Academic literature on the topic 'Lapita culture Papua New Guinea Admiralty Islands'

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Journal articles on the topic "Lapita culture Papua New Guinea Admiralty Islands"

1

Wahome, E. Wachira. "Continuity and change in Lapita and post-Lapita ceramics: a review of evidence from the Admiralty Islands and New Ireland, Papua New Guinea." Archaeology in Oceania 32, no. 1 (1997): 118–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1834-4453.1997.tb00377.x.

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Pavlides, Christina. "Archaeological Studies of the Middle and Late Holocene, Papua New Guinea. Part V. Pre-Lapita horizons in the Admiralty Islands: flaked stone technology from GAC and GFJ." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum, online 20 (December 12, 2007): 197–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.20.2007.1477.

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Thomson, Lex A. J., Paul A. Geraghty, and William H. Wilson. "Hawaiian seascapes and landscapes: reconstructing elements of a Polynesian ecological knowledge system." Journal of the Polynesian Society 129, no. 4 (2020): 407–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.15286/jps.129.4.407-446.

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Kaute and its derivatives koute, ʻoute and ʻaute are Polynesian names for a red-flowered Hibiscus. Since its first botanical collection on Tahiti by Banks and Solander (1769), this hibiscus has been referred to as H. rosa-sinensis L. and assumed to have been introduced by the bearers of the archaeological culture known as Lapita. Lapita people settled West Polynesia around 2800 BP and spoke a language derived from Proto-Oceanic, the common ancestor of almost all the Austronesian languages of Island Melanesia and Micronesia as well as Polynesia. However, whereas Proto-Oceanic names can be recon
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Lapita culture Papua New Guinea Admiralty Islands"

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Fredericksen, Clayton Frederick Keith. "Patterns in glass : obsidian and economic specialisation in the Admiralty Islands." Phd thesis, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/109307.

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This thesis considers the association between western Melanesian ethnographic economic specialisation and prehistoric systems of production and distribution. Contrasting theories for the development of historical specialisation are reviewed and the criticism made that these are chronologically limited to the late Holocene. The statement is made that to fully appreciate temporal change we must expand our view to encompass the preceramic period. Obsidian is one of the few archaeologically visible materials which was distributed in both preceramic and ceramic times. This material is chosen
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Books on the topic "Lapita culture Papua New Guinea Admiralty Islands"

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Kirch, Patrick Vinton. Lapita and Its Transformations in Near Oceania: Archaeological Investigations in the Mussau Islands, Papua New Guinea, 1985-88. Edited by Patrick Vinton Kirch. Archaeological Research Facility, University of California, 2001.

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Lapita and its transformations in near Oceania: Archaeological investigations in the Mussau Islands, Papua New Guinea, 1985-88. Archaeological Research Facility, University of California, 2001.

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3

Christian, Kaufmann, Schmid Christin Kocher, Ohnemus Sylvia, Ambrose W. R, Bühler Alfred, and Museum Rietberg, eds. Admiralty Islands: Art from the South Seas. Museum Rietberg, 2002.

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