Mask Cave: Red-Slipped Pottery and the Australian-Papuan Settlement of Zenadh Kes (Torres Strait)
Excavations at Mask Cave on the sacred islet of Pulu off Mabuyag in the central west of Zenadh Kes (Torres Strait) reveal four occupational phases: Phase 1 (2900-3800 years ago), Phase 2 (2100-2600 years ago), Phase 3 (1500-1700 years ago) and Phase 4 (last 1500 years). Faunal remains indicate marin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archaeology in Oceania 2006-07, Vol.41 (2), p.49-81 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Excavations at Mask Cave on the sacred islet of Pulu off Mabuyag in the
central west of Zenadh Kes (Torres Strait) reveal four occupational
phases: Phase 1 (2900-3800 years ago), Phase 2 (2100-2600 years ago),
Phase 3 (1500-1700 years ago) and Phase 4 (last 1500 years). Faunal
remains indicate marine specialization (turtle and fish) during all
phases. Pétrographie analysis of sherds of finely made red-slipped
pottery dating back 2400-2600 years reveals a unique fabric in terms of
current understandings of Oceanic ceramic technologies. Mineral
inclusions are consistent with local geology suggesting local
manufacture and the existence of Indigenous Australia's first pottery
tradition. Pre-ceramic Phase 1 is associated with demographic expansions
across the western islands of Zenadh Kes by local populations of
marine-based hunter-gatherers who were primarily Aboriginal language
speakers. Phase 2 is associated with the immigration of Papuan maritime,
horticultural and pottery-making peoples to the eastern and western
islands of Zenadh Kes commencing 2600 years ago. Australian then Papuan
settlement expansions across the western islands of Zenadh Kes explain
why the local Western-Central Language has an Aboriginal base with a
Papuan overlay. First colonization of the eastern islands by Papuans
explains why the local Meriam Mir language is Papuan. Early red-slipped
pottery in Zenadh Kes is linked to southern coastal Papuan pottery
traditions that are reassessed to have a comparable 2600 year antiquity.
Papuan settlement of the southern Papuan coast and Zenadh Kes was an
extension of the post-Lapita settlement of the Pacific, an event
memorialized in part by Torres Strait Islander oral tradition. |
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ISSN: | 0728-4896 1834-4453 |
DOI: | 10.1002/j.1834-4453.2006.tb00610.x |