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Lapita Burial Practices: Evidence for Complex Body and Bone Treatment at the Teouma Cemetery, Vanuatu, Southwest Pacific

Valentin Frédérique, Bedford Stuart, Buckley Hallie, Spriggs Matthew. 2010. Journal of Island & Coastal Archaeology.
Lapita Burial Practices: Evidence for Complex Body and Bone Treatment at the Teouma Cemetery, Vanuatu, Southwest Pacific
BOOKPART, (2010 ) - PUBLISHEDVERSION - English (en-GB)
Journal of Island & Coastal Archaeology
RESTRICTEDACCESS - Copyright © 2010 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
Audience : RESEARCHERS, STUDENTS
Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
Subject
Archaeology, Lapita Culture, Burial Practices, Teouma Cemetery, Vanuatu, Southwest Pacific
Domains
Archéologie, Anthropologie, Biologie, Sciences Sociales, Sciences du vivant, Sciences humaines
Description

Excavation of the 3,000-year-old Lapita cemetery of Teouma (Efate, Central Vanuatu) has allowed the first detailed investigation of mortuary practices of these initial colonizers of the Vanuatu archipelago. Focusing on one component of funerary practice: the adult corpse and bone treatment of 25 mortuary contexts recovered at the site during excavations in 2004 and 2005, the present study reveals that beyond a complex procedure common for all the deceased, there is marked diversity of funerary behavior. Utilizing current knowledge and practice regarding the method of field anthropology or archaeothanatology, including the chronology of joint disarticulation sequences, we were able to establish the following practices: treatment of corpses by inhumation in a container—pit or wrappers—not immediately filled with sediment, followed by exhumation of the skull and other bones of the upper part of the skeleton, and secondary deposition of bones, including the cranium. The identified variations reflect particular attitudes toward human remains which might be connected to the social position of the deceased and/or individual choice.

Keywords
bioarchaeology, Lapita, mortuary behavior
Language
English (en-GB)
Creators
Valentin Frédérique, Bedford Stuart, Buckley Hallie, Spriggs Matthew
Contributors
Sources
Journal of Island & Coastal Archaeology, 5(2), 212-235.
Coverage
Vanuatu, Southwest Pacific
Name of newspaper
Journal of Island & Coastal Archaeology