학술논문

Early Metal Age interactions in Island Southeast Asia and Oceania: jar burials from Aru Manara, northern Moluccas
Document Type
Report
Source
Antiquity. August 2018, Vol. 92 Issue 364, p1023, 17 p.
Subject
Indonesia
Language
English
ISSN
0003-598X
Abstract
New evidence from the rocksheiter site of Aru Manara, on the island of Morotai, in the northern Moluccas, East Indonesia, suggests an earlier than previously assumed date for extensive interactions between this area of Southeast Asia and the wider Pacific. Shared mortuary customs and associated ceramic grave goods, along with other practices such as megalithic traditions, appear to start in the Late Neolithic, but become more widespread and consolidated in the Early Metal Age. Excavations at Aru Manara show that the northern Moluccas may have figured prominently in the newly established network of interaction evidenced at this time, making it an important location in the spread and dispersal of people and culture throughout Island Southeast Asia and into Oceania. Keywords: Moluccas Islands, Indonesia, Neolithic, Metal Age, trade network, pottery
Introduction The northern Moluccas (Maluku Utara) Islands in Eastern Indonesia (Figure 1) are located at the geographic interface of Island Southeast Asia and Oceania. Various archaeological studies have helped to [...]