Ana Manuku: a prehistoric ritualistic site on Mangaia, Cook Islands.
STEADMAN, DAVID W. ; ANTON, SUSAN C. ; KIRCH, PATRICK V. 等
Introduction
Archaeological and palaeontological research has demonstrated the
often profound impact of colonizing humans on previously isolated island
ecosystems, including forest clearance, erosion and alluvial deposition,
biotic scarcity and extinction, and introduction of non-indigenous
species (Kirch 1983; 1997; 2000; Steadman 1995; Kirch & Hunt 1997).
Such human-induced environmental changes are well documented on Pacifc
islands such as Aneityum (Hope & Spriggs 1982), Rapanui (Flenley et
al. 1991; Steadman et al. 1994), the Marquesas (Steadman & Rolett
1996; Rolett 1998) and the Hawaiian Islands (James et al. 1987; Athens
1997).
On many high islands in Polynesia, late prehistoric populations
reached densities of [is greater than] 100 persons/sq. km (Kirch 2000),
sustained by major agricultural developments such as dryland field
systems or converting valley bottoms to irrigated pondfields for taro.
While improving crop yields, these capital-intensive production systems
also contributed to a sociopolitical context with considerable
competition for land, and often open conflict between social groups. At
their prehistoric endpoints of indigenous development (i.e. their
fateful encounters with the West), many Polynesian societies had:
1 high-density populations;
2 highly intensified production systems;
3 reduced natural resources;
4 hierarchical political control and social stratification; and
5 intense competition for land and other resources.
In some societies, such as Rapanui, Marquesas, or Mangareva, this
situation was also marked, according to ethographic and ethnohistoric
sources, by aggression that included warfare or raiding between
competing groups, taking of enemy victims for sacrificial offerings and
cannibalism (Kirch 2000).
Our research on Mangaia, Southern Cook Islands, has provided
substantial evidence in support of the general model of environmental
and sociopolitical change outlined above (Steadman & Kirch 1990;
Kirch 1996; Kirch et al. 1992; 1995). In this paper we present new data
from a Mangaian rock-shelter site that further elucidate the social (and
ritual?) consequences of inter-group competition in the late prehistoric
period.
Mangaia (52 sq. km) is divided into six traditional districts that
begin on the limestone coast and meet atop the volcanic uplands (FIGURE
1). At least 2000-3000 people lived on Mangaia at European contact
(Hiroa 1934: 6), yielding a population density of 39-58 persons/sq. km.
Because much of the limestone region lacks soil, the density per area of
arable land exceeded 100 persons/sq. km. Prehistoric landscape and
vegetational changes have been interpreted from sediment cores from all
districts (Ellison 1994; Kirch & Ellison 1994). Among Mangaia's
numerous archaeological sites, Tangatatau Rockshelter (site MAN-44,
Veitatei District) has yielded the richest and longest (c. AD 1000-1750)
prehistoric sequence of artefacts, midden bone, shell and plant material
(Kirch 1996; Kirch et al. 1992, 1995). Consumption of vertebrates at
MAN-44 changed considerably during this time (see Discussion).
[Figure 1 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
To test whether the cultural/faunal sequence at MAN-44 was
characteristic of the entire island, we undertook excavations at a
bone-rich rock-shelter called Ana Manuku (site MAN-84) in Keia District,
2 km north of MAN-44. Here we report the stratigraphy, chronology,
faunal sequence and cultural context of MAN-84, followed by a discussion
of how this new site influences our thinking on the cultural sequence of
Mangaia.
Methods
Kirch excavated two 1-sq. m test units (D31, E18) at MAN-84 in 1991
(FIGURE 2). Steadman and Anton excavated nine 1-sq. m units in 1997.
Because of differences in bone retrieval methods between the 1991 and
1997 excavations, the tabulated faunal data in this paper are based only
on the units excavated in 1997 (C28-C32, D28-D30, D32). Major
sedimentary changes were designated as layers, which we subdivided
arbitrarily into levels of c. 10 cm thickness. All bones, artefacts,
charcoal etc. were recovered in situ or with sieves (dry-screening
through 3.3 mm mesh, subsampled by water-screening through 2.0 mm mesh).
