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The human occupation record of Gua Mo’o hono shelter, Towuti-Routa region of Southeastern Sulawesi

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Authors

O’Connor, Sue
Bulbeck, David
Piper, Philip J.
Aziz, Fadhila
Marwick, Ben
Campos, Fredeliza
Fenner, Jack
Aplin, Ken
Maloney, Tim
Hakim, Budianto

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ANU Press

Abstract

Here we describe the excavation, chronology and assemblage from Gua Mo’o hono, a rockshelter in the Lake Towuti region in Southeast Sulawesi. The excavation produced glass, ceramics and pottery, dense faunal and lithic assemblages and a diversity of bone tools. The Gua Mo’o hono sequence demonstrates that humans were active in and around the rockshelter from at least 6500 cal BP, and informs on early to late Holocene subsistence and technology in this region. Although the occupants of Gua Mo’o hono exploited a diverse range of fauna from a variety of habitats around the site, there appears to have been a particular focus on suids, both the babirusa and the Sulawesi warty pig.

Description

Citation

Source

Book Title

The Archaeology of Sulawesi: Current Research on the Pleistocene to the Historic Period

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access via publisher website

License Rights

Creative Commons licence (CC BY-NC-ND; creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)

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