The Walandawe Tradition from Southeast Sulawesi and Osseous Artifact Traditions in Island Southeast Asia

Kenneth Aplin, Susan O'Connor, Francis Bulbeck, Philip Piper, Benjamin Marwick, Emma St Pierre, Fadhila Aziz

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    Abstract

    This chapter describes a sample of points and other osseous artifacts recovered from Holocene contexts at three sites in Walandawe, Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. Microscopic observations of use traces and manufacturing techniques are presented as well as metrical observations and morphological classifi cations. The points show a suite of temporal trends apparently related to a shift from a predominant use as hafted projectile points to their growing use as penetrative tools. Trends include a higher incidence of wear and decline in tip damage, a decrease in bipoint production, an increased focus on unipoints, and a manufacturing shift from predominantly scraping cortical bone to frequently grinding suid incisors and long-bone shafts. Notwithstanding these changes, the Walandawe osseous artifacts constitute an identifi able tradition with systematic differences from other Island Southeast Asian assemblages located in southwest Sulawesi and especially Borneo, the Aru Islands, the northern Moluccas and the New Guinea Birds Head.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationOsseous Projectile Weaponry: Towards an Understanding of Pleistocene Cultural Variability
    EditorsMichelle C. Langley
    Place of PublicationDordrecht, Netherlands
    PublisherSpringer Nature
    Pages189-208pp
    Volume1
    Edition1st
    ISBN (Print)9789402408997
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2016

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