Type X is one of four Post-Lapita pottery styles reported from Huon Peninsula and the Siassi Islands of Papua New Guinea. Previous petrographic work was inconclusive about its likely area of origin but indicated a possible Huon Peninsula source. Renewed analysis of a larger sample supports this conclusion and confirms the use of grog temper. This kind of temper is otherwise not recorded in the New Guinea region, and its use in the production of Type X was probably culturally driven. Comparisons between Type X and grog-tempered pottery from Palau, Yap, and Pohnpei in Micronesia lead to the suggestion that Type X probably derived from an otherwise unrecorded contact between Huon Peninsula and Palau about 1000 years ago. The article reviews ot...
The Lapita expansion took Austronesian seafaring peoples with distinctive pottery eastward from the ...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The people living on the islands and the coastal fringe of eastern Papua New Guinea, the so called M...
Type X is one of four Post-Lapita pottery styles reported from Huon Peninsula and the Siassi Islands...
Austronesian speaking peoples left Southeast Asia and entered the Western Pacific c.4000-3000 years ...
<div><p>Austronesian speaking peoples left Southeast Asia and entered the Western Pacific c.4000-300...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
Because of their durability and widespread use, ceramics in the Pacific are important artifacts for ...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
Lapita assemblages from the western Pacific have been regionalized into stylistic boundaries or prov...
The last five decades of research into Papua New Guinean archaeology have revealed a variety of rapi...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
The Lapita expansion took Austronesian seafaring peoples with distinctive pottery eastward from the ...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The people living on the islands and the coastal fringe of eastern Papua New Guinea, the so called M...
Type X is one of four Post-Lapita pottery styles reported from Huon Peninsula and the Siassi Islands...
Austronesian speaking peoples left Southeast Asia and entered the Western Pacific c.4000-3000 years ...
<div><p>Austronesian speaking peoples left Southeast Asia and entered the Western Pacific c.4000-300...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
Because of their durability and widespread use, ceramics in the Pacific are important artifacts for ...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
Lapita assemblages from the western Pacific have been regionalized into stylistic boundaries or prov...
The last five decades of research into Papua New Guinean archaeology have revealed a variety of rapi...
The history of pottery use along the south coast of Papua New Guinea spans from Lapita times, here d...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
The Lapita expansion took Austronesian seafaring peoples with distinctive pottery eastward from the ...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The people living on the islands and the coastal fringe of eastern Papua New Guinea, the so called M...