Obsidian Point Discovered on Kapingamarangi Atoll, Micronesia: Implications for Post-Settlement Regional Interactions

Authors

Keywords:

obsidian point, interdisciplinary analysis, Kapingamarangi Atoll, Admiralty Islands, prestige goods, Polynesian Outliers, Saudeleur dynasty, post-settlement interaction

Abstract

An obsidian point was discovered by chance by local people on Kapingamarangi Atoll, a Polynesian Outlier in Micronesia. In addition to use-wear and residue analysis to identify its use, pXRF analysis conducted on it demonstrated that it was brought from the Admiralty Islands in Papua New Guinea over about 900 km. The information on other Admiralty obsidian artefacts found in western Oceania and other associated phenomena suggest that those artefacts were brought from the source through an interaction network between Micronesia and Melanesia during the first half of the second millennium AD. They had significant social value as prestige goods in the peripheral areas of the Admiralty obsidian circulation, serving as chiefly heirlooms and grave goods. In addition to skilful Caroline Islands seafarers, Polynesian Outlier populations had an important role in the interregional interactions during this dynamic period in the western Pacific, which was possibly activated by Polynesian intrusion into the region related to a larger Polynesian expansion into eastern Polynesia circa AD 1000. Further, we argue that the Saudeleur dynasty of Pohnpei, which achieved the development of a famous megalithic politico-religious centre, Nan Madol, was influential in the interaction sphere during its height in AD 1000–1500. Thus, by using archaeological, linguistic, historical, ethnological, oral traditional and DNA data, the interdisciplinary analysis of this rare obsidian artefact has deepened our understanding of post-settlement interaction in the region.

Author Biographies

Takuya Nagaoka, Pasifika Renaissance

Takuya Nagaoka earned his PhD from Waipapa Taumata Rau | University of Auckland with a dissertation on the household and settlement pattern archaeology of the late prehistoric–early historic period in Roviana, the Solomon Islands, in 2012. In 2014, he took the initiative to found the NGO Pasifika Renaissance (serving as Executive Director). His specialties are Oceanic archaeology and area studies and his main geographic focuses are Micronesia and the Solomon Islands.

Peter J. Sheppard, Waipapa Taumata Rau | University of Auckland

Peter Sheppard is an Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, School of Social Sciences, Waipapa Taumata Rau | University of Auckland, having joined the academic staff in 1992 and retired in 2021. He has conducted archaeological research in the Solomon Islands since 1989 when, as a postdoctoral fellow, he was sent by Roger Green to Malaita to locate sources of chert found in the Lapita sites of Temotu Province. Returning to the Solomon Islands in 1996 he began a series of projects with his students and colleagues that involved survey and excavation throughout the islands of the Western Province. In 2009 he turned to the eastern Solomons, where he carried out field studies on Santa Ana, followed by research on Santa Cruz in Temotu Province with re-excavation and dating of the SE-SZ-8 Lapita site originally excavated by Green. Much of this work is summarised in the first monograph-length survey of Solomon Island archaeology, Archaeology of the Solomon Islands (University of Otago Press, University of Hawai‘i Press), which he published with Richard Walter in 2017. Peter is also Co-editor of the journal Archaeology in Oceania with Peter White.

Callan Ross-Sheppard, McGill University

Callan Ross-Sheppard is a doctoral candidate at the Anthropology Department of McGill University. Their current research focuses on the archaeology of lead-glazed ceramic wares, particularly those in use among Kitan/Liao-period communities in northeastern China and French colonial sites in Eastern Canada.

Nina Kononenko, University of Sydney; Australian Museum

Nina Kononenko is a Research Associate in Geosciences and Archaeology, Australian Museum, and an Honorary Associate, Department of Archaeology, School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Sydney. She completed her first PhD project, on Neolithic stone tool technology, in 1982 in Leningrad at the Russian Academy of Sciences, and her second PhD project on Holocene obsidian tool functions from West New Britain, Papua New Guinea, in 2008 at ANU. Her current research is focused on the reconstruction of ancient technology, subsistence practices, domestic and social activities in the Pacific and Australia based on experimental replication of tool function, and microscopic use-wear/residue analysis of stone, bone, shell and glass artefacts from prehistoric and historic sites held at museums as well as from excavated sites in Australia and the Pacific. 

Published

2023-03-16