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Boatbuilding Technology Analysis of the Seventh Century Boat Remains from Bongal Site on the West Coast of North Sumatera
Author(s) -
Stanov Purnawibowo,
Agni Sesaria Mochtar
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
kalpataru
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2550-0449
pISSN - 0126-3099
DOI - 10.24832/kpt.v30i2.821
Subject(s) - west coast , archaeology , radiocarbon dating , ninth , geography , rope , period (music) , fishery , oceanography , engineering , geology , biology , art , physics , structural engineering , acoustics , aesthetics
. The west coast of North Sumatera was a famous sea trade route since the ninth century, according to the research conducted in the Barus Site, the international trading ports in the region. However, the study of the maritime technology in the region is still scarcely done. Boat timbers finding from Bongal Site is the first, as well as the oldest, shipwreck remains found in the west coast of North Sumatera. This paper aims to study the boatbuilding technology, as one of the maritime technologies, of the boat remains found in Bongal Site. Analysis on form and function of the timbers, along with the radiocarbon-dating result of timber and Arenga pinnata rope show that the vessel was built in the Southeast Asian lashed-lugs technique in the seventh century, two centuries older than Barus. Analysis on the artefacts found near the timbers indicates that this type of vessel was used for trade activities on the west coast of North Sumatera.

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