Steadman and Kirch analysed the artefacts. Steadman identified all
non-human bones. For human bones, Anton determined the number of
identified specimens for each layer (following cross-conjoining), the
extent of heating (Buikstra & Ubelaker 1994), evidence of perimortem
breakage and spiral fracture (White 1992:135; Turner & Turner 1999),
and presence of stone tool marks, impact marks, flake scars, carnivore tooth marks and rodent gnawing (Binford 1981; Blumenschine 1988; Fisher
1995; Hagland 1997). Here we summarize the main points of these
osteological analyses. Full details of the human bones will be reported
elsewhere by Anton.
[Figure 2 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Ana Manuku Rockshelter (Site MAN-84)
Site setting
Ana Manuku Rockshelter is developed at the base of the inner
limestone cliff that encircles Mangaia (FIGURE 1). The floor area inside
the dripline is c. 75 sq. m (FIGURE 2). Ana Manuku lies only 60 m from
Keia Swamp, a large and relatively drought-resistant site of irrigated
pondfield taro (Colocasia esculenta). MAN-84 also lies 75 m from a marae or temple named Tukituki Mata (described in Hiroa 1934: 139, 174-6; and
Bellwood 1978: 142-, 159-60) and 600 m from marae Aka Oro. Neither
Tukituki Mata or Aka Oro has been excavated.
Stratigraphy
Modern goat faeces (Layer I; thickness 10-30 cm) covered the entire
cultural deposit (FIGURE 3). The two prehistoric occupation Layers (II,
III) are cobbly, pebbly, slightly sandy, ashy silt deposits dominated by
combustion features with concentrations of charcoal and burned oven
stones (angular to subangular, mostly 8-16 cm diameter, with breakage
caused by heating). We interpret these features as Polynesian earth
ovens (umu) and the rake-out from these ovens. The 10-sq. m excavation
block (FIGURE 4) had seven ovens in Layer II (areal extent 30x45-72x105
cm, thickness 8-20 cm) and five ovens in Layer III (areal extent
36x48-51x58 cm, thickness 12-24 cm).
[Figures 3-4 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Layer II (Munsell very dark grayish brown 10YR 3/2) is more
compacted with better developed bedding planes than Layer III (yellowish
brown 10YR 5/4). This reflects mixing of Layer IV (strong brown 7.5 YR
5/6) into Layer III, undoubtedly while digging the ovens. Layer IV
differs from both cultural strata in lacking charcoal, ash, cultural
features, artefacts, marine molluscs and urchins, and in having few
bones other than of birds. We interpret Layer IV as non-cultural in
origin.
Chronology
The age of MAN-84 is based on accelerator-mass spectrometer (AMS)
radiocarbon ([sup.14]C) dates on human bones of nine different
individuals from unit C32, as well as six conventional (beta-decay)
[sup.14]C dates on wood charcoal (TABLE 1). The AMS [sup.14]C dates on
bone are highly consistent with each other (FIGURE 5). Three charcoal
dates (Beta-48352, Beta-111939, Beta-111943) from oven features broadly
overlap five human bone AMS dates (Beta-113847, Beta-113850-113853) from
the same units and levels. The other three charcoal dates
(Beta-111940-111942) are unlikely to be accurate age estimates of the
cultural strata. A young age determination is explicable for
Beta-111940, a piece of charcoal from the contact of Layers I and II,
and Beta-111941, charcoal from a loose context near the wall of the
rockshelter. Being from an oven, the young age estimate for Beta-111942
is less explicable, but might reflect downward displacement of the dated
charcoal sample, or possibly contamination by goat urine from Layer I.
That AMS [sup.14]C dates on individual bones are more reliable than
those on small pieces of charcoal has been demonstrated in other cave
and rock-shelter sites because charcoal tends to disperse more and to
absorb contaminants more than bone (James et al. 1987; Steadman et al.
1991).
[Figure 5 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
TABLE 1. Radiocarbon dates, Ana Manuku, Mangaia. All dates on human
bone are AMS. All dates on wood charcoal are conventional (beta-decay)
determinations. All analyses by Beta Analytic Inc., Miami, Florida.
