Archaeological excavations at Gua Sireh (Serian) and Lubang Angin (Gunung Mulu National Park), Sarawak, Malaysia
Date
1990
Authors
Ipoi Datan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
The initial aim of this research was to excavate only the cave of Gua
Sireh in an attempt to gather data for the prehistory of western
Sarawak, for which region mostly protohistoric sites have been
examined so far. Though Gua Sireh was excavated by Harrisson and
Solheim in 1959, their materials still await further analysis.
The excavation methods, finds and tentative interpretations of the
1989 excavation are presented in this thesis. Gua Sireh appeared to have
been ephemerally used about 20,000 years ago when the site would have
been about 500 kilometres inland. However, evidence for Late
Pleistocene and Early Holocene occupation is limited to a few amorphous
stones of quartz and chert and some freshwater shells. Pottery (some
with rice temper) which appeared at Gua Sireh about 4000 BP is
found to have affinities with the paddle-impressed pottery assemblages
from Tanjong Kubor, Gua Bungoh and Kupang (Brunei). Some of the sherds
with rice chaff temper have been submitted for AMS dating to determine
when rice first appeared in the region. Human and animal bones were
found throughout the pottery phase. Iron artefacts and glass beads were
recovered in the upper levels, presumably deposited after 2000 years
ago.
Before leaving Australia to commence my fieldwork in July 1989 it
was decided that a second site, Lubang Angin, be investigated as well.
Lubang Angin is a limestone cave, about 610 kilometres NE of Gua Sireh,
located in the Gunung Mulu National Park about 90 kilometres (as the
crow flies) inland from the coast. The 1989 excavation at Lubang Angin
was the first carried out in the Mulu region. The cave produced extended burials with associated burial items, similar to those found in the Niah
caves which are about 160 kilometres to the southwest.
These grave goods include "three-colour ware", double-spouted
vessels, predominantly cord-marked earthenwares, marine bivalve
shells, iron artefacts and glass beads. A c 3000 BP date on a marine
shell suggests that the Lubang Angin burials, like those of the Niah
caves, were probably placed between 1000 BC and AD 500. The
three-colour ware and double-spouted vessels at Lubang Angin and the
Niah caves were determined by neutron activation analysis to have been
manufactured from more than one source of raw materials.
Both sites have yielded interesting finds. Gua Sireh deserves further
excavation while other caves in the Mulu reserve should be investigated.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Thesis (Masters sub-thesis)
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description