Australian Indigenous banana cultivation found to go back over 2,000
years
Findings help dispel the view that Australia's first peoples were 'only
hunter gatherers'
Date:
August 12, 2020
Source:
Australian National University
Summary:
Archaeologists have found the earliest evidence of Indigenous
communities cultivating bananas in Australia. The evidence of
cultivation and plant management dates back 2,145 years and was
found at Wagadagam on the tiny island of Mabuyag in the western
Torres Strait.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== Archaeologists at The Australian National University (ANU) have found
the earliest evidence of Indigenous communities cultivating bananas
in Australia.
==========================================================================
The evidence of cultivation and plant management dates back 2,145 years
and was found at Wagadagam on the tiny island of Mabuyag in the western
Torres Strait.
The site comprised a series of retaining walls associated with gardening activities along with a network of stone arrangements, shell arrangements,
rock art and a mound of dugong bones.
Soils from the site showed definitive evidence for intensive banana
cultivation in the form of starch granules, banana plant microfossils
and charcoal.
Lead researcher, Kambri-Ngunnawal scholar Robert Williams, says the
findings help dispel the view that Australia's first peoples were "only
hunter gatherers." "The Torres Strait has historically been seen as a separating line between Indigenous groups who practiced agriculture in
New Guinea but who in Australia were hunter gatherers," Mr Williams said.
==========================================================================
"Our research shows the ancestors of the Goegmulgal people of Mabuyag were engaged in complex and diverse cultivation and horticultural practices
in the western Torres Strait at least 2,000 years ago.
"So rather than being a barrier, the Torres Strait was more of a bridge
or a filter of cultural and horticultural practices going both north
and south.
"The type of banana we found on Mabuyag appeared much earlier on New
Guinea, which was a centre of banana domestication." The team also
found stone flake tools with plant residues along their cutting surfaces.
"What we're seeing here is an Indo-Pacific horticultural tradition based primarily on things like yams, taro and banana and important fat and
protein elements in the form of fish, dugong and turtle, these people
had a very high- quality diet," Mr Williams said.
========================================================================== "Food is an important part of Indigenous culture and identity and this
research shows the age and time depth of these practices. I hope it
will spark interest in these food traditions and might move people back
towards them." Mr Williams said the charcoal found at the site indicated burning for gardening activities. Excavated charcoal provided dates for
the finds through radiocarbon dating.
Co-researcher Dr Duncan Wright said the Torres Strait region was a place
where local innovations took place.
"The age of the banana propagation is also very significant. It's not
something we expect to see in continental Australia and this is the
earliest well dated evidence for plant management in Torres Strait,"
Dr Wright said.
"At the time I thought it was odd to see cultivation in a landscape
otherwise set aside for ritual activities. Now we know why, the retaining
walls were part of a much older phase of activity at Wagadagam." As a descendant of the Kambri Ngunnawal peoples, Mr Williams said he was
mindful of how his research could affect a first nations' community.
"Historically, culture has been appropriated by non-Indigenous
archaeologists and anthropologists, so it was really important for me
to make a connection with the people in this community and ensure they understood the research really belongs to them.
"I hope this work is something the community can be really proud about. It demonstrates through clear evidence the diversity and complexity of
early horticulture in the western Torres Strait." Mr Williams is the
lead author on the research published in Nature, Ecology and Evolution.
He did his Masters in Archaeology at ANU and is currently a third year
PhD candidate in the Department of Archaeology at Sydney University.
"This paper is led by a First Australian author. It's another big
achievement for Robert, whom I suspect will play an important role in
the discipline of Archaeology," Dr Wright said.
"His work makes a statement that goes beyond academia, representing a
much- needed shift for the discipline where research into First Nations' communities is led by First Nations' peoples." We acknowledge that the research took place on country belonging to the Goemulgal.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Australian_National_University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Robert N. Williams, Duncan Wright, Alison Crowther, Tim Denham.
Multidisciplinary evidence for early banana (Musa cvs.) cultivation
on Mabuyag Island, Torres Strait. Nature Ecology & Evolution,
2020; DOI: 10.1038/s41559-020-1278-3 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200812115319.htm
--- up 4 weeks, 1 hour, 55 minutes
* Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (1337:3/111)