Burial practices in the early mid-Holocene of the Wallacean Islands: A sub-adult burial from Gua Makpan, Alor Island, Indonesia

Date

2020

Authors

Samper Carro, Sofia Cristina
Stewart, Tahlia
Mahirta, M
Wood, Rachel
O'Connor, Sue

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Editions scientifique et medicales Elsevier SAS

Abstract

Mortuary contexts in geographical and chronological settings such as islands are key to investigating human migration pathways, population replacements, diet, health, occupational activities, belief systems as well as other aspects of social behaviour. Located between Mainland Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Island Southeast Asia is of particular interest in this respect. As yet, however, few complete burials predating the Neolithic have been recovered and described from within this vast region. This paper presents a sub-adult burial from Gua Makpan, Alor Island, Indonesia, which is dated to the early mid-Holocene. The anatomical description and bioskeletal profile of the remains is complemented by the analysis of mortuary practices. Our results suggest a delayed primary burial or a secondary treatment, where long bone diaphyses were removed prior to interment. The stratigraphical position of the remains indicates that the skeleton was not interred in anatomical position, which supports the hypothesis of secondary treatment of the remains. The mortuary practices documented in the sub-adult burial from Gua Makpan are compared to burial practices documented for sites from elsewhere in Island Southeast Asia. We assess differences and similarities in mortuary treatments, that could inform on shared mortuary rituals across this maritime region and changing social practices with human migrations, or the introduction of new burial practices.

Description

Keywords

Wallacea, Alor island, Early holocene, Human remains, Burial practices, Mortuary analysis

Citation

Source

Quaternary International

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31