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Ref ID: 36537
Ref Type: Thesis-PhD
Authors: Mijares, Armand Salvador B.
Title: Unravelling prehistory: the archaeology of north-eastern Luzon
Date: 2006
Place of Publication: Canberra
Publisher: Australian National University
Type: PhD Thesis
Abstract: Northern Luzon is an important area for understanding and reconstructing the prehistory of the Southeast Asian region. From archaeological work undertaken in the 1970s, we can see the potential of the area in contributing to our understanding of the peopling of the Philippine Islands, from the Pleistocene foragers to the migration of the early Austronesians. The recent excavations in the PeƱablanca caves have provided the earliest dated evidence of human occupation in Luzon, at c. 25,000 BP. Evidence from faunal identification, macrobotanical and phytolith remains shows that a broad spectrum subsistence strategies employed by these early foragers. The lithic analysis shows some changes from Late Pleistocene into early Holocene technology. Interaction between the foragers of the PeƱablanca cave sites and the early Austronesian farmers of the Cagayan Valley was established by at least 3500 years ago. Farmers exchanged earthenware pottery, clay earrings, spindle whorls and shell beads with foragers, possibly for forest products. This exchange, however, did not on present evidence include cereal-based foods such as rice. The botanical evidence from the cave sites shows a heavy reliance on wild and arboreal food sources. This thesis therefore proposes a general culture history of northern Luzon from the late Pleistocene to the mid-Holocene period.
Date Created: 12/12/2006
Department: Archaeology and Natural History