Taiwan find may throw light on Pacific settlers

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SEEKING ANSWERS: This handout photo taken in December 2011 and provided by Chen Chung-yu, shows a complete skeleton of a stone age male his archaeological research team had unearthed from a tiny Taiwan-controlled islet , Liang Island off China. — AFP photo

TAIPEI: Taiwanese archaeologists working on an islet off China have unearthed the remains of a Stone Age male who may provide clues about ancient people who eventually dispersed throughout the entire Pacific.

The man, who was about 35 when he died nearly eight thousand years ago, may be a remote relative of Taiwan’s aborigines who today make up about two per cent of the island’s population, according to the head of the team, Chen Chung-yu.

“Judging from the way the body was buried, it could be a person from what we now call the Austronesia language family,” said Chen, a research fellow at Taiwan’s Academia Sinica institute.

Taiwan’s aborigines belong to the same language family, as do the people who migrated across the Pacific as far as Eastern Island off the coast of Chile in prehistoric times.

Chen and his team of three excavated the remains – a nearly complete skeleton – on Liang Island, a tiny Taiwanese-controlled islet 30 kilometres (19 miles) off China’s southeastern Fujian province, in December.

The burial site had emerged purely by chance, as the Taiwanese military was digging up the soil to prepare for the construction of a road on the 1.4-kilometre (0.9-mile island).

What struck Chen when he carried out the meticulous excavation work was the way the body was buried – in a foetal position like the one used by Taiwan’s aborigines as late as the 20th century.

Further DNA research on the skeleton will determine the genetic make-up of the skeleton, which is one of the oldest and best preserved ever to turn up on Taiwan.

But it is likely that there could be a link, since the ancestors of Taiwan’s aborigines, and of most Pacific islanders, are believed to have lived in what is now southern China at that time.

If this turns out to be the case, the find on Liang Island will add to the understanding of the way of life of the ancestors of the Austronesians just before they set out on their epic journey to people the Pacific. — AFP