Archaic and Living Traditions: Ethnoarchaeology of Andaman and Nicobar Archipelago

P. V. Prakash
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Abstract

The Andaman and Nicobar archipelago in the Bay of Bengal has been the home of three sects of people and cultures, namely, the natives, hybrids of convicts, and recent immigrants. The initial inhabitation of the islands is known through the study of shell middens and subsequent peopling by early ethnographic accounts and contemporary issue-based studies. The artifact-centric cultural inferences from such excavation reports, ethnographic accounts, material evidence, and living traditions are of immense value in understanding the cultural history of the archipelago. The cultural inferences derived from such studies under five categories—(a) settlements of the coast and the inland, (b) midden artifacts and native practices, (c) osseous trophies and wooden sculptures, (d) pottery and division of labor, and (e) seasons and preservation practices—are of ethnoarchaeological significance, despite the theoretical debate to consider the erstwhile ethnographic studies and museum collections as evidence for ethnoarchaeological interpretation.
古老与鲜活的传统:安达曼和尼科巴群岛的民族考古学
孟加拉湾的安达曼和尼科巴群岛一直是三类人群和文化的家园,即本地人、囚犯混血儿和新移民。通过对贝壳冢的研究,我们可以了解到群岛最初的居住情况,而早期的人种学记载和当代基于问题的研究则可以了解到群岛后来的居住情况。从这些发掘报告、人种学记载、物证和生活传统中得出的以文物为中心的文化推论,对于了解群岛的文化历史具有重要价值。从这些研究中得出的五类文化推论--(a) 沿海和内陆定居点,(b) 土埋文物和当地习俗,(c) 骨质战利品和木雕,(d) 陶器和劳动分工,(e) 季节和保存习俗--具有民族考古学的意义,尽管理论界还在争论是否应将以前的民族学研究和博物馆藏品视为民族考古学解释的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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