CALIB = calendar date following Stuiver et al. (1998). OxCal = calendar
date following OxCal version 3.3 (1999).
layer/
lab no. material dated unit level
Beta-114104 metacarpal C32 II/3
Beta-113846 juv. proximal hand C32 II/4
Beta-113847 thoracic vertebra C32 III/5
Beta-113848 cervical vertebra C32 III/6
Beta-113849 sacral arch C32 III/7
Beta-113850 cervical vertebra C32 III/8
Beta-113851 thoracic vertebra C32 III/8
Beta-113852 thoracic vertebra C32 III/8
Beta-113853 juv. rib C32 III/8
Beta-111940 charcoal D30 II/3
Beta-111941 charcoal C30 II/4
Beta-111943 charcoal C32 III/5
Beta-111942 charcoal C32 III/7
Beta-111939 charcoal C30 III/8
Beta-48352 charcoal D31 III
[sup.13]C/
measured [sup.12]C conventional
lab no. [sup.14] C age ratio [sup.14]C age
Beta-114104 440 [+ or -] 30 -19.9 520 [+ or -] 30
Beta-113846 290 [+ or -] 70 -18.4 390 [+ or -] 70
Beta-113847 380 [+ or -] 50 -18.0 500 [+ or -] 50
Beta-113848 500 [+ or -] 50 -19.4 590 [+ or -] 50
Beta-113849 410 [+ or -] 50 -20.1 490 [+ or -] 50
Beta-113850 440 [+ or -] 40 -20.1 520 [+ or -] 40
Beta-113851 380 [+ or -] 40 -18.6 480 [+ or -] 40
Beta-113852 350 [+ or -] 40 -20.0 430 [+ or -] 40
Beta-113853 420 [+ or -] 40 -20.9 480 [+ or -] 40
Beta-111940 20 [+ or -] 50 -26.0 0 [+ or -] 50
Beta-111941 240 [+ or -] 60 -26.3 220 [+ or -] 60
Beta-111943 730 [+ or -] 60 -32.1 620 [+ or -] 60
Beta-111942 190 [+ or -] 50 -27.2 160 [+ or -] 50
Beta-111939 720 [+ or -] 70 -34.3 580 [+ or -] 70
Beta-48352 810 [+ or -] 90 -27.8 770 [+ or -] 90
CALIB OxCal
lab no. cal AD (2[Sigma]) cal AD (2[Sigma])
Beta-114104 1400-1440 1320-1350 (0.10)
1390-1440 (0.85)
Beta-113846 1420-1655 1420-1650 (0.95)
Beta-113847 1395-1470 1300-1370 (0.15)
1380-1490 (0.80)
Beta-113848 1295-1430 1280-1430 (0.95)
Beta-113849 1400-1475 1300-1360 (0.11)
1380-1500 (0.85)
Beta-113850 1395-1450 1300-1360 (0.19)
1380-1450 (0.76)
Beta-113851 1410-1470 1330-1350 (0.02)
1390-1490 (0.93)
Beta-113852 1425-1515 1410-1530 (0.86)
1580-1630 (0.10)
Beta-113853 1410-1470 1330-1350 (0.02)
1390-1490 (0.98)
Beta-111940 1890-1905 1680-1730 (0.18)
1810-1930 (0.57)
1940- ... (0.21)
Beta-111941 1650-1680 1510-1890 (0.84)
1745-1805 1910-1960 (0.11)
1935-1950
Beta-111943 1280-1425 1280-1420 (0.95)
Beta-111942 1655-1950 1650-1960 (0.95)
Beta-111939 1285-1450 1280-1450 (0.95)
Beta-48352 1040-1400 1030-1330 (0.86)
1340-1400 (0.09)
The nine AMS [sup.14]C dates on human bone and three of the
charcoal dates suggest that the bones were deposited in Layers II and
III primarily if not exclusively from cal AD 1390-1470. Because the AMS
[sup.14]C dates all overlap at 2[Sigma] (and most overlap at only
1[Sigma], we cannot rule out the possibility that all human bone was
deposited at MAN-84 within a few years rather than decades. Layers II
and III each may represent only a single event, perhaps in successive
years or even during the same year.
Artefacts
Unlike other rock-shelter sites on Mangaia, MAN-84 lacked most of
the typical Eastern Polynesian artefacts, such as adzes, fishhooks,
scrapers, files, tattoo needles, etc. The only basalt artefact was a
broken pounder (TABLE 2). The bifacial blade of fine-grained limestone
was retouched on both edges, as was the toothed limestone coconut
grater. The other four artefacts were probably ornaments. The first is a
complete, two-holed barb of a trolling lure (bonito hook). This lure
must be a trade item because pearlshell (Pinctada margaritifera) does
not occur on Mangaia. The nearest possible sources are Rarotonga, Manuae
or Aitutaki, 200-400 km to the northwest (Kirch et al. 1992,1995).
