| Literature DB >> 27922064 |
Stuart Hawkins1, Trevor H Worthy2, Stuart Bedford1, Matthew Spriggs3, Geoffrey Clark1, Geoff Irwin4, Simon Best4, Patrick Kirch5.
Abstract
We report the unprecedented Lapita exploitation and subsequent extinction of large megafauna tortoises (?Meiolania damelipi) on tropical islands during the late Holocene over a 281,000 km2 region of the southwest Pacific spanning from the Vanuatu archipelago to Viti Levu in Fiji. Zooarchaeological analyses have identified seven early archaeological sites with the remains of this distinctive hornless tortoise, unlike the Gondwanan horned meiolaniid radiation to the southwest. These large tortoise radiations in the Pacific may have contributed to the rapid dispersal of early mobile Neolithic hunters throughout southwest Melanesia and on to western Polynesia. Subsequent rapid extinctions of these terrestrial herbivorous megafauna are likely to have led to significant changes in ecosystems that help explain changes in current archaeological patterns from Post-Lapita contexts in the region.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27922064 PMCID: PMC5138842 DOI: 10.1038/srep38317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The Southwest Pacific Region showing the current distribution of two distinctive land turtle types the hornless ?Meiolania damelipi from archaeological sites in Vanuatu and Fiji and horned Meiolaniidae further south from fossil sites in New Caledonia and on Lord Howe Island.
Archaeological sites which were checked but did not contain tortoise bones from Tikopia, Niuatoputapu and Lakeba Islands are also shown. ANU, CartoGIS CAP 16–280. Adobe Illustrator version Creative Cloud (CC). http://www.adobe.com/au/products/illustrator.html.
Figure 2Vanuatu, showing the locations of five archaeological sites with ?M damelipi type tortoise bones.
ANU, CartoGIS CAP 16-280-2. Adobe Illustrator version Creative Cloud (CC). http://www.adobe.com/au/products/illustrator.html.
Figure 3Fiji, showing the locations of archaeological sites on Naigani and Yanuca islands, the fossil site of Voli Voli and Lakeba Island.
ANU, CartoGIS CAP 16-280-3. Adobe Illustrator version Creative Cloud (CC). http://www.adobe.com/au/products/illustrator.html.