Journal Article10.1017/S0959774303000118
Ritually Orchestrated Seascapes: Hunting Magic and Dugong Bone Mounds in Torres Strait, NE Australia
Ian J. McNiven,Ricky Feldman +1 more
141
TL;DR: The use of dugong bones in ritual sites has important implications for the extent to which ‘secular’ midden deposits are representative of Islander subsistence practices as discussed by the authors.
read more
Abstract: People dwell in a world of their own subjective making. For many hunters, engagement with the ‘natural’ world is a negotiated affair because animals, like people, possess spirits. A critical part of the negotiation process is mediation of the human–prey relationship by hunting magic. Torres Strait Islanders of NE Australia are skilled hunters of dugongs, a marine mammal whose capture entails a broad range of ritual practices. Following ethnographic expectations, excavation of bone mounds reveals ritual treatment of dugong bones, especially skulls, to increase hunting success. Extensive use of dugong bones in ritual sites has important implications for the extent to which ‘secular’ midden deposits are representative of Islander subsistence practices. Since dugong bone mounds provide archaeological insights into Islander spiritual relationships with dugongs, chronological changes in use of these sites inform us about historical developments in Islander ontology and their ritual orchestration of seascapes and spiritual connections to the sea.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Handbook of Landscape Archaeology
Bruno David,Juergen Thomas +1 more
- 01 Jan 2008
Abstract: s of “Recent Work in Archaeological Geophysics,” Environmental and Industrial Geophysics Group, London, 19 December. Merali, Z. 2006. Dig here for treasures of the ancient world. New Scientist 2561: 30–31. Mills, J. 2005. Bias and the world of the vertical aerial photograph, in K. Brophy and D. Cowley (eds.), From the Air: Understanding Aerial Archaeology, pp. 117–26. Stroud: Tempus. Neubauer, W. 2004. GIS in Archaeology: The interface between prospection and excavation. Archaeological Prospection 11: 159–66. Pasquinucci, M., and Trément, F. (eds.). 2000. NonDestructive Techniques Applied to Landscape Archaeology. Oxford: Oxbow Books. Powlesland, D., Lyall, J., and Donoghue, D. 1997. Enhancing the record through remote sensing: The application and integration of multi-sensor, non-invasive remote sensing techniques for the enhancement of the sites and monuments record.
585
The Native Tribes of Central Australia 1
TL;DR: Spencer and Gillen as discussed by the authors pointed out that the aboriginal does not think it necessary to express his gratitude when he receives a gift from one of his own tribe, and that we should understand the sentiments of the native, put ourselves into his mental attitude, and then the question is capable of being more or less explained or understood.
Animals as Agents: Hunting Ritual and Relational Ontologies in Prehistoric Alaska and Chukotka
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the ways in which animals act as ontological subjects and as agents in myth and ritual, arguing that prehistoric hunters interacted with animals as agential persons, engaging in social practices intended to facilitate hunting success and avoid offending prey.
156
Integrating traditional ecological knowledge and fisheries management in the Torres Strait, Australia: the catalytic role of turtles and dugong as cultural keystone species
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess the role of these factors in the application of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) in the Torres Strait Islands, Australia, where commercial and subsistence fisheries are fundamental to the Indigenous Melanesian culture and livelihoods, and highlight the potential utility of cultural keystone species in stimulating cross-cultural resource governance in developed economies such as Australia.
145
References
A note on butchering dugong at Princess Charlotte Bay
TL;DR: Bones from three dugong were found in a small site at Princess Charlotte Bay, far north Queensland as discussed by the authors, showing signs of butchering damage, and they were sent to the Australian Museum for preservation.
5
•Book
Social theory and archaeology
Michael Shanks
- 01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: Shanks and Tilley as mentioned in this paper argue against the functionalism and positivism which result from an inadequate assimilation of social theory into the day-to-day practice of archaeology, and present a challenge to the traditional idea of the archaeologist as explorer or discoverer and the more recent emphasis on archaeology as behavioural science.