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Testing the human factor: Radiocarbon dating the first peoples of the South Pacific

Abstract
Archaeologists have long debated the origins and mode of dispersal of the immediate predecessors of all Polynesians and many populations in Island Melanesia. Such debates are inextricably linked to a chronological framework provided, in part, by radiocarbon dates. Human remains have the greatest potential for providing answers to many questions pertinent to these debates. Unfortunately, bone is one of the most complicated materials to date reliably because of bone degradation, sample pretreatment and diet. This is of particular concern in the Pacific where humidity contributes to the rapid decay of bone protein, and a combination of marine, reef, C₄, C₃ and freshwater foods complicate the interpretation of ¹⁴C determinations. Independent advances in bone pretreatment, isotope multivariate modelling and radiocarbon calibration techniques provide us, for the first time, with the tools to obtain reliable calibrated ages for Pacific burials. Here we present research that combines these techniques, enabling us to re-evaluate the age of burials from key archaeological sites in the Pacific.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Petchey, F., Spriggs, M., Leach, F., Seed, M., Sand, C.,…, Anderson, K. (2010). Testing the human factor: Radiocarbon dating the first peoples of the South Pacific. Journal of Archaeological Science, 38(1), 29-44.
Date
2010
Publisher
Elsevier
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
This is an author’s accepted version of an article published in the journal: Journal of Archaeological Science. © 2010 Elsevier.