Madagascar poses a significant challenge for understanding how people colonized islands. While its inhabitants also share an African ancestry, language, genetics, and culture all point to the arrival on the island of Austronesian-speaking settlers from the far side of the Indian Ocean. Recent decades have seen increasing acceptance of a late first-millennium BC date for Madagascar’s initial settlement, based principally on arguments relating to the purported antiquity and presence of cut-marked animal bones and the pollen of humanly introduced Cannabis plants. More recently, these claims have been pushed much further back in time by the discovery of stone tools at Lakaton’i Anja and cut-marked bones at Christmas River and Lamboharana. Such ...
Despite decades of archaeological research, roughly 75% of Madagascar's land area remains archaeolog...
Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of deposits at the Lakaton'i Anja rockshelter site in...
<div><p>The dialects of Madagascar belong to the Greater Barito East group of the Austronesian famil...
Madagascar poses a significant challenge for understanding how people colonized islands. While its i...
Despite nearly one hundred years of archaeological and palaeoecological research in Madagascar, the ...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
International audienceThe settlement of Madagascar is one of the most unusual, and least understood,...
Madagascar is an exceptional example of island biogeography. Though a large island, Madagascar’s lan...
International audienceThe settlement of Madagascar is one of the most unusual, and least understood,...
Madagascar's culture is a unique fusion of elements drawn from the western, northern, and eastern sh...
While the broad outlines of Polynesian prehistory are fairly well known, continuing surprises show t...
International audienceThe Austronesians who settled in Madagascar in the first millennium of the Chr...
The Austronesian settlement of the remote island of Madagascar remains one of the great puzzles of I...
Previous research suggests that people first arrived on Madagascar by ~2500 years before present (ye...
Despite decades of archaeological research, roughly 75% of Madagascar's land area remains archaeolog...
Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of deposits at the Lakaton'i Anja rockshelter site in...
<div><p>The dialects of Madagascar belong to the Greater Barito East group of the Austronesian famil...
Madagascar poses a significant challenge for understanding how people colonized islands. While its i...
Despite nearly one hundred years of archaeological and palaeoecological research in Madagascar, the ...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
The estimated period in which human colonization of Madagascar began has expanded recently to 5000-1...
International audienceThe settlement of Madagascar is one of the most unusual, and least understood,...
Madagascar is an exceptional example of island biogeography. Though a large island, Madagascar’s lan...
International audienceThe settlement of Madagascar is one of the most unusual, and least understood,...
Madagascar's culture is a unique fusion of elements drawn from the western, northern, and eastern sh...
While the broad outlines of Polynesian prehistory are fairly well known, continuing surprises show t...
International audienceThe Austronesians who settled in Madagascar in the first millennium of the Chr...
The Austronesian settlement of the remote island of Madagascar remains one of the great puzzles of I...
Previous research suggests that people first arrived on Madagascar by ~2500 years before present (ye...
Despite decades of archaeological research, roughly 75% of Madagascar's land area remains archaeolog...
Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of deposits at the Lakaton'i Anja rockshelter site in...
<div><p>The dialects of Madagascar belong to the Greater Barito East group of the Austronesian famil...