TY - JOUR
T1 - Cosmo-political landscapes of Torres Strait adhi and misœri stones
T2 - Closing the gap between Islander and non-indigenous perspectives
AU - Mitchell, Rod
AU - Gnielinski, Friedrich von
AU - Willsher, Josh
AU - Elu, McRose
AU - Wright, Duncan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Archaeology in Oceania published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of University of Sydney.
PY - 2023/4
Y1 - 2023/4
N2 - Torres Strait (TS), on Australia's north-east border, has a long history of research on pœrapœral kulal: powerful stones. Pœrapœral kulal contain vital power from site-of-origin and therefore their movement across the Coral-Arafura Sea corridor provides important information about past and present human relationships (Elu 2004). With few exceptions Western models draw on anthropological, linguistic and site origin research collated by a Cambridge University field team over 100 years ago, with little detailed reassessment of stone raw material and distribution or geological and archaeological surveys conducted within the intervening period. It is also unclear how TS Islanders engage with this literature, particularly the many communities poorly represented by 19th-century studies. In this paper, we test several assumptions influencing recent literature from contemporary islander and non-indigenous perspectives. This includes assessing whether: (a) western scholarship models oversimplify terminology and discussion; (b) early geological assessments of substantive movement of stones is correct; and (c) movement of exotic stones was a common feature across TS. Finally, using detailed cultural, archaeology, geology, and language data sets we reinterpret the regionally-varying role and antiquity of pœrapœral kulal within this animate cosmo-political land and seascape.
AB - Torres Strait (TS), on Australia's north-east border, has a long history of research on pœrapœral kulal: powerful stones. Pœrapœral kulal contain vital power from site-of-origin and therefore their movement across the Coral-Arafura Sea corridor provides important information about past and present human relationships (Elu 2004). With few exceptions Western models draw on anthropological, linguistic and site origin research collated by a Cambridge University field team over 100 years ago, with little detailed reassessment of stone raw material and distribution or geological and archaeological surveys conducted within the intervening period. It is also unclear how TS Islanders engage with this literature, particularly the many communities poorly represented by 19th-century studies. In this paper, we test several assumptions influencing recent literature from contemporary islander and non-indigenous perspectives. This includes assessing whether: (a) western scholarship models oversimplify terminology and discussion; (b) early geological assessments of substantive movement of stones is correct; and (c) movement of exotic stones was a common feature across TS. Finally, using detailed cultural, archaeology, geology, and language data sets we reinterpret the regionally-varying role and antiquity of pœrapœral kulal within this animate cosmo-political land and seascape.
KW - Torres Strait (Étroit de Torrès)
KW - Totemic pathways (liens totèmiques)
KW - community archaeology (archaeologie publique)
KW - cosmography (cosmographie)
KW - exotic stones (pierres exotiques)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85148248865&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/arco.5281
DO - 10.1002/arco.5281
M3 - Article
SN - 0728-4896
VL - 58
SP - 56
EP - 73
JO - Archaeology in Oceania
JF - Archaeology in Oceania
IS - 1
ER -