Trolling lures are not among the hundreds of fishhooks recovered at
MAN-44; the specimen from MAN-84 probably was a prestige item worn as an
ornament. All three bone artefacts are carved too extensively to be
identified reliably to species, although remnant surface textures on the
two beads suggest dog bone more than pig or human bone. A similar style
of bone bead is illustrated in Gruning (1937) and Hiroa (1944: figure
62). The bone ball is grooved on one side, as depicted in Hiroa (1944:
figure 58e), although it lacks the lug for attachment to a necklace.
TABLE 2. Artefact summary, Ann Manuku, Mangaia, by stratigraphic
Layer (II & III are cultural; IV is pre-cultural). Based on recovery
in situ and dry-screening through 3.3-mm mesh.
artefact type II III IV total
pearlshell trolling lure 1 0 0 1
bone bead 1 1 0 2
bone ball 1 0 0 1
basalt pounder 1 0 0 1
limestone blade 0 1 0 1
limestone coconut grater 1 0 0 1
total 5 2 0 7
Vertebrate fauna
The 1997 excavations at MAN-84 yielded a bone assemblage (TABLE 3)
very different from that at any other rock-shelter site on Mangaia. Pig
is represented only by one bone (Unit D31, Layer II, excavated in 1991).
Dog bone also is extremely rare, represented by two fragments (Unit D31,
Layer II; Unit D29, Layer II). Human bones are abundant in Layer II and
especially in Layer III, both inside and outside the ovens. All clearly
in a midden rather than burial context, 96% of the 1864 human bones were
recovered in situ or through dry-screening with 3.3 mm mesh. Like the
human bones, fish and rat bones are rare in Layer IV, where the few such
bones recovered almost certainly represent downward mixing from Layer
III, because:
TABLE 3. Major categories of vertebrates, Ann Manuku, Mangaia, by
stratigraphic Layer (II & III are cultural; IV is pre-cultural).
Based on recovery in situ, dry-screening through 3.3-mm mesh, and
wet-screening through 2.0-mm mesh. Numbers are NISP (n umber of
identiffed specimens).
taxon II III IV total
human 341 1515 8 1864
fish 1134 716 45 1945
rat 565 1030 27 1622
bird 48 287 1310 1635
lizard 2 13 0 15
fruit bat 1 1 0 2
dog 1 0 0 1
total 2092 3602 1390 7084
1 they occur only in the uppermost Layer IV;
2 their preservational qualities resemble those of bones from Layer
III; and
3 the human bones often conjoin with specimens from Layer III.
Bird bones are scarce in Layer II, increase in Layer III and then
increase dramatically to dominate the non-cultural Layer IV. Most bird
bones represent extirpated species of seabirds and landbirds, to be
reported elsewhere by Steadman. The greater abundance of bird bones in
Layer III than in Layer II is because bones originally deposited in
Layer IV were reworked upward during digging the ovens in Layer III.
Because burned bones are more likely to represent cultural than
non-cultural deposition, evidence for this is seen in the percentage of
burned bird bones, which decreases from Layer II (69%) to Layer III
(28%) to Layer IV (0.3%).
Human bones
The 1864 human bones (TABLES 3, 4) consist of burned, highly
fragmentary and isolated elements representing at least 41 individuals
ranging in age from foetal/newborn to adults probably of both sexes.
Minimum numbers of individuals are four adults and seven subadults from
Layer II, and 10 adults and 20 subadults from Layer III. Relative to
their occurrence in the complete skeleton, hand and foot phalanges are
slightly overrepresented (17% vs 13.6%) and cranial bones are
underrepresented (1.3% vs 10.7%), but no element is entirely absent. All
human bones are in a midden rather than funerary context, and we found
no evidence of burials.
TABLE 4. Human bone, Ann Manuku, Mangaia, by stratigraphic Layer
(II & III are cultural; IV is pre-cultural). Fragments that
cross-conjoin between Units or Layers are reported in the larger
numbered Unit or Layer. Based on recovery in situ, dry-screening through
3.3-mm mesh, and wet-screening through 2.0-mm mesh. Numbers are NISP
(number of identified specimens).
