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AN AUSTRONESIAN PRESENCE IN SOUTHERN JAPAN: EARLY OCCUPATION IN THE YAEYAMA ISLANDS.
Author(s) -
Glenn R. Summerhayes,
Atholl Anderson
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
bulletin of the indo-pacific prehistory association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1835-1794
pISSN - 0156-1316
DOI - 10.7152/bippa.v29i0.9481
Subject(s) - colonisation , pottery , archaeology , geography , ancient history , colonization , history
Archaeological research in the Yaeyama Islands, south- ern Japan, has a hundred year old history, yet little of it is known to those archaeologists working outside the imme- diate area. This area is of importance to those working in Southeast Asia and the Pacific as the colonisation of the Yaeyama Islands allows a closer assessment of the nature and timing of Austronesian movement out of Taiwan. This paper will examine the colonisation of the Yaeyama Islands and its archaeological signature, Shimotabaru pottery, by first reviewing the archaeological develop- ments of this island group, followed by an examination of the timing of colonisation and the nature of Shimotabaru pottery production. It will be argued that the early occu- pation in the Yaeyama Islands characterised by Shimo- tabaru pottery is the signature of Austronesian colonisa- tion from Taiwan, from between 4500 and 3900 years ago. Yet the colonising signature in the Yaeyama Islands is of a different character to the Austronesian presence in the islands south of Taiwan. This suggests that the nature of Austronesian expansion in general was more complex than is proposed in the prevailing model.

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