Henderson Island prehistory: colonization and extinction on a remote Polynesian island

Situated at the extreme margin of the Indo‐West Pacific biotic province, the four islands of the isolated Pitcairn Group hold interest for biogeographers and archaeologists alike. Human settlement may have been as early as the 8th century AD for the uplifted limestone island of Henderson, the most p...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
Main Author: WEISLER, MARSHALL I.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press (OUP) 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:f44abaf
Description
Summary:Situated at the extreme margin of the Indo‐West Pacific biotic province, the four islands of the isolated Pitcairn Group hold interest for biogeographers and archaeologists alike. Human settlement may have been as early as the 8th century AD for the uplifted limestone island of Henderson, the most pristine island of its kind. An archaeological survey of the Pitcairn Islands is provided, while Henderson is examined in detail. Recent extensive excavations provide a record of change during 600 years of human occupation. Adaptation to the ecologically‐marginal conditions is documented by artefacts, more than 150000 vertebrate bones, molluscs and subfossil plant remains recovered from stratigraphic contexts. The effects of prehistoric human occupation on the pristine environment are revealed by Polynesian plant and animal introductions, bird extinctions and range reductions, possible over‐predation of marine molluscs, exploitation of sea turtles, and large‐scale burning for swidden agriculture. The origin of human colonists is documented by analysing imported artefacts by geochemical characterization (x‐ray fluorescence analysis). The human abandonment of Henderson, by the seventeenth century, is viewed in the context of prehistoric regional dynamics.