Langley Michelle C, O'Connor Sue, Piotto Elena
Archaeology & Natural History, School of Culture, History & Language, College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University, Australia.
J Hum Evol. 2016 Aug;97:1-16. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2016.04.005. Epub 2016 Jun 9.
In this paper, we describe worked and pigment-stained Nautilus shell artefacts recovered from Jerimalai, Timor-Leste. Two of these artefacts come from contexts dating to between 38,000 and 42,000 cal. BP (calibrated years before present), and exhibit manufacturing traces (drilling, pressure flaking, grinding), as well as red colourant staining. Through describing more complete Nautilus shell ornaments from younger levels from this same site (>15,900, 9500, and 5000 cal. BP), we demonstrate that those dating to the initial occupation period of Jerimalai are of anthropogenic origin. The identification of such early shell working examples of pelagic shell in Island Southeast Asia not only adds to our growing understanding of the importance of marine resources to the earliest modern human communities in this region, but also indicates that a remarkably enduring shell working tradition was enacted in this area of the globe. Additionally, these artefacts provide the first material culture evidence that the inhabitants of Jerimalai were not only exploiting coastal resources for their nutritional requirements, but also incorporating these materials into their social technologies, and by extension, their social systems. In other words, we argue that the people of Jerimalai were already practicing a developed coastal adaptation by at least 42,000 cal. BP.
在本文中,我们描述了从东帝汶杰里马莱岛出土的带有加工痕迹和颜料污渍的鹦鹉螺贝壳制品。其中两件制品出自距今38000至42000年校正年(calibrated years before present,简称cal. BP)的地层,带有制作痕迹(钻孔、压剥、打磨)以及红色颜料污渍。通过描述来自该遗址较年轻地层(距今>15900年、9500年和5000年校正年)更为完整的鹦鹉螺贝壳饰品,我们证明那些可追溯至杰里马莱岛初始占领时期的制品是人为制造的。在东南亚岛屿发现如此早期的远洋贝壳加工实例,不仅加深了我们对海洋资源对该地区最早现代人类群落重要性的理解,还表明在全球这一区域存在着一种极为持久的贝壳加工传统。此外,这些制品提供了首个物质文化证据,表明杰里马莱岛居民不仅为满足营养需求而开发沿海资源,还将这些材料融入其社会技术,进而融入其社会体系。换句话说,我们认为杰里马莱岛居民至少在距今42000年校正年时就已践行一种成熟的沿海适应方式。