Climate change drove settlers to south pacific islands 200 years earlier than previously thought

Scitechdaily

Climate change drove settlers to south pacific islands 200 years earlier than previously thought"


Play all audios:

Loading...

RESEARCH LED BY SCIENTISTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON HAS FOUND SETTLERS ARRIVED IN EAST POLYNESIA AROUND 200 YEARS EARLIER THAN PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT. Colonization of the vast eastern


Pacific with its few and far-flung island archipelagos was a remarkable achievement in human history. Yet the timing, character, and drivers of this accomplishment remain poorly understood.


However, this new study has found a major change in the climate of the region, which resulted in a dry period, coinciding with the arrival of people on the tiny island of Atiu, in the


southern group of the Cook Islands, around 900AD. Findings are published in the paper, ‘Human settlement of East Polynesia earlier, incremental and coincident with prolonged South Pacific


drought’ in the journal _PNAS_ on April 6, 2020. “The ancestors of the Polynesians, the Lapita people, migrated east into the Pacific Ocean as far as Fiji, Tonga, and Samoa, reaching them


around 2800 years ago. But for almost 1500 years humans failed to migrate any further into the Pacific,” explains lead researcher, Professor David Sear of the University of Southampton. “Our


research gives us a much more accurate timescale of when people first arrived in the region and helps answer some key questions about why they made their hazardous journey east.” A team of


geographers, archaeologists, and geochemists from the UK, New Zealand, and the US, worked with the people of Atiu, to collect core samples of lake mud, charting over 6000 years of history.


Back in the labs in UK and US, the mud samples were subjected to a range of analyses including new techniques for reconstructing precipitation, and detecting the presence of mammalian feces.


Apart from fruit bats, the Southern Cook Islands never had mammal populations before humans settled there, so when the researchers found evidence of mammal feces alongside other evidence


for landscape disturbance and burning, it was a clear sign of the arrival of people. Within 100 years the first settlers, most likely from Tonga or Samoa, changed the landscape by burning


native forest to make way for crops. The team, including undergraduate and postgraduate students from the universities of Southampton and Washington, as well as scientists from Newcastle,


Liverpool, and Auckland universities, also examined lake sediments from Samoa and Vanuata. Using this data, they found evidence for a major climate change which coincided with the newly


established arrival time of the settlers. The data revealed a major change in the climate of the South Pacific region with the main rainbands that bring water to the archipelagos of Vanuatu,


Samoa, Tonga and Fiji migrating north. The result was the driest period in the last 2000 years. This led the researchers to conclude that, alongside growing populations, water stress drove


decisions to make dangerous voyages, aided by changes in winds that enabled easterly sailing. Soon after the arrival of people to Atiu, the climate changed again. Rain returned to the


eastern Pacific – supporting a rapid (c. 200 years) settlement of the remaining islands of Polynesia. Professor Sear adds: “Today, changing climate is again putting pressures on Pacific


island communities, only this time the option to migrate is not so simple. Within two centuries of the first arrival, those first settlers changed the landscape and the ecology, but were


able to make a home. Pacific islanders now live with modified ecologies, permanent national boundaries and islands already occupied by people. The ability to migrate in response to changing


climate is no longer the option it once was.” Reference: “Human settlement of East Polynesia earlier, incremental, and coincident with prolonged South Pacific drought” by David A. Sear,


Melinda S. Allen, Jonathan D. Hassall, Ashley E. Maloney, Peter G. Langdon, Alex E. Morrison, Andrew C. G. Henderson, Helen Mackay, Ian W. Croudace, Charlotte Clarke, Julian P. Sachs,


Georgiana Macdonald, Richard C. Chiverrell, Melanie J. Leng, L. M. Cisneros-Dozal and Thierry Fonville, 6 April 2020, _Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences_. DOI:


10.1073/pnas.1920975117 This research was supported by grants from the NERC, Explorers Club and Royal Geographical Society. The team wishes to acknowledge the support of the peoples of the


Cook Islands, Samoa and Vanuatu. NEVER MISS A BREAKTHROUGH: JOIN THE SCITECHDAILY NEWSLETTER.


Trending News

'i named chelsea star flop of the year last season - now he's transformed'

Chelsea star Moises Caicedo has forced Ally McCoist to eat his own words after turning his Blues form around this season...

Sir Sebastian Wood KCMG - GOV.UK

SIR SEBASTIAN WOOD KCMG * Deutsch * English * 中文 CONTENTS * Biography * Previous roles * Announcements BIOGRAPHY Sir Seb...

Transmembrane crosstalk between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton

KEY POINTS * Cell adhesions represent the interaction interfaces between cells and the extracellular matrix. Their study...

India's helicopter deal investigated for kickbacks

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST: NPR's business news starts with begins with a corruption case in India. ...

Clarity needed on access to covid vaccine

The British Dental Association (BDA) has welcomed interim advice from the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisatio...

Latests News

Climate change drove settlers to south pacific islands 200 years earlier than previously thought

RESEARCH LED BY SCIENTISTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON HAS FOUND SETTLERS ARRIVED IN EAST POLYNESIA AROUND 200 YEAR...

Accessible chromatin reveals regulatory mechanisms underlying cell fate decisions during early embryogenesis

ABSTRACT This study was conducted to investigate epigenetic landscape across multiple species and identify transcription...

These Veterans Fought for Our Freedom

_Sharrer, of Saginaw, Michigan, is the widow of an American officer who helped run a POW camp in Texas during World War ...

Credit where it's due | Nature

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe Sir Friedrich Katscher is correct in stating that science has a long hi...

Exploring the genetic and genomic connection underlying neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation and the risk for parkinson’s disease

ABSTRACT Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) represents a group of neurodegenerative disorders charact...

Top