witnessed the activation of wi...
Seafaring ceramicists connected widely spaced communities along the expanse of PNG’s south coast for...