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26 October 2022 | dataset

Freshwater fishing among Lapita people: The Sleepers (Teleostei: Eleotridae) of Teouma, Vanuatu.

The study of the ichthyofaunal corpus yielded by the archaeological site of Teouma, Efate Island, Vanuatu, has

revealed the unexpected presence of a significant number of bones of Eleotridae (Sleepers) on the site, as early as

2920–2870 cal. B.P. Out of the 8560 identified fish remains associated with the Lapita layers, which document

the period of initial settlement of the archipelago, 1368 have been determined as belonging to eleotrids, including

species of the genera Giuris, Ophiocara and Eleotris. They represent 16% of the corpus and occupy second

place among the dominant families in an assemblage composed otherwise of a wide-range of marine coastal and

reef-associated taxa. Even though the Lapita economy is characterised by an intensive and broad-spectrum

exploitation of all terrestrial and marine resources available and readily procurable, the eleotrids of Teouma are

the first clear evidence thus far of the exploitation of freshwater environments by Lapita communities anywhere

in their range. A river and a swamp are present in the vicinity of the site, and hooks and lines and/or multipronged

spears could have been used. Passive gear such as weirs, fish-traps or nets might have been applied as

well, enabling the capture of sleepers in larger quantities. The results presented here offer an original insight of

an unknown facet of Lapita subsistence strategies and aim to highlight the antiquity of freshwater fishing at a

regional scale.

Field Value
Publisher Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP)
Modified
Release Date
Identifier cd4eff61-6001-4edf-8ba3-4e99a5e4e4c2
Spatial / Geographical Coverage Location Vanuatu
Relevant Countries Vanuatu
Language English (United States)
License Public
[Open Data]
Author Bouffandeau, L., Bearez, P., Keith, P., Bedford, S., Spriggs, M.