Article ID: CBB346033461

The Past, Present and Future Values of the Polynesian Stone Adzes and Pounders Collected on the Pandora (2019)

unapi

After the Pandora’s partly unsuccessful pursuit of the Bounty mutineers through the Pacific islands in 1791, the ship ran aground on a submerged reef and sank 140km east of Cape York, Queensland. Archaeological excavations revealed that the Pandora crew, in addition to their primary objective, made ethnographic material collections during their voyage, including 25 stone adzes and 5 stone pounders. These collected objects are of particular interest because they have escaped the past processes that might have impacted them had they made the journey back to Europe. In archaeological studies, for instance, these adzes were not included in 20th century typological analyses concerned with understanding the initial human migrations into Oceania, or in more recent geoarchaeological research that seeks to understand Polynesian voyaging, social networks and exchanges. Our paper contextualises the adzes and pounders found on the Pandora to understand the engagement between the European crewmembers and the local people they encountered during their journey through the Pacific Islands. The Pandora crew had participated in the early colonial collecting practices that were foundational to European museum collections and the beginnings of anthropological and archaeological enquiry in the Pacific. On the other hand, the Polynesian participants likely benefited from the engagement in ways that suited their own agendas. We argue that the Pandora objects and similar museum collections as a broader assemblage are important not only for archaeological research, but also because they potentially continue to hold contemporary significance for Polynesian people today and are a legacy that can benefit future generations.

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Authors & Contributors
Spriggs, Matthew
Bradford M. Jones
Yuanzhi Li
Rick Bullers
Natali Pearson
Enrique Aragon
Journals
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
Historical Archaeology
Historical Records of Australian Science
Chinese Annals of History of Science and Technology
Indian Journal of History of Science
Publishers
Melbourne University Press
Insegna del Giglio
Free Press
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Archaeology
Excavations (archaeology)
Technology
Shipwrecks
Archaeology, Underwater
Stone
People
Casey, Dermot Armstrong
Wheeler, Robert Eric Mortimer
Tindale, Norman
Mulvaney, John
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century
19th century
Stone age
Prehistory
Places
Australia
Turkey
China
Piedmont
Middle and Near East
Indonesia
Institutions
Royal Anthropological Institute
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