Kohika
Ko whakapaukorero te maunga Ko Tarawera te awa Ko Ngati Awa te iwi Ko Mataatua te waka Ko Te Kohika te pa Ko T...
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Kohika
Ko whakapaukorero te maunga Ko Tarawera te awa Ko Ngati Awa te iwi Ko Mataatua te waka Ko Te Kohika te pa Ko Tupai, Ko Tutarakauika, Ko Te Rangihiiria, Ko Tuara nga taniwha Ko Matataketake me Tiki nga mauri kohatu Ko Te Awa o Te Atua te kotore Ko Otamaroroa te papa whenua Ko Tamarau te kaitiaki wairua Ko Te Kaokaoroa te akua Ko Waimea, Ko Waitepuru, Ko Awatarariki, Ko Awaitipaku, Ko Awaiti, Ko Omehue, Ko Awakaponga, Ko Te Waikamihi, Ko Mangaone nga awa Ko Te Otaramuturangi, Ko Tiepataua, Ko Te Awakaponga, Ko Te Ahikokoai, Ko Awatarerehika, Ko Te Umuhika nga urupa. Ngati Awa pepeha
Whakapaukorero is the mountain Tarawera is the river Ngati Awa is the tribe Mataatua is the canoe Te Kohika is the pa Tupai, Tutarakauika, Te Rangihiiria, and Tuara are the guardians Matataketake and Tiki are the talismans Te Awa o Te Atua is the estuary Otamaroroa is the locality Tamarau is the spirit guide Te Kaokaoroa is the coastline Waimea, Waitepuru, Awatarariki, Awaitipaku, Awaiti, Omehue, Awakaponga, Te Waikamihi and Mangaone are the streams Te Otaramuturangi, Tiepataua, Te Awakaponga, Te Ahikokoai, Awatarerehika and Te Umuhika are the cemeteries. Ngati Awa proverbial saying
Kohika The archaeology of a late Maori lake village in the Ngati Awa rohe, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
Edited by Geoffrey Irwin
Auckland University Press
First published 2004 Auckland University Press University of Auckland Private Bag 92019 Auckland, New Zealand www.auckland.ac.nz/aup © the authors 2004 ISBN 1 86940 315 0 This book is Memoir 9 of the Whakatane and District Historical Society, which has provided assistance with its publication.
National Library of New Zealand Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Kohika : the archaeology of a late Ma¯ori lake village in the Nga¯ti Awa rohe, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand / edited by Geoffrey Irwin. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1-86940-315-0 1. Ngati Awa (New Zealand people)—Antiquities. 2. Excavations (Archaeology)—New Zealand—Kohika (Rangitaiki Plains) 3. Kohika Site (N.Z.) I. Irwin, Geoffrey. 993.4201—dc 22
This book is copyright. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism, or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process without the prior permission of the publisher. Designed and typeset by Amy Tansell Printed by Printlink Ltd, Wellington
Contents
List of tables
vi
List of figures
vii
List of plates
ix
Acknowledgements 1. An introduction to Kohika in historical and archaeological context G.J. Irwin, R.G. Law, I. Lawlor and P. Ngaropo 2. Kohika in the geomorphological context of the Rangitaiki Plains G.J. Irwin
xiii 1 11
3. The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 20 M.S. McGlone and K.L. Jones 4. Excavations and site history at Kohika G.J. Irwin
45
5. Site chronology G.J. Irwin and M.D. Jones
76
6. The wooden artefacts from Kohika R.T. Wallace and G.J. Irwin
83
7. Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika R.T. Wallace, G.J. Irwin and R. Neich
122
8. Kohika fibrework S. McAra
149
9. Artefacts of bone, tooth, pumice and pounamu G.J. Irwin
160
10. Sources of the Kohika obsidian artefacts P.R. Moore
168
11. The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution S.J. Holdaway
177
12. Faunal remains from Kohika G.J. Irwin, R.K. Nichol, M.A. Taylor, T.H. Worthy and I.W.G. Smith
198
13. Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 217 G.J. Irwin, M. Horrocks, L.J. Williams, H.J. Hall, M.S. McGlone and S.L. Nichol 14. Kohika as a late northern Maori lake village G.J. Irwin
239
Appendix Inventory of wooden and fibre items R.T. Wallace and G.J. Irwin
249
Index
260
