TY - JOUR
T1 - Human ecodynamics in the Mangareva Islands
T2 - a stratified sequence from Nenega-Iti Rock Shelter (site AGA-3, Agakauitai Island)
AU - Kirch, Patrick V.
AU - Molle, Guillaume
AU - Nickelsen, Cordelia
AU - Mills, Peter
AU - Dotte-Sarout, Emilie
AU - Swift, Jillian
AU - Wolfe, Allison
AU - Horrocks, Mark
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Oceania Publications.
PY - 2015/4
Y1 - 2015/4
N2 - The Gambier Islands (French Polynesia) are noted for their extreme deforestation and low biodiversity in the post-European contact period. We report on the archaeological and palaeoecological investigation of a stratified rock shelter (site AGA-3) on Agakauitai Island, revealing a sequence of environmental transformation following Polynesian colonisation of the archipelago. Radiocarbon dates indicate use of the rock shelter from the 13th to the mid-17th centuries, followed by a sterile depositional hiatus, and then final early post-contact use (late 18th to early 19th century). Zooarchaeological analysis of faunal remains indicates rapid declines in local populations of seabirds, especially procellariids, as well as later increases in numbers of the introduced, commensal Pacific rat (Rattus exulans). Macro-and micro-botanical evidence documents transformation of the island’s flora from indigenous forest to one dominated by economic plants and fire-resistant taxa. A multi-causal model of dynamic interactions, including nutrient depletion due to seabird loss, most likely accounts for this dramatic ecological transformation.
AB - The Gambier Islands (French Polynesia) are noted for their extreme deforestation and low biodiversity in the post-European contact period. We report on the archaeological and palaeoecological investigation of a stratified rock shelter (site AGA-3) on Agakauitai Island, revealing a sequence of environmental transformation following Polynesian colonisation of the archipelago. Radiocarbon dates indicate use of the rock shelter from the 13th to the mid-17th centuries, followed by a sterile depositional hiatus, and then final early post-contact use (late 18th to early 19th century). Zooarchaeological analysis of faunal remains indicates rapid declines in local populations of seabirds, especially procellariids, as well as later increases in numbers of the introduced, commensal Pacific rat (Rattus exulans). Macro-and micro-botanical evidence documents transformation of the island’s flora from indigenous forest to one dominated by economic plants and fire-resistant taxa. A multi-causal model of dynamic interactions, including nutrient depletion due to seabird loss, most likely accounts for this dramatic ecological transformation.
KW - Gambier Islands
KW - Pacific rat
KW - Polynesian colonisation
KW - adzes
KW - fishhooks
KW - seabird extinctions
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84962251578&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/ARCO.5050
DO - 10.1002/ARCO.5050
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84962251578
SN - 0728-4896
VL - 50
SP - 23
EP - 42
JO - Archaeology in Oceania
JF - Archaeology in Oceania
IS - 1
ER -