A Large Trolling Lure Shank from Ahuahu Great Mercury Island, New Zealand

Authors

  • Louise Furey Auckland War Memorial Museum
  • Rebecca Phillipps University of Auckland
  • Joshua Emmitt University of Auckland
  • Andrew McAlister University of Auckland
  • Simon Holdaway University of Auckland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.129.1.85-112

Keywords:

Māori material culture, serpentinite artefacts, trolling lure shank, New Zealand archaeology, Ahuahu Great Mercury Island

Abstract

Large stone trolling lure shanks, greater than 100 mm, are rare and stylistically associated with the early period of Māori occupation of Aotearoa New Zealand. The triangular-sectioned shank is distinctive and reminiscent of Polynesian forms. The 2016 find during excavations at T10/360 at Waitapu in Coralie Bay, Ahuahu Great Mercury Island, is the first to be recovered in an archaeological context and only the third large shank attributed to the North Island. Moreover, the shank is the largest complete example known. Radiocarbon dates from contexts in direct association with the shank indicate deposition in the early 15th century, slightly later than other sites such as Wairau Bar and Shag River Mouth where similar shanks have been found. A comparative analysis of the attributes of all 28 shanks in New Zealand museum collections indicates no regional patterns are evident. We review the context in which the Ahuahu shank was found, and its importance, along with the other items recovered, for the interpretation of the Waitapu occupation. We also consider the various reported interpretations of large trolling shanks and, based on Polynesian examples where symbolism and function are discussed, suggest large shanks were not used directly in fishing but had a fishing-related role.

 

Author Biographies

Louise Furey, Auckland War Memorial Museum

Louise Furey is Curator of Archaeology at Auckland War Memorial Museum, New Zealand, and a co-director of the Ahuahu Archaeological Project, a partnership between Auckland Museum and the University of Auckland. Her research interests include Māori material culture, with a particular focus on ornaments, settlement period sites and Māori gardening.

Rebecca Phillipps, University of Auckland

Rebecca Phillipps is a senior lecturer in Anthropology, School of Social Sciences, the University of Auckland. Her research is focused on stone artefact analysis and archaeological theory in New Zealand and North Africa. She has worked extensively in Egypt, particularly in the Fayum region on mid-Holocene archaeology with work recently published in The Desert Fayum Reinvestigated (2017).

Joshua Emmitt, University of Auckland

Joshua Emmitt is a research fellow in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. He maintains the Ahuahu Archaeological Project database and specialises in spatial analysis of data, photogrammetry and pXRF. He has carried out research projects in Egypt, Italy, Australia and New Zealand.

Andrew McAlister, University of Auckland

Andrew McAlister is a post-doctoral honorary researcher in Anthropology, School of Social Sciences, at the University of Auckland. His research interests include the archaeology of the Marquesas Islands, the Cook Islands and New Zealand, with an emphasis on investigating the distribution of stone tools as a means of identifying social interaction.

Simon Holdaway, University of Auckland

Simon Holdaway is a professor of archaeology and Head of the School of Social Sciences at the University of Auckland. He is interested in material culture, low-level food producers and time theory. He has conducted fieldwork in New Zealand, Egypt and Australia. His recent books include The Desert Fayum Reinvestigated with co-editor Willeke Wendrich (Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, 2017) and Geoarchaeology of Aboriginal Landscapes in Semiarid Australia with co-author Patricia Fanning (CSIRO, 2014).

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Published

2020-03-30