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Lithic Analysis at a Late Prehistoric Coastal Site in the Samoan Archipelago

This thesis presents a lithic attribute and geochemical analysis of the lithic material
recovered from coastal site of Fatumafuti, on Tutuila Island, in the Samoan archipelago
during 1050-520 BP. The goal of this thesis is to clarify the nature of stone tool
production and to add to our current understanding of the cultural transformations from
Lapita to a Polynesian identity. To complete this goal four research questions are
addressed. What is the stage of reduction (cha ne operatoire) at Fatumafuti? Does the
assemblage vary over space and time? Where did the source material come from? And,
what was the organization of lithic craft production? Specifically, is there evidence for
specialization?
The lithics at Fatumafuti contain multiple segments in the technical sequence of tool
manufacture (cha ne operatoire). The two major segments are middle stage and late
stage reduction, and two minor segments are early stage reduction and tool rejuvenation.
Expedient tools found on site indicate that prehistoric groups did not rely on a
completely curated technology. Tool manufacture was geared toward producing a
variety of tools, as opposed to a specific product. Production was most intense towards the coastal portion of the site during the earlier cultural component and then shifted
towards the talus base during the later cultural component. Using non-destructive Energy
Dispersive X-Ray Fluorescence (EDXRF), elemental concentrations were analyzed and
compared to those of Tataga-matau, Lau?agae, Asiapa and Alega. One, possibly two,
sources were utilized at this site; however, they are not chemically similar to Tatagamatau,
Lau'agae, Asiapa and Alega. I conclude that people of Fatumafuti practiced
independent household production at the end of the Aceramic and beginning of the
Recent period. Either the intensification of lithic craft production that is seen during the
height of complex chiefdoms is not seen at Fatumafuti, or these social transformations
had not yet taken hold. With more cases that date to this time, we may find that Samoan
chiefdoms had not attained full complexity at this point.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-909
Date2009 December 1900
CreatorsHawkins, Megan T.
ContributorsEckert, Suzanne L.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Thesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf

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