2nd Edition

Archaeology of Pacific Oceania Inhabiting a Sea of Islands

By Mike T. Carson Copyright 2024
400 Pages 204 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

400 Pages 204 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

400 Pages 204 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Archaeology of Pacific Oceania , now in its second edition, offers a state-of-the-art and fully detailed chronological narrative of how Pacific Oceania came to be inhabited over a long time scale, posing fundamental questions both for Pacific Oceania and for global archaeology. The Pacific Ocean covers 165 million sq. km, nearly one-third of the world’s total surface area, yet its thousands of... Read more

Chapter 1 Research themes in Pacific Oceanic archaeology

Chapter 2 Regional context and perspectives

Chapter 3 Substance and scope of Pacific Oceanic archaeology

Chapter 4 Hunter-gatherer traditions in the western Asia-Pacific region

Chapter 5 Following the Asia-Pacific pottery trail, 4000 through 800 B.C.

Chapter 6 First contact with the Remote Oceanic environment

Chapter 7 A siege of ecological imperialism

Chapter 8 The end of an era

Chapter 9 A broad-spectrum revolution? 500 B.C. through A.D. 100

Chapter 10 The atoll highway of Micronesia, A.D. 100 through 500

Chapter 11 Ethnogenesis and polygenesis, A.D. 500 through 1000

Chapter 12 An A.D. 1000 event? Formalization of cultural expressions

Chapter 13 Expansion and intensification, A.D. 1000 through 1800

Chapter 14 Living with the past

Biography

Mike T. Carson (Ph.D. in Anthropology, University of Hawai‘i, 2002) has investigated the broad geographic range and chronological scope of archaeological landscapes throughout the Asia-Pacific region. He was author of several books about Pacific Oceanic archaeology and ancient landscapes, editor of Palaeolandscapes in Archaeology: Lessons for the Past and Future (Routledge, 2022), and co-editor of Asian Perspectives: The Journal of Archaeology for Asia and the Pacific (University of Hawai‘i Press, 2014–2020). He currently is Associate Professor of Archaeology at the Richard F. Taitano Micronesian Area Research Center at the University of Guam.