Unit II III IV total
C28 32 87 2 121
C29 10 285 1 296
C30 22 407 1 433
C31 10 183 0 193
C32 36 290 0 326
D28 52 29 0 81
D29 28 29 0 57
D30 50 40 0 90
D32 101 162 4 267
total 341 1515 8 1864
The human bones exhibit considerable human-induced modification.
Although some pieces are unheated (Munsell 10YR 8/3-7/3), 84% are at
least lightly browned (Munsell 7.5YR 7/4 or darker), consistent with
heating at low temperatures. 20% are heavily heated or burnt (Munsell
7.5YR 4/4 or darker), but [is less than] 1% is calcined (e.g. Munsell
gley 8/N). All adult and older juvenile limb bones are highly fragmented
including spiral and step (hinge) fractures, occasionally accompanied by
percussion pits, flake scars or tool striae. Other elements,
particularly ribs, exhibit `peeling' indicative of fracture when
fresh (White 1992: 143). Differential colouring on either side of some
ancient fractures indicate that the fracture preceded heating. We found
no definitive evidence of damage by pigs, although rodent gnawing occurs
as do tooth marks and breakage suggesting canid activity.
The quantity and appearance of the human bones leave little doubt
that people brought the human bone to the site, since the dense
concentration of burned, broken and battered human remains precludes
casual introduction by pigs or dogs. The non-associated, fragmentary
nature of most remains is inconsistent with other mortuary practices on
the island, such as burial caves. Some of the burials in Te Rua Rere
cave (Tava'enga District) are coeval with the human remains at
MAN-84 (Anton & Steadman in press). Thus if the site's human
bones represent some form of mortuary ritual, it was not the only
mortuary practice on Mangaia at that time. Since very little of the
human bone is calcined a crematorium is unlikely (Correia 1997; Anton
& Steadman 1998), even though other mortuary rituals were practised
at that time. What seems clear is that human body parts, as well as some
small fish, rats and a few birds, were cooked in earth ovens at MAN-84.
Discussion
Comparisons with Tangatatau Rockshelter (site MAN-44)
Mangaia's other extensively excavated rockshelter is
Tangatatau, which has produced one of Eastern Polynesia's best
chrono-stratigraphic sequences of artefacts (570 adzes, fishhooks, stone
pounders, scrapers, files, bone needles, etc.), bone, shell and plant
materials (Kirch et al. 1992; 1995; Kirch 1996). The prehistoric
cultural strata range in age from c. AD 1000 (analytic zone 2) to AD
1750 (zone 15). Faunal evidence ([is greater than] 30,000 identified
bones) suggests that the site does not reflect the earliest occupation
of Mangaia because bones of non-native species (rat, dog, pig, chicken)
occur regularly in zone 2. One would expect bones of these species to be
scarce or absent in zone 2 if it represented initial occupation. Also,
zone 2 has little evidence for heavy exploitation of seabirds, as
elsewhere in Eastern Polynesia (Steadman 1995). Zone 2 of MAN-44 may
represent the first long-term occupation of Mangaia's interior,
since earlier habitation may have been intermittent and restricted to
the coast.
While MAN-44 was occupied, consumption of vertebrates changed
considerably, and bones of pig, dog, rat, and chicken increased in the
middle levels (zones 8-10). All of these except rat declined in upper
prehistoric levels, perhaps because resource stress forced people to eat
lower on the food chain. Birds are rich in species only in early levels
(c. AD 1000-1300; zones 2-4). The dramatic decline in native species of
birds between zone 4 (22 species) and zone 5 (5 species) reflects
extinctions as interior forests were felled to create an agricultural
landscape to feed the growing population (Kirch 1996; Steadman 1997). By
c. AD 1300, most species of birds were either extinct or too rare to be
sampled. Zones 5 to 8 (c. AD 1300-1500) are roughly coeval with Layers
II and III at MAN-84 (C. AD 1390-1470). MAN-44 differs dramatically in
its scarcity of human bones and abundance of fish, pig and chicken bones
(TABLE 5). Its midden deposits differ further from those at MAN-84 in
their abundance of shellfish and in being more intensely burned (more
ashy), with the more poorly defined ovens reflecting repeated cycles of
cooking. This in turn suggests long-term occupation, as substantiated by
radiocarbon dates spanning nearly a millennium.
