The discovery of pottery from the ancient Lapita culture by researchers at The Australian National University (ANU) has shed new light on how Papua New Guinea served as a launching pad for the colonisation of the Pacific -- one of the greatest migrations in human history
From: Australian National University
April 22, 2022 -- The new study makes clear the
initial expansion of the Lapita people throughout Papua New Guinea was far
greater than previously thought.
The study, published in
the Nature Ecology and Evolution journal, is based on the
discovery of a distinctive Lapita pottery sherd, a broken piece of pottery with
sharp edges, on Brooker Island in 2017 that lead researcher Dr Ben Shaw said
was "like finding a needle in a haystack."
"Lapita cultural
groups were the first people to reach the remote Pacific islands such as Vanuatu
around 3,000 years ago. But in Papua New Guinea where people have lived for at
least 50,000 years, the timing and extent of Lapita dispersals are poorly
understood," Dr Shaw said.
"For a long time,
it was thought Lapita groups avoided most of Papua New Guinea because people
were already living there."
The study shows Lapita
people introduced pottery to Papua New Guinea that had distinct markings, as
well as new tool technologies and animals such as pigs.
"We found lots of
Lapita pottery, a range of stone tools and evidence for shaping of obsidian
[volcanic glass] into sharp blades," Dr Shaw said.
"As we dug deeper,
we reached an even earlier cultural layer before the introduction of pottery.
What amazed us was the amount of mammal bone we recovered, some of which could
be positively identified as pig and dog. These animals were introduced to New
Guinea by Lapita and were associated with the use of turtle shell to make
tools."
Dr Shaw said the new
discovery explains why the Lapita people colonised the Pacific islands 3,000
years ago and the role that Indigenous populations in New Guinea had in Lapita
decisions to look for new islands to live on.
According to Dr Shaw,
later Lapita dispersals through PNG and interaction with Indigenous populations
profoundly influenced the region as a global centre of cultural and linguistic
diversity.
"It is one of the
greatest migrations in human history and finally we have evidence to help
explain why the migration might have occurred and why it took place when it
did," he said.
"We had no
indication this would be a site of significance, and a lot of the time we were
flying blind with the areas we surveyed and when looking for archaeological
sites, so it is very much like finding the proverbial needle in a
haystack."
The research involved
many ANU researchers and international collaborators who showed how migration
pathways and island-hopping strategies culminated in rapid and purposeful
Pacific-wide settlement.
"A lot of our good
fortune was because of the cultural knowledge, and we built a strong
relationship with the locals based on honesty and transparency about our
research on their traditional lands. Without their express permission, this kind
of work would simply not be possible. The Brooker community is listed as the
senior author on the paper to acknowledge their fundamental role in this
research," Dr Shaw said.
Discovery
sheds light on why the Pacific islands were colonized -- ScienceDaily
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