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Material Perspectives: Stone Tool Use and Material Culture in Papua New Guinea
Karen Hardy and Paul Sillitoe
Table of Contents
- Section 1: Introduction
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Background
- Section 2: Environmental, Ethnographic and Archaeological Context
- 2.1 Environment
- 2.2 Ethnographic background
- 2.3 Archaeological context
- 2.4 Ethnography and stone tools
- Section 3: Material Culture and the Use of Stone Tools
- 3.1 Raw materials
- 3.2 Items of material culture
- 3.3 Other tasks
- 3.4 Arrows
- 3.5 String
- 3.6 Survival in a prehistoric context
- Section 4: Raw Material, Technology, Storage and Discard
- 4.1 Raw material
- 4.2 Raw material procurement
- 4.3 Hammerstones
- 4.4 Nodule reduction and technology
- 4.5 Refrain said when knapping chert
- 4.6 Selection of flakes for use
- 4.7 Locations where men work with chert tools
- 4.8 Use and terminology
- 4.9 Storage and discard
- 4.10 Ritual uses of stone
- Section 5: Social and Gender Aspects of Stone Tool Use
- 5.1 Social aspects
- 5.2 Gender
- 5.3 Children
- 5.4 Ownership of objects
- Section 6: Functional Analysis (Robert Shiel and Karen Hardy)
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Method of analysis
- 6.3 Sample for analysis
- 6.4 Results of the functional analysis
- 6.5 Analysis of the functional results
- 6.6 Statistical analysis of use-wear data, with R.S. Shiel
- 6.7 Ethnographic data
- 6.8 Users
- 6.9 Change in edge angles
- 6.10 Relations between the four phases
- 6.11 Discussion
- Section 7: Wola Use of Lithics within the Wider Material Context
- 7.1 Wola use of lithics within the wider material context
- 7.2 Conclusions
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