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dc.contributor.author Anderson A.
dc.contributor.author Chappell J.
dc.contributor.author Gagan M.
dc.contributor.author Grove R.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-04-25T03:22:12Z
dc.date.available 2025-04-25T03:22:12Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=11525741
dc.identifier.citation The Holocene, 2006, 16, 1, 1-6
dc.identifier.issn 0959-6836
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/49073
dc.description.abstract Long-distance human migration across the Pacific Ocean occurred during the late Holocene and originated almost entirely in the west. As prevailing tradewinds blow from the east, the mechanisms of prehistoric seafaring have been debated since the sixteenth century. Inadequacies in propositions of accidental or opportunistic drifting on occasional westerlies were exposed by early computer simulation. Experimental voyaging in large, fast, weatherly (windward-sailing) double-canoes, together with computer simulation incorporating canoe performance data and modern, averaged, wind conditions, has supported the traditional notion of intentional passage-making in a widely accepted hypothesis of upwind migration by strategic voyaging. The critical assumption that maritime technology and sailing conditions were effectively the same prehistorically as in the historical and modern records is, however, open to question. We propose here that maritime technology during the late-Holocene migrations did not permit windward sailing, and show that the episodic pattern of initial island colonization, which is disclosed in recent archaeological data, matches periods of reversal in wind direction toward westerlies, as inferred from the millennial-scale history of ENSO (El NiNo-Southern Oscillation).
dc.subject LATE HOLOCENE
dc.subject PREHISTORIC SEAFARING
dc.subject COLONIZATION PATTERN
dc.subject REMOTE OCEANIA
dc.subject ENSO (EL NINO-SOUTHERN OSCILLATION)
dc.subject WIND REVERSALS
dc.subject PACIFIC
dc.subject Holocene
dc.title PREHISTORIC MARITIME MIGRATION IN THE PACIFIC ISLANDS: AN HYPOTHESIS OF ENSO FORCING
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1191/0959683606hl901ft
dc.subject.age Cenozoic::Quaternary::Holocene
dc.subject.age Кайнозой::Четвертичная::Голоцен


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