List of tables Table 1.1 Table 3.1 Table 5.1 Table 5.2 Table 6.1 Table 6.2 Table 7.1 Table 8.1 Table 8.2 Table 8.3 Table 8.4 Table 8.5 Table 8.6 Table 8.7 Table 8.8 Table 8.9 Table 9.1 Table 10.1 Table 10.2 Table 11.1 Table 11.2 Table 11.3 Table 11.4 Table 11.5 Table 11.6 Table 11.7 Table 11.8 Table 11.9 Table 11.10 Table 11.11 Table 11.12 Table 11.13 Table 11.14 Table 11.15 Table 11.16 Table 11.17 Table 11.18 Table 12.1 Table 12.2 vi
Frequency of sites by type in the Rangitaiki Plains and surrounding area Radiocarbon dates, Kohika pollen site (Square D17) Chronometric data used in the current analysis Summary posterior distributions for Phase 2 start, Phase 2 end and Phase 2 duration Characteristics of the bird spear fragments Comb dimensions (mm) Estimated dimensions of excavated houses and pataka Single spiral-wrapped bundles of harakeke (1SWB) Two-ply spiral-wrapped bundles of harakeke (2PSW) Three-ply cordage Three-ply braid variants Plaited twill with narrow strips Plaited check with broad strips Netting and component parts Other pieces: fragments whose technique is unclear Contents of boxes (KOH number and technique) Artefacts from Kohika Size, roundness and sphericity of Kohika obsidian pebbles XRF analyses of obsidian samples from Kohika and Maketu Complete flake mean dimensions (and standard deviation) by exterior scar direction for all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian Maximum dimension of cores by scar pattern for all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian Maximum dimension for proximal, medial and distal fragments by exterior scar pattern, Mayor Island obsidian Complete flake mean dimensions (and standard deviation) from the Historical Society assemblage by exterior scar pattern, Mayor Island obsidian Mean dimensions for complete platform rejuvenation flakes from all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian Mean dimensions for complete flakes of length greater than 23 mm, by exterior scar direction from all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian Mean dimensions (and standard deviations) of complete tools compared with complete flakes for all areas in the university excavations, Mayor Island obsidian Mean dimensions (and standard deviation) for pieces with macroscopic edge modification by type for all areas excavated by the university, Mayor Island obsidian Mean dimensions (and standard deviation) for complete tools from the Historical Society assemblage by edge modification type, Mayor Island obsidian Frequency of edge-modified pieces, flakes and cores by area, Mayor Island obsidian Mean length (and standard deviation) of complete flakes with length > 23 mm by exterior scar morphology and area, Mayor Island obsidian Frequency of complete and fragmented flakes of length > 23 mm by area, Mayor Island obsidian Number and weight of flakes and flake fragments of maximum dimension less than 10 mm by area, Mayor Island obsidian Complete flakes with length > 23 mm from the university excavations compared with those excavated by the Whakatane Historical Society, Mayor Island obsidian Frequency of complete and fragmented tools by type of edge modification and area Length of notched area of edge modification for all notched tools by region Maketu and Taupo obsidian technological types Proportion of cortex on flakes and edge-modified pieces from all areas, Mayor Island obsidian Minimum number of individual mammals Human bone by excavation area
Table 12.3 Table 12.4 Table 12.5 Table 12.6 Table 12.7 Table 12.8 Table 12.9 Table 12.10 Table 12.11 Table 12.12 Table 12.13 Table 13.1 Table 13.2 Table 13.3 Table 13.4 Table 13.5 Table 13.6 Table 13.7