TABLE 5. Comparison of vertebrate assemblages from coeval strata at
Mangaian rockshelters: Layers II and III at site MAN-84 versus analytic
zones 5-8 of site MAN-44. Minor categories (sea turtle, lizard and fruit
bat) are excluded. Data for MAN-84 are from TABLES 3 and 4 herein. Data
for MAN-44 are from Kirch et al. (1995).
NISP % NISP
taxon MAN-84 MAN-44 MAN-84 MAN-44
human 1856 5 32.69 0.04
fish 1900 11,789 33.47 95.10
rat 1595 408 28.10 3.29
dog 1 5 0.02 0.04
pig 0 91 0.00 0.73
chicken 0 43 0.00 0.35
native bird 325 55 5.72 0.44
total 5677 12,396 100 100
The artefact concentration at MAN-44 (ignoring innumerable basalt
flakes) is c. 35 per excavation unit, compared to less than one at
MAN-84 (TABLE 2). The absence or extreme scarcity at MAN-84 of adzes,
adze preforms, adze flakes, fishhooks, fishhook blanks, scrapers, coral
or urchin flies, tattoo needles and stone pounders points to a lack of
domestic activities and implies that it was not a habitation site.
Human remains from Mangaian rock-shelters (including MAN-44,
MAN-82, MAN-83, MAN-84, and MAN-87) are not in a funerary context but
are isolated, fragmentary elements most of which exhibit human
modification, especially burning (Anton & Anderson 1993). Despite
preservational similarities, the MAN-84 human bone assemblage is much
larger (NISP = 1864) than at any other Mangaian rock-shelter (NISPs from
1-17), and indeed is even an order of magnitude greater than the largest
non-human, large mammal bone assemblage from Mangaia, namely that of pig
and dog from MAN-44 (combined NISP from all zones = 218). The MAN-84
human bone sample has many more and much younger juveniles than at the
other rock-shelters. Also, only at MAN-84 are there stone tool marks on
some of the human bones.
MAN-84 in an ethnographic context
The large number ([is greater than] 40) of human individuals
associated with earth ovens suggests that MAN-84 was a special-use site,
perhaps ritualistic in nature, rather than a habitation site. The
Mangaian ethnohistoric record, compiled by missionaries and colonial
officials, is replete with stories of: human sacrifice to ensure
victory, to install a paramount chief or to ensure plentiful harvests;
murder and warfare to gain arable land or to redress past wrongs; and
cannibalism of either a ritualistic or nutritive nature. We review these
reports and the accounts of Mangaian burial customs in order to help to
understand the possible context of MAN-84.
The site's name, Ana Manuku, is interesting. Manuku means `to
slip off or out, to come loose' (Savage 1980: 140). Before
excavating the site, Mangaians told us that manuku means
`dislocated' in the sense of a dislocated joint, such as an elbow
or knee. Ana means `cave', although some Mangaians called the site
Are Manuku with Are meaning `house' or `place', because the
rock-shelter does not attain total darkness and is not truly a cave.
The human remains at MAN-84 are disarticulated
(`dislocated'?), fragmentary, and burned but not cremated. This is
not consistent with burial customs described ethnohistorically or seen
in prehistoric burials caves. Usually within a day of death a corpse was
wrapped in cloth, then disposed of either in a shallow pit, within a
marae, or in a cave or chasm in the makatea (Hiroa 1934: 190). Those
buried in the ground were placed face down in a flexed position with
limbs secured by a sennit cord and the head toward the rising sun (Gill
1894). Most bodies, however, were hidden in secret caves or chasms to
avoid interference with the body by enemies (Hiroa 1934: 191). Hiroa
specifically suggested that a body, particularly that of a warrior,
obtained by his enemies would be burned. If the human bones at MAN-84
reflect a large number of individual corpses that were ill-treated by
their enemies, these might be expected to be more fully burnt, to have
more complete elements and to represent solely or primarily adult males.
For cave burials some secondary treatment of the corpse is acknowledged,
entailing exposing it to the sun, rubbing it with oil and rewrapping it
in cloth, but no dismemberment or intentional bone breakage is known
(Hiroa 1934: 191; Katayama 1986; Ant6n & Steadman in press).
