Underwater Cultural Heritage in the Pacific: Themes and Future Directions

IF 1.4 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY International Journal of Asia Pacific Studies Pub Date : 2021-07-30 DOI:10.21315/ijaps2021.17.2.6
Bill Jeffery, Jennifer F. McKinnon, H. V. Van Tilburg
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

This article focuses on the underwater cultural heritage (UCH) located across the Pacific Ocean by sampling three temporal themes: living heritage and traditional indigenous cultural heritage, the global connections of the Manila Galleon trade, and the modern warfare of World War II (WWII). Many of the traditional cultural practices (living heritage) and tangible cultural heritage related to indigenous people of the Pacific are coastal and sea related. Their world encompasses the sea, which was not seen as a barrier as but a much-used connection to people occupying the thousands of islands. The Pacific contains an extensive maritime cultural heritage, including UCH, which reflects the cultural identity of people living in the region. From the 16th to 18th centuries, the Spanish Empire prospered through an elaborate Asia-Pacific trade network. The Manila Galleon trade between Manila, Philippines, and Acapulco, Mexico, connected into the existing Atlantic trade transporting commodities such as porcelain, silver, spices and textiles from Asia to the Americas and Spain. Of the 400 known voyages between 1565 and 1815, approximately 59 shipwrecks occurred, of which only a handful of galleons have been investigated. The scale of WWII heritage in the Pacific region reflects the intensity and impacts of global conflicts fought across the world’s largest ocean. Associated UCH includes near shore defensive infrastructure, landing and amphibious assault craft, submerged aircraft, and a wide range of ships and submarines, auxiliary, combatant and non-military casualties alike. Twentieth century warfare involved massive losses of material. The legacy of submerged battlefields in the Pacific is complex. Interest is high in the discovery of naval UCH, but critical aspects are often intertwined. Archaeology, history, reuse, memorialisation (gravesites), tourism, unexploded ordnance, environmental threat (fuel oil), ownership and salvage all shape what we can learn from this resource.
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太平洋水下文化遗产:主题与未来方向
本文通过三个时间主题:活的遗产和传统的土著文化遗产、马尼拉大帆船贸易的全球联系以及第二次世界大战的现代战争,重点关注太平洋上的水下文化遗产(UCH)。与太平洋土著人民有关的许多传统文化习俗(活遗产)和有形文化遗产都与沿海和海洋有关。他们的世界围绕着大海,大海不被视为一个屏障,而是一个经常被用来连接居住在数千个岛屿上的人们的纽带。太平洋蕴藏着广泛的海洋文化遗产,其中包括联合国教科文组织,这反映了生活在该地区的人们的文化认同。从16世纪到18世纪,西班牙帝国通过一个复杂的亚太贸易网络繁荣起来。菲律宾马尼拉和墨西哥阿卡普尔科之间的马尼拉大帆船贸易,连接了现有的大西洋贸易,将瓷器、白银、香料和纺织品等商品从亚洲运往美洲和西班牙。在1565年至1815年间已知的400次航行中,大约发生了59起沉船事故,其中只有少数几艘大帆船被调查过。太平洋地区二战遗产的规模反映了世界上最大的大洋彼岸发生的全球冲突的强度和影响。相关的UCH包括近岸防御基础设施、登陆艇和两栖攻击艇、水下飞机,以及各种舰艇和潜艇、辅助、战斗人员和非军事人员伤亡。20世纪的战争造成了大量的物资损失。太平洋水下战场的遗产是复杂的。人们对发现海军无人潜航器的兴趣很高,但关键方面往往是相互交织的。考古、历史、再利用、纪念(墓地)、旅游、未爆弹药、环境威胁(燃料油)、所有权和打捞,这些都决定了我们可以从这一资源中学到什么。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Asia Pacific Studies
International Journal of Asia Pacific Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
审稿时长
20 weeks
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