Skip to main content
Ref ID: 37338
Ref Type: Book Section
Authors: Louys, Julien
Albers, Paul C. H.
Van der Geer, Alexandra A. E.
Title: Concluding remarks: Continuing the work in Sumatran connections
Date: 2024
Source: Quaternary Palaeontology and Archaeology of Sumatra
DOI: http://doi.org/10.22459/TA56.2024.14
Abstract: The island of Sumatra is at a critical crossroads of biodiversity and cultural diversity in Southeast Asia.
Despite its central geographical position, the island has received relatively limited archaeological and
palaeontological attention in comparison with its immediate neighbours to the north (the Thai-
Malay Peninsula) and the south (Java), particularly regarding the Pleistocene. This volume has drawn
together the history and current status of Sumatran archaeological and palaeontological research and,
it is hoped, provides a firm baseline from which understanding of the island can progress. As hinted
throughout the contributions presented in this volume, we are barely scratching the surface in our
understanding of the biotic and cultural history of Sumatra, and it is telling that the first large-scale
explorations and collections from the island, those conducted by Dubois in the late 1880s, still form
the basis of much of the current research presented in these pages. The common theme emerging
from all the chapters is one of connection—within Sumatra, but more importantly with the rest of
Southeast Asia—biologically, culturally and through time and space. We echo the call of researchers
from the 1970s—Edwards McKinnon, Bronson and others—for wider and more numerous field
expeditions and greater research attention to this island.
Editors: Louys, Julien
Albers, Paul C. H.
Van der Geer, Alexandra A. E.
Page Start: 295
Page End: 300