Abstract:
1) This article touches upon views gained from traditional or oral
history together with views of modern scientific method to reach at
understandings of past actions. The text presents an emic view
concerning the Pulemelei mound and a ceremony carried out at the
site in 2003. It is an edited version of papers presented at Auckland
University in 2003 (Tamasese 2003) and at the inauguration of an
exhibition at the Kon-Tiki Museum in 2004, which featured the
results of the archaeological excavations at Pulemelei mound in
2002-2004.
2) This paper describes the history of archaeology carried out in the
Samoan islands. Two archaeological programs under the
leadership of Roger Green in the 1960s and Jesse Jennings in the
1970s have laid a firm foundation for the understanding of Samoan
prehistory from an archaeological point of view. Subsequent
research in American Samoa has also added to this knowledge.
This review describes some of the major findings of settlements,
mounds and artifacts and discusses the contributions of
archaeological research in Samoa and points towards important
theoretical and methodical issues for future research
3) In West Polynesia, monumental structures with a volume $ 2500
m2 include mounds of earth or stone that in traditional history were
used to house or bury chiefs, as well as being the focus of
ceremonial and religious activity. We review archaeological theory
about the initiation of monumental architecture and examines how
chiefly and high-status activity might be identified. Large
structures with monumental dimensions often have a complicated
construction history that spanned several centuries indicating
change to the social structure, particularly the power of elites. As a
result archaeologists need to develop ideas that relate episodes of
architectonic change to alterations in the prehistoric socio-political system
4) This paper describes the results of archaeological excavations in
the Pulemelei mound on Savai’i, thought to be the largest
freestanding stone structure in Polynesia, in 2002-4. These
excavations comprise the first large-scale archaeological
investigation of a monumental complex in Samoa. We examine the
chronology and function of the large mound and other structures
5) Remote sensing methods – ground penetrating radar (GPR) and
cesium magnetometer – were employed to investigate the internal
structure of the Pulemelei mound, a large earth oven (umu tı-) and
a smaller stone and earth structure to the north of the large mound.
Results suggest that Pulemelei does not contain a burial vault like
those built in Tonga, and GPR indicates at least two platform
construction events, as well as a small mound-shaped feature at the
base of the Pulemelei mound. The use of geophysical techniques
on these structures at the Pulemelei site in Samoa indicate they can
be applied successfully to other examples of monumental
architecture in the Pacific
6) We examine radiocarbon dates from Samoan archaeological sites
using the fourfold division of Samoan prehistory established by
Green (2002). The context of dating samples was assessed to
recognize potentially “reliable” determinations in the Samoan 14C
corpus. Radiocarbon dates associated with earth and stone
structures were identified to one of four phases of construction/use
to develop a chronology for the emergence and use of domestic and
monumental architecture. The 17 radiocarbon determinations from
the Pulemelei mound site were used to generate a local prehistoric
sequence for the Letolo area. In general the results parallel the
prehistoric sequence for Samoa, but the chronology of the
Pulemelei mound demonstrates that monumental architecture in
West Polynesia can have a complicated developmental history
spanning several centuries
7) This paper explores the extensive prehistoric settlement pattern at
the Letolo plantation. Using the results of earlier research we use a
correspondence analysis to investigate variation in the settlement
pattern, particularly differences between coastal and inland
locations.
Investigation of archaeological sites in Samoa in the 1960s
and 1970s resulted in several suggestions about the
prehistoric settlement pattern (Davidson 1969, Davidson
1974:242; Jennings et al. 1982). The first archaeological
excavations investigated a variety of sites, and an important
conclusion of this research was that prehistoric settlement
was established at both coastal and inland locales in early
prehistory (at least by c. 2000 BP). It was also found that
house pavements were an early component of the settlement
sequence, but raised stone and earth platforms/mounds for
occupation or ritual space are, to current knowledge,
confined to the last millennium (Wallin, Martinsson-Wallin
and Clark, this publication). A temporal shift in material
culture in Samoa is thereby evident. Roads and stone walls
were frequently associated with large platforms/mounds.
The roads were often clearly defined by stone walls and
connected house hold units
Description:
This Main Article combines the work of each author involved in this Research, and each author's article is included, and submitted together simultaneously.
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