In 2008-2009, the patriarch of the Keipte Kuyumen clan of the upper Kikori River near the Highlands foothills, Papua New Guinea, requested that archaeological excavations be undertaken at the site of Waredaru in a dense rainforest setting, an ancestral village only known from oral traditions. According to these oral traditions, Waredaru was a sago adze-head (‘sago-pounder’) manufacturing centre, and it is at this village that the Keipte Kuyumen underwent an important ceremony by which they obtained their clan lands. This paper reports on these archaeological excavations, enabling the rare dating of the origins of the Keipte Kuyumen as a landed social group
The Aru Islands were connected to Greater Australia until approximately 8.000 years ago, when they w...
Historicising the emergence of ethnographic activities provides insights into the reliability of eth...
The Reber-Rakival site on Watom Island is of particular significance, as it is the first place where...
In 2008-2009, the patriarch of the Keipte Kuyumen clan of the upper Kikori River near the Highlands ...
We report on archaeological excavations undertaken at Kumukumu 1 atop the dense rainforest-clad Aird...
A growing body of archaeological research in the western Gulf of Papua and its associated river syst...
The ethnographically-described hiri has long raised questions concerning the history and origins of ...
This paper presents preliminary results from the 2019 excavations at Walufeni Cave, at the eastern e...
Supplement 1: Contact history in the project areaSupplement 2: Archaeological sequences in the study...
This paper presents archaeological evidence for the initial occupation and use of a large clan ossua...
We report on archaeological excavations undertaken at Kumukumu 1 atop the dense rainforest-clad Aird...
The settlement of Sahul, the lost continent of Oceania, remains one of the most ancient and debated ...
Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of K...
Wanlek is a site at 1675 m altitude in the upper Kaironk valley, near Simbai in the Madang District ...
Předmětem studie je analýza dějin antropologie v Melanésii se zvláštním přihlédnutím k oblasti dnešn...
The Aru Islands were connected to Greater Australia until approximately 8.000 years ago, when they w...
Historicising the emergence of ethnographic activities provides insights into the reliability of eth...
The Reber-Rakival site on Watom Island is of particular significance, as it is the first place where...
In 2008-2009, the patriarch of the Keipte Kuyumen clan of the upper Kikori River near the Highlands ...
We report on archaeological excavations undertaken at Kumukumu 1 atop the dense rainforest-clad Aird...
A growing body of archaeological research in the western Gulf of Papua and its associated river syst...
The ethnographically-described hiri has long raised questions concerning the history and origins of ...
This paper presents preliminary results from the 2019 excavations at Walufeni Cave, at the eastern e...
Supplement 1: Contact history in the project areaSupplement 2: Archaeological sequences in the study...
This paper presents archaeological evidence for the initial occupation and use of a large clan ossua...
We report on archaeological excavations undertaken at Kumukumu 1 atop the dense rainforest-clad Aird...
The settlement of Sahul, the lost continent of Oceania, remains one of the most ancient and debated ...
Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of K...
Wanlek is a site at 1675 m altitude in the upper Kaironk valley, near Simbai in the Madang District ...
Předmětem studie je analýza dějin antropologie v Melanésii se zvláštním přihlédnutím k oblasti dnešn...
The Aru Islands were connected to Greater Australia until approximately 8.000 years ago, when they w...
Historicising the emergence of ethnographic activities provides insights into the reliability of eth...
The Reber-Rakival site on Watom Island is of particular significance, as it is the first place where...