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Cave Archaeology and Sampling Issues in the Tropics: A Case Study from Lene Hara Cave, a 42,000 Year Old Occupation Site in East Timor, Island Southeast Asia

O’Connor Sue, Barham Anthony, Spriggs Matthew, Veth Peter , Aplin Ken, St Pierre Emma . 2010. .
Cave Archaeology and Sampling Issues in the Tropics: A Case Study from Lene Hara Cave, a 42,000 Year Old Occupation Site in East Timor, Island Southeast Asia
ARTICLE, (2010 ) - PUBLISHEDVERSION - English (en-GB)

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Audience : RESEARCHERS, STUDENTS

Sujet
Cave Archaeology, Sampling Issues, Tropics, Lene Hara Cave, Occupation Site, East Timor, Island Southeast Asia, Modern Humans, Human Colonization, Sunda Shelf, Occupation History, Dating, Stratigraphy, Test Excavations, Breccia Deposits, Sedimentary Sequences, Areal Sampling, Greater Australia, Nusa Tenggara Island Chain, Early Dates, Northern Australia, Modern Human Entry
Domaines
Archéologie, Anthropologie, Sciences Sociales, Sciences de la Terre, Sciences humaines
Description

New evidence from Lene Hara Cave, East Timor, demonstrates that it was first occupied by modern humans by 42,454±450 cal BP at approximately the same time as nearby Jerimalai shelter. Together these sites constitute the earliest evidence for modern human colonisation of Island Southeast Asia east of the Sunda Shelf. Here we report on the dating and stratigraphy from the 2000 and 2002 test excavations at Lene Hara, as well as new dates obtained by sampling breccia deposits in 2009. The post-2000 excavations and sampling demonstrate that different areas of the cave preserve different sedimentary sequences and necessitate a revision of our earlier interpretations of the occupation history of the cave. At Lene Hara, and other caves with complex depositional histories in tropical regions, the occupation sequence will only be revealed through integrating information from extensive areal sampling.


When calibrated, the early dates from East Timor now align closer to the oldest evidence for occupation in northern Australia, with substantial implications for current theories on the colonisation of this region by modern humans. The Nusa Tenggara (Lesser Sunda) island chain emerges as a likely passage for modern human entry into Greater Australia. In view of the short water crossings required to reach Flores from Timor, the apparent absence of modern humans on Flores prior to the Holocene appears highly anomalous.

Mots-clés
Langue
English (en-GB)
Auteurs
O’Connor Sue, Barham Anthony, Spriggs Matthew, Veth Peter , Aplin Ken, St Pierre Emma
Contributeurs
Sources
Australian Archaeology, 71(1), 29‑40.
Couverture
East Timor, Island Southeast Asia, Sunda Shelf, Nusa Tenggara Island Chain, Northern Australia
Nom du journal