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Historical ecology and marine resources

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Historical ecology and marine resources

Session C16. Historical ecology and marine resource use in the Indo-Pacific region (IPPA 2009, Hanoi)

Location: International
Members: 5
Latest Activity: Aug 27

About

Organisers: Rintaro Ono (Australian National University), David Addison (American Samoa Community College) and Alex Morrison (University of Hawaii)
Contact: rintaro.ono-at-anu.edu.au; add1ison-at-gmail.com

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Peter Matthews

Using messages allows us to create separate discussion threads on separate topics 2 Replies 

Started by Peter Matthews. Last reply by Peter Matthews Aug 16.

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Alex E. Morrison Comment by Alex E. Morrison on August 27, 2009 at 12:21pm
Welcome everyone! Looking forward to IPPA!
-Alex
Rintaro Ono Comment by Rintaro Ono on August 16, 2009 at 5:33pm
Many thanks for your message, Kat and yes I did have your abstract last time! Sorry for asking you again and we do appreciate for your kind consideration to prepare your draft before our session. Thanks again and see you soon! Rintaro
David Addison Comment by David Addison on August 15, 2009 at 3:37am
Hi Kat.
Welcome!

ciao, DA
Kat Szabo Comment by Kat Szabo on August 14, 2009 at 9:32pm
Hi Rintaro and all. Good to be here! Am working on the paper but you already have an abstract from me, no?
Rintaro Ono Comment by Rintaro Ono on August 14, 2009 at 10:21am
Hi Kat, welcome to our session page and many thanks for your entry! We are happy to wait for your abstract and draft too!
David Addison Comment by David Addison on August 11, 2009 at 3:47am
Welcome all session participants!
Looking forward to seeing old friends and making new acquaintances in Hanoi.
-- ciao, DA
Rintaro Ono Comment by Rintaro Ono on July 31, 2009 at 2:07pm
Many thanks Peter, and I will try to inform all member for the session to join this web page and further discussion before IPPA.
Peter Matthews Comment by Peter Matthews on July 8, 2009 at 9:58pm
Speakers and other participants in Session may now ask the session organisers for access to the Session C16 archive, to submit or view draft papers and other session documents
Peter Matthews Comment by Peter Matthews on July 8, 2009 at 9:45am
Session abstract
Archaeology is in a unique position to provide a long-term perspective on past marine ecosystems and human eco-dynamics. In most parts of the Indo-Pacific, archaeology provides the only record of pre-industrial marine exploitation. Therefore, archaeological data can provide a valuable baseline for evaluating contemporary ecological trends. Researchers are invited to present technical, methodological, and theoretical papers on a variety of topics such as fish and shell analyses, prehistoric fishing, ethno-archaeology, or traditional and modern fishing. Papers should have a conservation or historical marine ecology focus. Participants will be asked to have papers ready for submitting to the session organizer by 1 October 2009, and the papers will be posted or attached by a website or mailing list hosted by the session organizer. This will give everyone a chance to read each other's ideas in detail. The IPPA session will then consist of short presentations (10-15 min. each) and ample time for discussion. Selected participants will be asked to revise their papers immediately after the conference for publication in an edited volume scheduled for early 2010.

Session speakers
Akira Goto (Nanzan University, Japan): The Oceanic encountered with the Japanese: An Outrigger Canoe-Fishing Gear Complex in the Bonin Islands and Hachijo-jima Island.

Alex Morrison (University of Hawaii, USA): TBA

Catherine Szabo (University of Wollongong, Australia): The selection of raw materials for shell artefact production.

Christelle Carlier (Université Paris 1): Fishhooks and ancient fishing in eastern Polynesia, the case of three islands.

Cynthia Neri Zayas (University of Philippines): The stone tidal weir in the Ryukyus, the Pescadores and the Visayas.

Fredeliza Z. Campos (University of Philippines): Prehistoric fishing in Batanes and its cultural implications in Island Southeast Asia.

Irina Y. Ponkratova (Northeastern State University, Magadan, Russia) and Yaroslav V. Kuzmin (Institute of Geology and Mineralogy,, Novosibirsk, Russia): The origin and development of maritime adaptation and seafaring in Northeast Asia: results and problems.

Jeffery William (James Cook University, Australia): The stone tidal weir in Yap, Micronesia.

Judy Amesbury (Micronesian Archaeological Research Services Guam, USA): Pelagic fishing in the Mariana Archipelago: from the prehistoric period to the present.

Kazuhiro Suda (Hokkaigakuen University, Japan): Marine resource use in transition: traditional and modern fishing in Tonga, Western Polynesia.

Melissa Carter (University of Sydney): The problem with Polymesoda: Ethnoarchaeology of subsistence shellfishing in the central Solomon Islands and contributions to the identification and understanding of the Polymesoda (Gelonia) subgenus

Osamu Hashimura (National Museum of Ethnology): The history and culture of marine resource use: the case study of the Dolphin Fish (Coryphaena hippurus) in Japan and East Asia.

Richard Olmo (University of Guam): Association between midden remains and extant reef populations on Guam.

Rintaro Ono (ANU, Australia) and David J. Addison (ASCC, American Samoa): 600 years of marine procurement on Atafu Atoll, Tokelau.

Rintaro Ono (ANU, Australia) and Michiko Intoh (National Museum of Ethnology, Japan): Island of pelagic hunters, prehistoric fishing in Fais, Micronesia.

Scott Fitzpatrick (North Carolina State University, USA): TBA

Sergey V. Gusev (Russian Research Institute for Cultural and Natural Heritage): The old whaling in north Pacific: new records.

Shio Segi (ANU, Australia): Territorial use rights in fisheries in the Philippines – analysis from a historical perspective.

Takashi Tsuji (RIHN, Japan): Ecology and technology of bamboo fish traps in the Visayas, Philippines; with special reference to the moray trap.

Tomoya Akimichi (RIHN, Japan): TBA

Yayoi Najima (Keio University, Japan): Prehistoric fishing strategies in sub-tropic sea, Amami Islands, Japan.
 

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Peter Matthews David Addison Rintaro Ono Kat Szabo Alex E. Morrison
 
 

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