Sacrifice of a single human victim to the deity Rongo occurred on
Mangaia to assure peace following a battle or to install a new paramount
chief without warfare (Hiroa 1934: 37). Typically, a member of a
defeated or weak tribe was killed by warriors of a victorious or
powerful tribe, then laid out at the marae Aka Oro in Keia, some 600 m
inland from MAN-84 (Hiroa 1934: 81-3, 98). The body later was
transferred to the shore marae Orongo, also in Keia, where only his nose
and ears were distributed among the leaders of each district and the
rest of the body dumped behind the marae. The last of these sacrificial
victims was said to have been taken in 1823. Although the importance of
Keia District in ritual sacrifice is clear, the single (usually male)
victim and the lack of dismemberment beyond the nose and ears is
inconsistent with the large number of individuals, representing all age
classes and both sexes, at MAN-84. Furthermore, the sacrificial victim
for installation of a chief, having been dedicated to Rongo, would have
been highly tapu and thus not acceptable to prepare as food.
Another marae in Keia is Tukituki Mata (MAN-28), only 75 m inland
from MAN-84, on the path to Aka Oro. Tukituki Mata is described as a
`secular marae' that was a favourite spot for public meetings to
discuss politics or history in times of peace (Hiroa 1934: 139, 176).
Such-meetings were said to have been followed by feasting on the `flesh
of fish'. Tukituki means `the act of repeated pounding, bruising,
braying, bumping, beating upon, slamming, banging, etc.' whereas
mata means `the eyes or eyes of human beings, animals, birds and
insects; the face of a human being or animal' (Savage 1980:
147,409). Tukituki Mata literally means to smash someone's face,
especially the part containing the eyes. It is intriguing that the
`flesh of fish' (rather than just `fish') was said to have
been eaten at Tukituki Mata in late prehistoric times. On Mangaia (Hiroa
1934: 81) and in the Marquesas Islands (Handy 1923), human sacrificial
victims were referred to euphemistically as `fish'.
The small area of arable land on Mangaia led to intense fighting
over its control. Gill's informants recounted, in chronological
order, 42 battles spanning a period of 300-400 years (Gill 1894:
308-11). Each battle led to a change in power and redistribution of
arable land. A calendric chronology is not available for the first seven
battles. Battle no. 8 was estimated to have been fought in c. AD 1570.
The last battle was in c. AD 1828. Battles nos. 1 and 5 (before c. AD
1570) were fought in Keia District, as were nine subsequent battles. Not
only were many warriors killed in most of these battles, but the
surviving males and children of the defeated tribe often took refuge in
the rugged limestone forest, sometimes resorting to cannibalism to
survive (see below). The demographic distribution of the human bones at
MAN-84 is inconsistent, however, with their being either the food
remains or skeletal remains of a defeated war party. Also, the site is
open on three sides, provides little concealment, and would be difficult
to defend.
Among other ethnographically recorded large-scale murders to
redress past wrongs, the `first oven of men' (battle no. 7) and
`second oven of men' (battle no. 10) stand out because of the
reportedly large numbers of victims (Gill 1894: 53-5). Both events
involved revenge of the Ngariki tribe on the Ngati-Tane (Atiu). In each
case, the Ngariki constructed a large communal oven in which to steam
the roots of ti (Cordyline terminalis). The Atiu were invited to take
part but in the final moments of construction, when the embers were
hottest, the Atiu were ambushed and thrown into the oven. In the first
oven of men, nearly all subadult and adult male Atiu and two male
Ngariki were killed at Putoa, on the border between Ivirua and Tamarua.
In the second oven, some 40 years later according to Gill, various Atiu
men, women and children perished in the Angaitu area on the border of
Tava'enga and Karanga. The depressions said to mark the ovens of
men were examined by Gill (1894: 54-5), although these sites have not
been excavated. No dismemberment or eating of the victims was reported
for either oven of men, which were not located in Keia District, and
thus cannot be identified with MAN-84. Regardless, the `ovens of
men' suggest that large numbers of people, of both sexes and any
age, could be killed and burned on Mangaia in a single, well-organized
event.
