Publication | Open Access
Terminal Pleistocene emergence of maritime interaction networks across Wallacea
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Citations
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References
2022
Year
Historical GeographyHistorical ArchaeologyBioarchaeologyArchaeological EvidenceEvolutionary BiologyPaleoanthropologyWallacean IslandsArchaeological RecordArchaeologyVast Island ArchipelagoAnthropologyLanguage StudiesPleistocenePaleoecologyLandscape ConnectivityIsland OccupationSocial SciencesTerminal Pleistocene Emergence
The crossing of the Wallacean islands and settlement of Sahul by modern humans over 50,000 years ago, represents the earliest successful seafaring of our species anywhere in the world. Archaeological research throughout this vast island archipelago has recovered evidence for varied patterns in island occupation, with accumulating evidence suggesting a significant change in cultural activities and interaction amongst island communities following the LGM. New forms of technology such as shell fish hooks and adzes appear alongside standardised forms of shell beads, indicating that these technological innovations were accompanied by shared styles of personal ornamentation. Simultaniously, obsidian from a single, off-island source is found in the archaeological assemblages on at least four islands. We explore these implied spheres of interaction across Wallacea, with a focus on the terminal-Pleistocene/early-Holocene cultural materials and customs linking the southeastern Wallacean islands of Alor, Timor, and Kisar, and other parts of greater Wallacea and Near Oceania.
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