潘多拉星球上收藏的波利尼西亚石碑和石锤的过去、现在和未来价值

IF 1.2 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Bulletin of the History of Archaeology Pub Date : 2019-09-12 DOI:10.5334/bha-622
Michelle Richards, Jasmin Günther
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1791年,潘多拉号在太平洋岛屿上追捕邦蒂叛变者,但部分失败后,该船在昆士兰约克角以东140公里处触礁沉没。考古发掘显示,潘多拉号船员除了主要目标外,还在航行中收集了民族志材料,包括25块石广告和5块石磅。这些收集到的物品特别令人感兴趣,因为它们逃脱了过去的过程,如果它们返回欧洲,这些过程可能会对它们产生影响。例如,在考古研究中,这些adze没有被包括在20世纪的类型学分析中,这些分析涉及了解人类最初迁移到大洋洲的情况,也没有被纳入最近的地质考古研究中。我们的论文将潘多拉星球上发现的广告和广告放在背景中,以了解欧洲船员和他们在穿越太平洋岛屿时遇到的当地人之间的接触。Pandora团队参与了早期的殖民收藏活动,这些活动是欧洲博物馆收藏的基础,也是太平洋地区人类学和考古调查的开端。另一方面,波利尼西亚与会者可能以适合他们自己议程的方式从参与中受益。我们认为,潘多拉的物品和类似的博物馆藏品作为一个更广泛的集合,不仅对考古研究很重要,而且因为它们对今天的波利尼西亚人来说可能继续具有当代意义,是一个可以造福子孙后代的遗产。
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The Past, Present and Future Values of the Polynesian Stone Adzes and Pounders Collected on the Pandora
After the Pandora's partly unsuccessful pursuit of the Bounty mutineers through the Pacific islands in 1791, the ship ran aground on a submerged reef and sank 140km east of Cape York, Queensland. Archaeological excavations revealed that the Pandora crew, in addition to their primary objective, made ethnographic material collections during their voyage, including 25 stone adzes and 5 stone pounders. These collected objects are of particular interest because they have escaped the past processes that might have impacted them had they made the journey back to Europe. In archaeological studies, for instance, these adzes were not included in 20th century typological analyses concerned with understanding the initial human migrations into Oceania, or in more recent geoarchaeological research that seeks to understand Polynesian voyaging, social networks and exchanges. Our paper contextualises the adzes and pounders found on the Pandora to understand the engagement between the European crewmembers and the local people they encountered during their journey through the Pacific Islands. The Pandora crew had participated in the early colonial collecting practices that were foundational to European museum collections and the beginnings of anthropological and archaeological enquiry in the Pacific. On the other hand, the Polynesian participants likely benefited from the engagement in ways that suited their own agendas. We argue that the Pandora objects and similar museum collections as a broader assemblage are important not only for archaeological research, but also because they potentially continue to hold contemporary significance for Polynesian people today and are a legacy that can benefit future generations.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊最新文献
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