A radiocarbon chronology for prehistoric agriculture in the Society Islands, French Polynesia

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Abstract

I discuss a suite of 29 radiocarbon age determinations from four valleys on the islands of Mo'orea and Raiatea in the Society Archipelago. These provide the first sequence for the development of prehistoric agricultural production and human-induced environmental change in the Society Islands. Indirect evidence of small-scale agriculture, and by association, human occupation, dates to at least the 7th-10th centuries AD. Agricultural sites themselves date from the early 13th century AD until the late prehistoric/early historic period, with most agricultural activity clustering at the end of the temporal sequence. Evidence for extensive landscape transformation in the Opunohu Valley, likely associated with clearing for agricultural purposes, begins soon after the earliest evidence for cultivation and continues throughout prehistory.

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APA

Lepofsky, D. (1995). A radiocarbon chronology for prehistoric agriculture in the Society Islands, French Polynesia. Radiocarbon, 37(3), 917–930. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033822200014995

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