scholarly journals KEVEOKI 1: Exploring the Hiri ceramics trade at a short-lived village site near the Vailala River, Papua New Guinea

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno David ◽  
Nick Araho ◽  
Bryce Barker ◽  
Alois Kuaso ◽  
Ian Moffat

Investigations at the newly discovered, once-coastal but now inland archaeological village site of Keveoki 1 allows us to characterise the nature and antiquity of ancestral hiri trade ceramics around 450-500 cal BP in the recipient Vailala River- Kea Kea villages of the Gulf Province of the southern coast of Papua New Guinea. This paper reports on the decorated ceramics from Keveoki 1, where a drainage channel cut in 2004 revealed a short-lived village site with a rich, stratified ceramic assemblage. It represents a rare account of the ceramic assemblage from a short duration village on a relic beach ridge in southern Papua New Guinea, and contributes to ongoing attempts to refine ceramic sequences in the recipient (western) end of the hiri system of longdistance maritime trade. Because of the presence of a single occupational period of a few decades at most, short duration sites such as Keveoki 1 allow for chronological refinement of ceramic conventions in a way that multilevel sites usually cannot, owing to the lack of stratigraphic mixing between chronologically separate ceramic assemblages in the former.

2010 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno David ◽  
Jean-Michel Geneste ◽  
Ken Aplin ◽  
Jean-Jacques Delannoy ◽  
Nick Araho ◽  
...  

1993 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 1575
Author(s):  
P Grootaert ◽  
HJG Meuffels

Four species of the marine genus Cymatopus are reported from the coasts of Papua New Guinea. Two species, C. calcaratoides, sp. nov. (northern coast), and C. motuporensis, sp. nov. (southern coast), and the female of C. leopoldi Meuffels & Grootaert are described. Together with C. calcaratus and C. malayensis, they form a distinct monophyletic group in the western Pacific. The larvae and pupae of Cymatopus live in the thin layer of algae and debris on the rocks in the eulittoral zone. The adult flies feed at low tide on the larvae of chironomids and ceratopogonids in the intertidal zone. *Contribution No. 257 of the Leopold I11 Biological Station on Laing Island.


Author(s):  
Donald Denoon ◽  
Kathleen Dugan ◽  
Leslie Marshall

1984 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 786-788
Author(s):  
Patricia M. Greenfield

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esteban Tristan ◽  
Mei-Chuan Kung ◽  
Peter Caccamo

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