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The political economy of ancient Samoa: Basalt adze production and linkages to social statusWinterhoff, Ernest H., 1977- 12 1900 (has links)
xviii, 264 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number. / This dissertation examines the role of stone tool production as a strategic resource in the development of chiefly authority in prehistoric Samoa. The evolution of Polynesia's complex chiefly systems is a long standing issue in anthropology, and prior archaeological research has identified that specialized goods were a significant factor in the elevation of elite status in many Polynesian contexts. Before Western contact, Samoa was a stratified chiefdom with leaders claiming exclusive privileges and participating in an extensive trade network within the Fiji-West Polynesian region during the Traditional Samoan period (c. A.D. 300-1700). However, Samoa's political structure was quite different in the earlier Polynesian Plainware period (c. 500 B.C.-A.D. 300). Archaeologists, with the aid of historical linguistics, have documented a simple hereditary system operating among small horticultural communities. To address this political transformation, I investigate coeval changes occurring in stone adze production recovered on Tutuila Island.
Based firmly in the theoretical perspective of political economy, I ask three inter-related questions in my dissertation: were adze specialists present in ancient Samoa; if so, what was their connection to chiefly prerogatives; and what further relationship did these adze producers have with Samoa's emerging elite? To answer these questions, I utilize mass flake analysis and typological classifications to document technological and spatial changes in stone tool production. I also employ settlement studies and geochemical characterization to chart how leaders managed and controlled raw materials, as well as the distribution of basalt adzes in exchange networks.
From my research, I record numerous nucleated workshops of adze specialization on Tutuila dating as far back as 800 years ago. As a new form of economic organization, these adze specialists acted as catalysts for increased political complexity and stratified authority. In addition, I trace how Samoan elites used their bourgeoning authority in restricting access to basalt sources and the distribution of the finished products during this same time period. In the larger Samoan political economy, I conclude that Tutuilan chiefs, located in an otherwise economically-impoverished island, utilized these newly-developed adze specialists and high-quality basalt as strategic resources for accumulating material surplus in prestige competition. / Adviser: William S. Ayres
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Une tradition technologique régionale de l’industrie de pierre polie dans la vallée de l’Outaouais au cours de l’Archaïque supérieurLapensée-Paquette, Manuel 04 1900 (has links)
La séquence culturelle régionale de l’Archaïque supérieur et terminal de la vallée de
l’Outaouais n’est pas complétée, mais les variations stylistiques, technologiques et
fonctionnelles des artéfacts sur le plan régional et local facilitent le découpage culturel. La
reconstruction de la chaîne opératoire des haches, des herminettes et des gouges en pierre
polie des sites Muldoon et Lamoureux, deux sites du sud-est ontarien, pourrait permettre de
déceler une tradition technologique régionale à cheval entre l’Archaïque laurentien,
l’Archaïque post-laurentien et d’autres courants des Grands Lacs. L’analyse des haches, des
herminettes et des gouges des sites Muldoon et Lamoureux démontre l’utilisation massive
de l’amphibolite. La moitié distale de ces outils est surtout polie et finement abrasée et la
moitié proximale souvent éclatée, mais parfois abrasée. Ces éléments technologiques et
l’industrie de pierre taillée démontrent des ressemblances et des différences avec les sites
laurentiens de la région, et certains sites post-laurentiens du Québec et de l’Ontario
méridional. Le matériel en pierre polie des sites Muldoon et Lamoureux démontre des liens
technologiques vers l’Ouest tout en gardant un contact avec la sphère d’interaction postlaurentienne.
La vallée de l’Outaouais semble alors prendre une place indépendante dans
l’Archaïque supérieur, certaines continuités technologiques s’observent entre l’Archaïque
laurentien et l’Archaïque post-laurentien. / The Late and Terminal Archaic cultural sequence of the Ottawa Valley region is not
well defined. Definition of cultural boundaries should be based on stylistic, technological
and functional variations, on a regional and local scale. The “chaîne opératoire”
reconstruction of ground stone celts and gouges from the Muldoon and Lamoureux sites
could lead to the recognition of a regional technological tradition linked to the Laurentian
Archaic, the Post-Laurentian Archaic (Narrow Point) and other cultural trends from the
Great Lakes. The analysis of celts and gouges from Muldoon and Lamoureux show a
massive use of amphibolite. The distal half of these tools is mostly finely abraded and
polished. The proximal half is frequently broken off, but sometimes abraded. These
technological traits prove to have some resemblances and differences with Laurentian sites
in the Ottawa Valley and some Post-laurentian sites in southern Quebec and Ontario. The
ground stone material from these sites shows several links towards the west while
participating in the Post-Laurentian Archaic interaction sphere. The Ottawa valley seems
therefore to take an independent place in the Late Archaic, as technologic continuities are
seen between Laurentian and Post-Laurentian assemblages.
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Une tradition technologique régionale de l’industrie de pierre polie dans la vallée de l’Outaouais au cours de l’Archaïque supérieurLapensée-Paquette, Manuel 04 1900 (has links)
La séquence culturelle régionale de l’Archaïque supérieur et terminal de la vallée de
l’Outaouais n’est pas complétée, mais les variations stylistiques, technologiques et
fonctionnelles des artéfacts sur le plan régional et local facilitent le découpage culturel. La
reconstruction de la chaîne opératoire des haches, des herminettes et des gouges en pierre
polie des sites Muldoon et Lamoureux, deux sites du sud-est ontarien, pourrait permettre de
déceler une tradition technologique régionale à cheval entre l’Archaïque laurentien,
l’Archaïque post-laurentien et d’autres courants des Grands Lacs. L’analyse des haches, des
herminettes et des gouges des sites Muldoon et Lamoureux démontre l’utilisation massive
de l’amphibolite. La moitié distale de ces outils est surtout polie et finement abrasée et la
moitié proximale souvent éclatée, mais parfois abrasée. Ces éléments technologiques et
l’industrie de pierre taillée démontrent des ressemblances et des différences avec les sites
laurentiens de la région, et certains sites post-laurentiens du Québec et de l’Ontario
méridional. Le matériel en pierre polie des sites Muldoon et Lamoureux démontre des liens
technologiques vers l’Ouest tout en gardant un contact avec la sphère d’interaction postlaurentienne.
La vallée de l’Outaouais semble alors prendre une place indépendante dans
l’Archaïque supérieur, certaines continuités technologiques s’observent entre l’Archaïque
laurentien et l’Archaïque post-laurentien. / The Late and Terminal Archaic cultural sequence of the Ottawa Valley region is not
well defined. Definition of cultural boundaries should be based on stylistic, technological
and functional variations, on a regional and local scale. The “chaîne opératoire”
reconstruction of ground stone celts and gouges from the Muldoon and Lamoureux sites
could lead to the recognition of a regional technological tradition linked to the Laurentian
Archaic, the Post-Laurentian Archaic (Narrow Point) and other cultural trends from the
Great Lakes. The analysis of celts and gouges from Muldoon and Lamoureux show a
massive use of amphibolite. The distal half of these tools is mostly finely abraded and
polished. The proximal half is frequently broken off, but sometimes abraded. These
technological traits prove to have some resemblances and differences with Laurentian sites
in the Ottawa Valley and some Post-laurentian sites in southern Quebec and Ontario. The
ground stone material from these sites shows several links towards the west while
participating in the Post-Laurentian Archaic interaction sphere. The Ottawa valley seems
therefore to take an independent place in the Late Archaic, as technologic continuities are
seen between Laurentian and Post-Laurentian assemblages.
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