TY - JOUR
T1 - New Excavations at Faahia (Huahine, Society Islands) and Chronologies of Colonization in Central East Polynesia
AU - Anderson, Atholl
AU - Conte, Eric
AU - Smith, Ian
AU - Szabo, Katherine
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The six-hectare site of Vaito'otia-Fa'ahia on Huahine Island in the Leeward Societies is renowned for its wealth of material culture typifying early East Polynesian settlement, including items of wood and fibre preserved by waterlogging, through the research of Yosihiko Sinoto and colleagues in particular. However, the stratigraphy for much of the excavated area is sketchy and no precise chronology of settlement is available. Renewed excavations in the Fa'ahia site area in 2007, although relatively limited in scope, produced more stratigraphic detail, additional faunal remains and artefacts, including a patu, and 12 new radiocarbon dates on short lifespan material from the lowest cultural layer which indicate initial human occupation about AD 1050-1160. In the light of this result, recent arguments for earlier initial colonisation of Central East Polynesia are reviewed. Chronological evidence adduced in these relies primarily upon radiocarbon samples with potentially substantial inbuilt age, and it is concluded that there is no empirical case for colonization of the region prior to the early eleventh century AD.
AB - The six-hectare site of Vaito'otia-Fa'ahia on Huahine Island in the Leeward Societies is renowned for its wealth of material culture typifying early East Polynesian settlement, including items of wood and fibre preserved by waterlogging, through the research of Yosihiko Sinoto and colleagues in particular. However, the stratigraphy for much of the excavated area is sketchy and no precise chronology of settlement is available. Renewed excavations in the Fa'ahia site area in 2007, although relatively limited in scope, produced more stratigraphic detail, additional faunal remains and artefacts, including a patu, and 12 new radiocarbon dates on short lifespan material from the lowest cultural layer which indicate initial human occupation about AD 1050-1160. In the light of this result, recent arguments for earlier initial colonisation of Central East Polynesia are reviewed. Chronological evidence adduced in these relies primarily upon radiocarbon samples with potentially substantial inbuilt age, and it is concluded that there is no empirical case for colonization of the region prior to the early eleventh century AD.
M3 - Article
VL - 10
SP - 1
EP - 14
JO - Journal of Pacific Archaeology
JF - Journal of Pacific Archaeology
IS - 1
ER -