How valuable was high-quality stone in a stone-age culture?
So important that the valuable stone found its way long
distances from home.
This isn’t news to the archaeological community. It has found
a Kaho`olawe-sourced basalt adz in the Tuamotu Islands. Mauna Kea adz quarry
stone tools in the Marquesas. Marquesan Eiao Island adzes throughout what is
now French Polynesia. The longest adz in the Bishop Museum’s collection was
found in the ocean off O’ahu, but came from the Pu‘u Pāpa‘i quarry on Molokai.
Quality stone tools traveled. Maybe as trade items. Maybe
a gifts between chiefs. Maybe because a stone tool from afar had a special prestige,
or a mana, a perceived spiritual power.
They were part of what archaeologists call “interaction
networks” between the spread-out islands across the Pacific.
The Museum of Stone Tools has some adz images here.
Most volcanic islands had at least some good quality stone,
although the quality varied. New Zealand and Australian researchers Christopher
Jennings, Marshall Weisler and Richard Walter last year in the journal Archaeology
in Oceania published a comprehensive report on stone quarries across the Pacific.
It is entitled, “An archaeological review of Polynesian adze quarries and
sources.”
They argue that stone tools were more than just useful implements, but a significant part of cultural activity in Polynesia. They hold that “the adze industry played a much more significant and complex role in Polynesian cultural history than is currently realized.”
Early Pacific residents could make tools from readily
available sources near home, but if they found exemplary qualities in remote
sites, they would go to great lengths to get that material—such as quarrying in
the frigid heights of Mauna Kea, or an isolated island like Eiao.
Adzes, they say, were “the most distantly exchanged items in
the Neolithic world.”
But why? “We can establish a relationship between large
scale quarry production, fine grained stone, highly skilled flaking technology
and long-distance exchange, but we still do not know what drove these
associations,” they wrote.
A good quarry would be used continuously over long periods
of time. The Pu‘u Pāpa‘i quarry on Molokai is one of the oldest in Hawai’i,
perhaps because it had high quality stone and was near an early settlement site
at Kawela.
Researchers Marshall I. Weisler, John Sinton, Quan Hua, and
Jane Skippington reviewed that quarry in the Journal of Pacific Archaeology,
a 2024 paper with the ponderous title, “Indirectly Dating one of the Oldest
Adze Quarries in the Hawaiian Islands Provides Insights into the Colonisation
Process and Community Network.”
Adzes made from stone at this specific Molokai quarry are readily identified because it the unique chemical characteristics, high in strontium and phosphate. The unique chemical makeup of quarry stones is how adzes are sometimes linked to their home islands.
One suggestion from a lot of recent work is that adzes were
a key component of exchange networks. It is not clear whether adzes were a
lubricant that facilitated trade between distant islands, or whether voyaging
canoes were simply early Snap-On tool trucks, hauling quality tools to
customers.
One thing that seems clear is that hauling valuables between island was a long-standing practice in the Pacific. It dates back at least to the Lapita culture of thousands of years ago, according to paper from May 2024 by Nicholas W. S. Hogg, Scarlett Chiu, Patrick V. Kirch and Glenn R. Summerhayes.
That paper, in Archeology in Oceania, reviews early
exchange networks involving adzes and pottery in the Lapita era of far western
Polynesia.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2024
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