Dog body parts by excavation area Taphonomic variables for identified dog bone by excavated area Estimated ages of dogs at death Avian taxa represented among identifiable elements in the Kohika assemblage with data from all squares and layers amalgamated Frequencies of fish species, by area Fish species frequencies by layer, Area D Bone class frequencies for jack mackerel, Area D Shellfish from Kohika Shell samples from the White House, Area D Shell samples from the Yellow House, Area D Shell samples from the Bright Yellow floor, Area D Samples included in coprolite analyses Physical attributes of coprolites analysed Components of coprolites, weights and percentages Incidence of fish body parts in Kohika coprolites Seeds from Kohika coprolites Percentages of inorganic material Variation in coprolite no.19
List of figures Figure 1.1 Figure 1.2 Figure 2.1 Figure 2.2 Figure 2.3 Figure 3.1 Figure 3.2 Figure 3.3a Figure 3.3b Figure 3.3c Figure 3.3d Figure 3.4a Figure 3.4b Figure 3.5 Figure 3.6a Figure 3.6b Figure 4.1 Figure 4.2 Figure 4.3 Figure 4.4 Figure 4.5 Figure 4.6 Figure 4.7 Figure 4.8 Figure 4.9 Figure 4.10 Figure 4.11 Figure 4.12 Figure 4.13 Figure 4.14
The former river courses of the Rangitaiki Plains and communication routes recorded in early maps (Gibbons 1990, Hunia 1977) Archaeological sites recorded in the area of the Rangitaiki Plains The geomorphology of the Rangitaiki Plains Former shorelines and river courses on the Rangitaiki Plains Soils of the Rangitaiki Plains in the vicinity of Kohika (after Pullar 1985) The Bay of Plenty lowlands with pollen sites underlined Pollen site stratigraphy: Kohika pollen site (excavation Square D17), Tunapahore archaeological site complex and Thornton-Atkinson archaeological site Kohika, percentage pollen diagram Kohika, percentage pollen diagram Kohika, percentage pollen diagram Kohika, percentage pollen diagram Thornton-Atkinson complex, percentage pollen diagram Thornton-Atkinson complex, percentage pollen diagram Tunapahore A, percentage pollen diagram Tunapahore B, percentage pollen diagram Tunapahore B, percentage pollen diagram A contour map of Kohika showing the location of the excavations Some representative section drawings from Area A A plan of the excavated features in Area A Square B1, north section Square B1, south section Square B1, plan of features at the base of the excavation Square B3, east section Square B4, west section Square C1, south section Square C1, west section Square C7, south section Square C10, north section Area D, the layout of excavation units Squares D1 and D2, all sections vii
Figure 4.15 Figure 4.16 Figure 4.17 Figure 4.18 Figure 4.19 Figure 5.1 Figure 5.2 Figure 5.3 Figure 5.4 Figure 6.1 Figure 6.2 Figure 6.3 Figure 6.4 Figure 6.5 Figure 6.6 Figure 6.7 Figure 6.8 Figure 6.9 Figure 6.10 Figure 6.11 Figure 6.12 Figure 6.13 Figure 6.14 Figure 6.15 Figure 6.16 Figure 6.17 Figure 6.18 Figure 6.19 Figure 6.20 Figure 6.21 Figure 6.22 Figure 6.23 Figure 6.24 Figure 6.25 Figure 6.26 Figure 7.1 Figure 7.2 Figure 7.3 Figure 7.4 Figure 7.5 Figure 7.6 Figure 7.7 Figure 7.8 Figure 7.9 Figure 7.10 Figure 7.11 Figure 7.12 Figure 7.13 Figure 7.14 Figure 7.15 Figure 8.1a Figure 8.1b Figure 9.1 Figure 9.2 viii
Area D, the White House horizon Area D, the Yellow House horizon (stakeholes less than 10 cm deep are not shown) Area D, the Bright Yellow horizon Area D, Squares D12–15, trench Historical Society investigations (with some of their notes) Summary of the calibrated distributions for the chronometric data given in Table 5.1 Posterior distribution for Phase 2, start Phase 2, end Phase 2, duration Bird spear point made from tree-fern trunk Twelve digging sticks and one ko footrest A weeder blade, a one-piece spade, and four handles of composite digging tools Seven complete detachable digging-tool blades, one rough-out and one fragment Part of a carving on a ceremonial ko Seven broken shafts with terminal knobs, possibly handles from composite tools Fifteen beaters and beater fragments Four bowls and bowl fragments A steering paddle rough-out Canoe paddle and paddle fragments Canoe hull pieces Three canoe seats, one bulkhead and eight other fittings Canoe bailers Six heru or hair