The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topic. A range of factors contribute to this conundrum including landscape transformation and disturbance where relevant archaeology may be undetectable or misinterpreted, along with a lack of sound, site-specific evidence and comparative analysis. Moreover, the preeminence of the Lapita pottery sequence has set regional expectations and perceptions concerning early pottery on New Guinea, which can substantively affect the interpretations of local evidence, sometimes resulting in scanty finds being interpreted on a priori conceptual grounds. Presented here is a description of hitherto unreported pottery recovered in 2004-05 from the Papua New Gui...
For over forty years, archaeologists working along Papua New Guinea's southern coastline have sought...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
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 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...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
Recent research in southern New Guinea, Torres Strait and north-eastern Australia suggests that Lapi...
Pottery has long been the artefact of choice for establishing migrations in the West Pacific, as dem...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
An apparent colonisation of the Papuan south coast by pottery-making villagers about 2000 years ago ...
The origin and timing of the introduction of pigs and pottery into New Guinea are contentious topics...
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...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...
The initial appearance of pottery on New Guinea has been an elusive and sometimes controversial topi...
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 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...
Materialising Ancestral Madang documents the emergence of pottery production processes and exchange ...
Recent research in southern New Guinea, Torres Strait and north-eastern Australia suggests that Lapi...
Pottery has long been the artefact of choice for establishing migrations in the West Pacific, as dem...
This study explores the ceramic sequence of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea)...
An apparent colonisation of the Papuan south coast by pottery-making villagers about 2000 years ago ...
The origin and timing of the introduction of pigs and pottery into New Guinea are contentious topics...
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...
Buka Island lies in the Bougainville District of' the Territory of PaPua and New Guinea. In 1967 th...
This thesis examines the nature of changing pottery production and exchange on the northeast coast o...