Abstract
In October 2022 an extensive archaeological landscape was identified by staff of the Vanuatu Cultural Centre at Pangpang on theeast coast of Efate Island in central Vanuatu. It included midden deposits on the banks of the Pangpang River near the sea at ForariBay where Lapita and Early Erueti-style pottery sherds were recovered. Later Mangaasi-style pottery was found nearby and furtherinland across much of the wider landscape. This is the only location on Efate where the full pottery sequence, and hence 1600 yearsof occupation dating from first arrival, has been identified in a restricted location. Later survey of former settlements across thevalley indicates that the region was heavily populated before European contact. Survey and excavations in 2023 confirmed thatthe wider Pangpang landscape has the potential for tracking the dynamics of first human arrival and subsequent adaptation inCentral Vanuatu over three millennia.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Number of pages | 16 |
| Journal | Archaeology in Oceania |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 17 Mar 2026 |
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