combs Six darts or javelins Seven potaka or spinning tops An adze handle rough-out A chisel handle and a chisel socket A section of a putorino (flute) Two net gauges Two thread reels Fibre-, net- and rope-working tools Ladder Wood-splitting wedges Pegs Items of unidentified function A reconstruction of the carved house from the Historical Society (HS) Area A reconstruction of the pole and thatch house from the Yellow House floor, Area D A reconstruction of the pataka from Area D Types of lashing holes on house planks Poupou and other vertical house elements from the HS Area Door or window parts from the HS Area Tumatahuki battens from the HS Area Possible fragments of pataka from the HS Area Dressed slabs split from pukatea tree trunks, HS Area and Area B Timbers recovered from Area D The three rafters from Area D Detail of rafter tenon joints Parameters used to estimate the width of a building in Area D, based on rafter dimensions Two parts of pataka from Area D, plus two indeterminate items (KOH30 and 31) Detail of the internal and external framing of a superior house KOH298. Drawing of two-ply spiral-wrapped bunches of harakeke (2PSW) Diagram of technique for making 2PSW Bone hei tiki pendant, tooth pendant, bone toggle Pounamu adze
Figure 9.3 Pumice kumara god Figure 10.1 Dimensions of obsidian pebbles from Kohika, Maketu and Otamarakau Figure 10.2 Rb-Sr plots for analysed obsidian artefacts from Kohika (solid symbols) and source samples from Maketu and Taupo Figure 10.3 Zr-Rb plots for analysed obsidian artefacts from Kohika (solid symbols) and source samples from Maketu and Taupo Figure 10.4 Relative proportions of ‘grey pebble-type’ and ‘other grey’ obsidian from Kohika Figure 11.1 Terms used to describe flake fragments. Proximal flakes include a platform, distal flakes have a termination, and medial flakes lack a platform or a termination Figure 11.2 Flakes with different exterior scar patterns. The identification numbers are given in brackets: a (1703), b (1637), uni-directional; c (1907), d (1735), bi-directional; e (1893), sub-radial; f (1688), radial Figure 11.3 Quadrants for assessing scar orientation. The flake is orientated with the platform at quadrant 1 (the figure is based on artefact 161) Figure 11.4 Typology for edge modification: a (2617), b (2163), bifacial; c (2128), heavy; d (1145), e (1687), f (2175), g (1850), light; h (2490), i and j (1822), k (1635), notch Figure 11.5 Dimensions of a complete flake Figure 11.6 Core shapes: a (1525), pebble; b (1747), c (2248), multiple platform; d (2875), e (3179), flake; f (2878), radial Figure 11.7 Platform preparation flakes and flakes with two interior surfaces: a (2882), b (2491), c (1589), d (1752) and e (1588) Figure 11.8 Large flakes from Historical Society: a (94), b (96), c (150), d (161), e (98) and f (158) Figure 12.1 Size frequency distributions of snapper, kahawai and jack mackerel, Area D Figure 12.2 Size frequency distributions of jack mackerel by layer, Area D Figure 12.3 Size frequency distributions of pipi and tuatua, Area D Figure 13.1 Components of Kohika coprolite samples, percentages by weight Figure 13.2 Percentage pollen diagram for Kohika coprolite samples Figure 13.3 Percentage phytolith diagram for Kohika coprolite samples Figure 13.4 Percentage diatom diagram for Kohika coprolite samples Figure 14.1 A schematic view northwards over Area D across the lake to the dunes and the sea. In the left foreground is a reconstruction of Area D during the Yellow House horizon. The houses, canoes, nets and racks on the right represent the artefacts and building timbers found in the Historical Society Area. The palisade follows the topography around the lake. The lakeshore vegetation of raupo, flax and cabbage trees with patches of kahikatea and kanuka scrub is based on the pollen record. The roofed pit and two small covered bins in the bottom right were actually found in Area A.
