A Preliminary Report on Health and Disease in Early Lapita Skeletons, Vanuatu: Possible Biological Costs of Island Colonization

Date

2008

Authors

Buckley, Hallie R.
Tayles, Nancy
Spriggs, Matthew
Bedford, Stuart

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

The human colonization of Near Oceania has an antiquity of over 40,000 years but colonization of Remote Oceania, including Vanuatu, did not begin until around 3200-3100 BP. Just before this time a distinctive form of dentate-stamped pottery known as the Lapita style appeared in the Bismarck Archipelago northeast of the island of New Guinea. The only direct evidence of health in these Remote Oceanic settlers is their skeletal remains, but until recently only small samples of late Lapita skeletons have been found. Here we report the preliminary findings on some aspects of health of the first large sample (36 individuals) of early Lapita-associated skeletons from Teouma, Vanuatu, dated to ca. 3100-3000 BP. Dental health, trauma and degeneration of joints show they were well adapted to the rigors of island life and lived a physically active life while coping with a significant disease burden. The discovery of skeletal remains of pioneer settlers on islands is extremely rare. The Teouma sample provides insights into the possible biological cost of such a colonization and is applicable to other contexts where human migration into virgin landscapes may have demanded biological adaptation to ensure success.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: archipelago; colonization; health status; human settlement; island; skeletal remains; Asia; Bismarck Archipelago; Eurasia; Malay Archipelago; Melanesia; New Guinea; Pacific islands; Pacific Ocean; Papua New Guinea; Southeast Asia; Vanuatu Colonization; Health; Lapita; Pacific; Skeletons; Vanuatu

Citation

Source

Journal of Island & Coastal Archaeology

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31