Lapita Colonization across the Near/Remote Oceania Boundary
Sheppard J. Peter. 2011. .
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ARTICLE, (2011 ) - PUBLISHEDVERSION - English (en-GB)
RESTRICTEDACCESS -
2011 by The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. All rights reserved..
Audience : RESEARCHERS, STUDENTS
The University of Chicago Press on behalf ofThe Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research
Subject
Archaeology, Lapita Colonization, Oceania Boundary, Reef-Santa Cruz Islands, Bismarck Archipelago, Volcanic Activity, New Britain, Sailing Conditions, Intertidal Sites, Shoreline, Beach Terraces, Wave Notches, Food Production, Western Solomons, National Museum of the Solomon Islands, Research Assistance, Lapita Colonization, Remote Oceania, New Guinea, Austronesian Languages, Island Melanesia, East Polynesia, Linguistics, Biology, Austronesian Expansion
Domains
Archéologie, Anthropologie, Biologie, Linguistique, Sciences Sociales, Sciences humaines
Description
The Lapita colonization of Remote Oceania involved rapid expansion from New Guinea across onetenth of the circumference of the earth. Implicit in most discussions of this phenomenon is a standard wave-of-advance model founded on demographic growth and the economic advantage provided by food production. The Lapita movement is also routinely embedded within a much larger narrative of the expansion of Austronesian languages and peoples out of Southeast Asia into Island Melanesia and ultimately east through East Polynesia. Although this simple narrative is very attractive, as more data become available, the details of segments of the “Austronesian” expansion require revision in order to reconcile the data from archaeology, linguistics, and biology. This paper looks closely at recent data on the Lapita portion of the “Austronesian” expansion and concludes that it is best explained as a leapfrog rather than a wave-of-advance movement out of New Guinea into Remote Oceania. This has important implications for those interested in modeling linguistic and biological variation in the region and highlights the potential importance of historical accident over process in our understanding of culture history.
Creators
Sheppard, J. Peter
Sources
Current Anthropology, Vol. 52, No. 6 (December 2011), pp. 799-840
Coverage
Bismarck Archipelago, New Britain, Pacific Islands, New Caledonia, New Guinea Highlands, Melanesia, Micronesia, Polynesia