Author:
Burley David V.,Taché Karine,Purser Margaret,Balenaivalu Ratu Jone
Abstract
The authors report the first exposure of prehistoric salt-working in the Pacific, one that used solar evaporation of sea water on large flanged clay dishes. This short-lived industry of the seventh century AD disappeared beneath the dunes, but its documented nineteenth- and twentieth-century successors offer it many useful analogies: the salt, now extracted by boiling brine, was supplied to inland communities upriver, where it functioned as a prime commodity for prestige and trade and an agent of social change.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Arts and Humanities,Archaeology
Reference37 articles.
1. Fijian property and gear;Tonganivalu;Transactions of the Fijian Society,1917
2. Field J.S. 2003. The evolution of competition and cooperation in Fijian prehistory: archaeological research in the Sigatoka valley, Fiji. Unpublished PhD dissertation, University of Hawaii.
Cited by
8 articles.
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