1. Altered logics of production and exchange during the colonial encounter: historical changes in obsidian source acquisition in the Admiralty Islands.
- Author
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Golitko, Mark and Torrence, Robin
- Subjects
- *
OBSIDIAN , *CROSS-cultural studies , *ISLANDS , *MUSEUMS , *PROVINCES - Abstract
Spears, daggers, and axes with obsidian tips and blades made by inhabitants of the Admiralty Islands (Manus Province, Papua New Guinea) were intensively collected by Europeans during the later 19th and early 20th centuries and are widely represented in museum collections. Prior studies have shown how islanders creatively responded to increasing European demand by changing style and manufacturing strategies. What is less well understood is how the colonial encounter, particularly during its early stages, opened new opportunities for producers to work outside traditional patterns of ownership. Obsidian source assignments for a large sample of implements dated c. 1850–1990 show that as museum collecting intensified, the number of sources utilized expanded from a single source to multiple obsidian flows, indicating that customary production monopolies had broken down in response to opportunities for commercial trade. This case study demonstrates the valuable role that chemical characterization can play in studies of cross-cultural encounter and engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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