The MAN-84 human bone assemblage is taphonomically consistent with
having been dismembered and cooked, and perhaps by inference eaten,
although other ritual activity cannot be precluded and may be suggested
by the site's presence in Keia, the main ritual district on
Mangaia. Cannibalism is recorded frequently in Mangaian ethnohistory in
reference to fugitive tribes, isolated fugitives, people from other
islands, and the proclivities of certain priests (Hiroa 1934: 66, 73).
These groups or individuals practised opportunistic cannibalism of
nutritive necessity (Gill 1894: chapters 14-15). Usually lone victims of
any age or sex were killed, then taken to a refuge cave for cooking and
eating.
The very young age of some individuals at MAN-84 is inconsistent
with opportunistic cannibalism, as older juveniles or adults generally
were described as targets rather than infants and young children or
adults with children. Furthermore, the site is much too conspicuous to
be a `cannibal lair'. All cases of `hermit' cannibalism were
referred to as disgusting activities that led to, or reinforced, the
social stigma and marginality of its perpetrators (Gill 1894: 86, 219).
Those who cooked the body parts at MAN-84 likely did so with the assent
of whoever held power in Keia at that time.
Other examples of cannibalism may have been more acceptable in
Mangaian society. The priest Mautara was said to have gained his
nickname from the notorious cannibal Mautara because of their shared
appetite for human flesh (Hiroa 1934: 51). This priest is reported to
have avenged an insult by ordering the Ngariki tribe to kill and eat
their firstborn children, which reportedly was done (Gill 1894: 68-9;
Hiroa 1934:73). Such a practice might account for the infant remains at
MAN-84, but not the many non-infants.
Conclusions
Our excavation of Ana Manuku (site MAN-84) revealed a site unlike
any other known on Mangaia, or indeed, elsewhere in Polynesia. The two
occupation layers are both dominated by traditional earth ovens with
abundant bones of humans, rats and fish. Nine AMS [sup.14]C dates on
human bones from different individuals suggest that these bones were
deposited at some time between AD 1390 and 1470, within the period of
severe resource depletion on Mangaia as indicated by pollen and charcoal
influx in lake sediments (Ellison 1994; Kirch & Ellison 1994; Kirch
1996) and faunal sequences (Steadman & Kirch 1990; Kirch et al.
1995; Steadman 1995).
Unusual faunal and artefactual attributes indicate that MAN-84 was
a special-use site rather than a habitation site. Unlike other Mangaian
rock-shelters such as Tangatatau (MAN-44), the cultural strata did not
yield the artefacts of everyday life. The bone assemblage also is highly
distinctive in that pig and dog are extremely rare, whereas human bones,
all clearly in a midden rather than burial context, number nearly 2000.
None of Mangaia's ethnographically recorded violence is a good
match for the human bones recovered at MAN-84. The site's
island-wide significance is difficult to assess because of its
uniqueness and because it is the only major site excavated in Keia
District. To determine whether MAN-84 is representative of prehistoric
rock-shelter sites in Keia, or whether MAN-44 characterizes sites in
Veitatei, will require the excavation of additional sites in both
districts. For now, we cannot be certain whether sites with abundant
human bone in a midden context are to be found only in Keia, a district
noted for its island-wide ritualistic importance, including the temples
of human sacrifice. We do know that substantial body parts of at least
41 persons of all age classes were cooked at MAN-84 in what seems to be
one event or two closely timed events at c. AD 1400-1450. That these
body parts were eaten is suggested by the remains of other animal foods
(fish, rats, birds) in the identical midden context.
Acknowledgements. We thank the many Mangaians who helped us,
especially T. Arokapiti, T. George, M. Harry, T. Mautairi, P.
Ngatokorua, S. Ngatokorua, D. Ngu, M. Ngu, A. Tangatakino, A. Tuara, G.
Tuara and T. Tuara. Research permits were issued by T. Okotai (Office of
the Prime Minister). Funding for field work and lab analyses was
provided by the University of Florida Division of Sponsored Research
(grant U001 to DWS, SCA & L. Norr), the National Science Foundation
(grants BNS-9020750 to PVK & DWS, and EAR-9714819 to DWS), and
National Geographic Society (grant 4001-89 to PVK & DWS). P.
Anderson, J. Endicott, D. Sirois, A. Swartz, K.L. Weinstein and M.I.
Williams assisted in the field or laboratory. We dedicate this paper to
the memory of our dear friend, George Tuara.
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