• This week in Southeast Asian archaeology:⠀
We honor Dr. Eusebio Dizon’s enduring legacy, confront the auction of sacred Buddha relics, and celebrate Cambodia’s dazzling Angkor bronzes shining in Paris.⠀
Heritage, healing, and hard questions await.⠀
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  • 🧱 This week in #SEAsiaArchaeology:⠀
🎨 4,000-year-old rock art in Mukdahan⠀
🪨 Sacred stele vandalized in Hội An⠀
📚 Miriam Stark on James Scott’s legacy⠀
From ochre to ontology—read the latest!⠀
 ⠀
https://bit.ly/3GgTjYh⠀
  • From Taiwan’s ocean floor to Myanmar’s quake-shaken soil—this week’s newsletter features Denisovan jawbones and newly unearthed Inwa-era ruins. Ancient stories resurface in the most unexpected ways. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
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  • Skulls under Bangkok, shattered temples in Myanmar, and AI mapping Angkor’s ancient waterscapes—just another week in Southeast Asian archaeology.⠀
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https://bit.ly/4cpHZVJ
  • Eid Mubarak! 🌙 This week’s newsletter covers the powerful Myanmar quake felt as far as Bangkok, the return of looted Khmer artefacts to Cambodia, and more archaeological updates from across Southeast Asia. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
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https://bit.ly/3FOUqy3
  • Sunken ships in Vietnam, a hidden city beneath Thailand, and a newly protected stupa in Laos—this week’s Southeast Asian archaeology newsletter uncovers layers of history just beneath the surface. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
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https://bit.ly/4iW4T9n
  • Cebu Governor Garcia calls for the return of all looted church artifacts to restore the province
  • This week: Equinox at Angkor Wat lights up the skies, but shadows fall elsewhere—Boljoon’s stolen panels return, Bali battles temple theft, and a deep dive into the murky world of antiquities trafficking. #southeastasianarchaeology #freenewsletter

https://bit.ly/3Dy8paX
  • Cambodia restores Beng Mealea Temple
  • Tamil Nadu announces deep-sea excavation between Poompuhar and Nagapattinam to explore ancient Chola maritime heritage. #southeastasianarchaeology #India #CholaDynasty

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[Paper] What plants might potentially have been used in the forests of prehistoric Southeast Asia?

20 April 2017
in Philippines
Tags: archaeobotanyethnoarchaeology / ethnography / ethnologylithicsPleistoceneprehistoryQuaternary International (journal)rainforestresearch papers
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A new paper by Xhauflair et al. examines plant exploitation in Palawan, Philippins today and its potential for understanding plant exploitation in prehistory.

Pleistocene and Holocene lithic assemblages found in Southeast Asia are characterised by simple production techniques and a paucity of formal stone tools. This situation led some scholars to hypothesise that this situation reflected an adaptation of prehistoric human groups to the rainforest and that these simple stone tools had been mainly used to manufacture more complex implements made of bamboo. Microscopic use traces observed on stone tools could support this hypothesis since many result from plant processing. However, it remains unclear whether these traces were produced by working bamboo or other plants, due to the lack of a suitable use-wear reference collection. To be able to clearly discriminate the use-wear resulting from bamboo processing, such a collection needs to encompass use traces resulting not only from bamboo processing but also from working various other plants, which might potentially have been used by prehistoric groups. We present here the results of a three month field work among Pala’wan communities aiming to know what plants from the forests of Palawan, Philippines are used nowadays, are therefore useful to humans in general and might have been used during the past as well. We recorded the use of 95 different plant species belonging to at least 34 different families. Archaeobotanical studies confirm that some of those plants were available and used by humans in the past while others would have been extant at least in forest refugia, even during glacial periods. Those plants are processed by the Pala’wan at all life stages from seed to dead trees and the parts involved are very diverse. While the most frequent type of use that we witnessed was technological in nature (67 plant species), plants are also used for alimentary, medicinal, ornamental, and sanitary purposes, and even for producing poison. The observations presented here can serve as a basis for use-wear analysts to design experiments in relation to plant exploitation by humans during the past, and to enlarge reference collections.

Source: What plants might potentially have been used in the forests of prehistoric Southeast Asia? An insight from the resources used nowadays by local communities in the forested highlands of Palawan Island

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