Open AccessJournal Article
Bayesian re-evaluation of Lapita settlement in Fiji: radiocarbon analysis of the Lapita occupation at Bourewa and nearby sites on the Rove Peninsula, Viti Levu Island
Patrick D. Nunn,Fiona Petchey +1 more
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented radiocarbon dates for Lapita-era sites on the Rove Peninsula, southwest Viti Levu Island, Fiji and concluded that many of the dates on charcoal are imprecise indicators of settlement age and have an average offset of 150 years.
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Abstract: 80 radiocarbon dates are presented for Lapita-era sites on the Rove Peninsula, southwest Viti Levu Island, Fiji. Of these, 67 are from the Bourewa site which is the largest and probably the earliest in the area. Of these, 10 are rejected as not being demonstrably associated with its Lapita occupation. Constraints on date interpretation arising from sample materials are highlighted. In particular, charcoals that have not been identified to short-lived tree species, twigs or seeds are evaluated according to observed contextual associations and established understanding of inbuilt age offsets using Bayesian outlier analysis. It is concluded that many of the dates on charcoal are imprecise indicators of settlement age and have an average offset of 150 years. Shell radiocarbon results are similarly evaluated and it is concluded that the majority have 14 C values that are in equilibrium with the marine radiocarbon reservoir and therefore yield ages that are accurate indicators of Lapita occupation of Bourewa. Results suggest that initial occupation at Bourewa occurred 2814±25 calBP (2837-2786 calBP [68.2% prob.]; 2865-2770 [95.4% prob.]) and ended 2657±20 calBP (2677-2641 calBP [68.2% prob.]; 2690-2614 calBP [95.4% prob.]). Similar analyses applied to other dated Lapita sites in Fiji shows that, while Bourewa is among the earliest, the Matanamuani (VL 21/5) site on Naigani Island remains the earliest to be securely dated.
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Island Archaeology, Model Systems, the Anthropocene, and How the Past Informs the Future
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Refining the chronology for west polynesian colonization: new data from the Samoan archipelago
Jeffrey T. Clark,Seth Quintus,Marshall I. Weisler,Emma St Pierre,Luke D. Nothdurft,Yuexing Feng +5 more
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TL;DR: The genetic diversity of mtDNA and Y chromosome lineages in the Leeward Society Islands is consistent with linguistic evidence for settlement of eastern Polynesia proceeding from the central northern Polynesian outliers in the Solomon Islands, and challenges phylogenetic models of cultural evolution predicated onEastern Polynesia being settled from Samoa.
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TL;DR: In this article, the OxCal program informatique OxCal permet d'effectuer de nombreuses analyses sur les dates radiocarbones, de la simple calibration a l'analyse de tous les sites archeologiques en donnant des informations sur la stratigraphie and les autres methodes de datation.
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Matthew Spriggs,Atholl Anderson +1 more
TL;DR: In a recent ANTIQUITY article (65: 767-95) Anderson presented a detailed analysis of radiocarbon dates to show that the settlement of New Zealand occurred later than previously thought as discussed by the authors.
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