The Archaeology of Sulawesi: Current research on the Pleistocene to the Historic Period (2024)

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The Archaeology of Sulawesi: Current Research on the Pleistocene to the Historic Period, 2018

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Earliest hominin occupation of Sulawesi, Indonesia

Sulawesi is the largest and oldest island within Wallacea, a vast zone of oceanic islands separating continental Asia from the Pleistocene landmass of Australia and Papua (Sahul). By one million years ago an unknown hominin lineage had colonized Flores immediately to the south 1 , and by about 50 thousand years ago, modern humans (Homo sapiens) had crossed to Sahul 2,3. On the basis of position, oceanic currents and biogeographical context, Sulawesi probably played a pivotal part in these dispersals 4. Uranium-series dating of speleothem deposits associated with rock art in the limestone karst region of Maros in southwest Sulawesi has revealed that humans were living on the island at least 40 thousand years ago (ref. 5). Here we report new excavations at Talepu in the Walanae Basin northeast of Maros, where in situ stone artefacts associated with fossil remains of megafauna (Bubalus sp., Stegodon and Celebochoerus) have been recovered from stratified deposits that accumulated from before 200 thousand years ago until about 100 thousand years ago. Our findings suggest that Sulawesi, like Flores, was host to a long-established population of archaic hominins, the ancestral origins and taxonomic status of which remain elusive.

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Simpson 2020 The Spice Islands in Prehistory: Archaeology in the Northern Moluccas, Indonesia

Dale F . Simpson Jr.

Australian Archaeology, 2020

I highly recommend this 50th edition of Terra Australis. This edited volume provides a long-term, multidisciplinary scientific approach, to investigate and analyse materials found in the 40,000-year archaeological record of the NM. This volume provides significant information about the migration routes of both ancient and modern humans, the movements and interactions (and lack thereof) of humans during both the Pleistocene and Holocene, and the translocation and utilisation of raw materials, flora, and fauna in unique island environments. For those archaeologists who focus on Island Southeast Asia, Oceania, field archaeology, ceramics, lithics, glass beads, worked shell, faunal analysis, bioarchaeology and/or interaction studies, this volume is a must read, as it presents a valuable longitudinal study, significant methodological protocols, solid empirical evidence, and vetted conclusions about human behaviour in the NM over a 40,000-year span.

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Skeletal remains of a Pleistocene modern human (Homo sapiens) from Sulawesi

basran burhan

PLOS ONE, 2021

Major gaps remain in our knowledge of the early history of Homo sapiens in Wallacea. By 70–60 thousand years ago (ka), modern humans appear to have entered this distinct biogeographical zone between continental Asia and Australia. Despite this, there are relatively few Late Pleistocene sites attributed to our species in Wallacea. H. sapiens fossil remains are also rare. Previously, only one island in Wallacea (Alor in the southeastern part of the archipelago) had yielded skeletal evidence for pre-Holocene modern humans. Here we report on the first Pleistocene human skeletal remains from the largest Wallacean island, Sulawesi. The recovered elements consist of a nearly complete palate and frontal process of a modern human right maxilla excavated from Leang Bulu Bettue in the southwestern peninsula of the island. Dated by several different methods to between 25 and 16 ka, the maxilla belongs to an elderly individual of unknown age and sex, with small teeth (only M1 to M3 are extant) t...

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Ten Thousand Years of Cultivation at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea

John Muke

Ten Thousand Years of Cultivation at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea, 2017

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The Archaeology of the Aru Islands, Eastern Indonesia

Matthew Spriggs

2007

This volume describes the results of the first archaeological survey and excavations carried out in the fascinating and remote Aru Islands, Eastern Indonesia between 1995 and 1997. The naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, who stopped here in search of the Birds of Paradise on his voyage through the Indo-Malay Archipelago in the 1850s, was the first to draw attention to the group. The results reveal a complex and fascinating history covering the last 30,000 years from its early settlement by hunter-gatherers, the late Holocene arrival of ceramic ...

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The Archaeology of Sulawesi: Current research on the Pleistocene to the Historic Period (2024)
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