List of plates Plate 1.1 Plate 1.2
Plate 1.3
Plate 1.4
In 1975, Kohika was an inconspicuous, low-lying grassed mound in an area of agricultural swamp drainage. A whakanoa ceremony was conducted by Jack Fox, Romana Kingi, Mike Mason, Harry Reneti and Albert Te Rere, of the Ratana, Anglican, Catholic, Ringatu and Presbyterian churches respectively. The kaumatua placed the site and the artefacts into the interim care of the University of Auckland. After the discovery of artefacts, the first investigations were undertaken by members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society. In this 1976 photograph are (from left) Dave White, Ken Moore and the late Anton van der Wouden. The spoil in the background was removed from the drain by a digging machine. The University of Auckland excavations of Area D during the season of January, 1976. ix
Plate 2.1
Plate 2.2
Plate 4.1 Plate 4.2 Plate 4.3 Plate 4.4 Plate 4.5 Plate 4.6 Plate 4.7 Plate 4.8 Plate 4.9 Plate 4.10 Plate 4.11 Plate 4.12 Plate 4.13 Plate 4.14 Plate 4.15
Plate 4.16 Plate 4.17 Plate 4.18 Plate 4.19 Plate 4.20 Plate 4.21 Plate 4.22 Plate 4.23 Plate 4.24 x
The new mouth of the Tarawera River. The former course of the Rangitaiki River is at the left of the entrance and the former Te Awa o te Atua estuary, which carried the combined waters of the two rivers, lay to the right of the entrance and flowed west to Matata. The current road bridge is on the Kaharoa shoreline, and a short distance upstream is the junction of the Tarawera and the Awaiti Stream. Canal 109 runs inland from the Awaiti past the remains of Lake Kohika. Looking seawards, a canal and stopbank now separate Lake Kohika from the archaeological lake village, which formerly lay on its southwestern shore. The site itself is located on a remnant of sand-dune that dates from the coastline of 2000 years ago. The archaeological excavation can be seen at the end of the farmer’s cattle-race. Kohika in January 1976. Work is in progress in Areas A, B and D. The spoil heaps are of different colour, which results from their varied composition. Excavations in Square A1 Extension. Part of a small bin surrounded by surface stakeholes in Square A3. A cross-section of a bin structure in Square A3 dug into the former sand-dune. An oval-ended pit in Square A1 Ext. interrupted by a later rectangular pit lying at right angles to it. A charcoal sample for C14 dating was taken from underneath the large pumice boulder found in the pit fill. Square B1 during excavation. Square B1 near the base of the excavation showing in situ posts. The drain section in Area B shows a flood deposit of reworked tephra alluvium outside the site, where a later meander channel, visible in Square B3, has cut into its surface. Wooden items from the peat below the flood deposit in Square B3 are triple-bagged in plastic. A degraded pukatea board in the upper peat of Square B4. The pukatea board in Square B4 consolidated prior to removal. The defended edge of the site was sharply defined in Square B4. Palisade posts were exposed in the side of the agricultural drain visible in the background and Square B3 lies on the other side of it. The edge of the site reveals the effect of the flood in Square B4. Fine silt lies around the palisade posts, reworked Kaharoa alluvium lies outside the site, and the two are separated by the wave-lapped shore. Square B4, west section, showing a palisade post, pre-flood deposits that built up during occupation, the flood alluvium of sand and silt, and post-flood sediments that are culturally sterile. Squares C1 and C12 reveal a deposit of alluvium. Above this, a late meander channel in the Upper Peat can be seen in the baulk, while below the alluvium is the culture-bearing Lower Peat. This photograph shows the pump being primed in 1975 at the start of a day’s work. Square C10 contained a complex succession of fire-pits and hangi with occupational debris and fills composed of material quarried elsewhere. Excavating a swamp in wet weather can have its difficulties. Area D. The site perimeter in Area D. Inside the line of posts were artificial house floors; outside many associated waterlogged artefacts were found preserved in peat. Square D2, with superimposed house floors visible in the south section. Square D2. A line of standing posts, with horizontal light wooden battens flexed and pegged between them, marks the edge of an artificial floor of silt, packed with water-rolled greywacke pebbles. Square D1, south section. Also showing a test excavation of the lacustrine silt, the Kaharoa Tephra and sedge peat below. Square D5, the White House floor. Square D4, firescoops in the White House horizon. Area D, exposing the extent of the Yellow House horizon, January 1976.
Plate 4.25 Plate 4.26
Area D, some details of the excavation of the Yellow House floor. Area D, Square DD during excavation of the Yellow House horizon. Intruding into the square is the corner of Square D2, dug previously, while the baulks are composed of backfilled spoil. Plate 4.27 Square DD, laid bracken-fern stems below an artificial house floor. Plate 4.28 Square D2, canoe bow in peat. Plate 4.29 Square D2, gourd shell. Plate 4.30 Square D2, adzed log and length of rope. Plate 4.31 Square D7, whale vertebra, wooden spear and coil of vine. Plate 4.32 Square D13, north section. Plate 4.33 Square D14, log at base of excavation. Plate 6.1 Thirteen sections of bird spear and one spear point. Plate 6.2 Two coils of rata vine. Plate 7.1 KOH14. Poupou base, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.2 KOH16. Poupou base, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.3 KOH17. Poupou base, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.4 KOH18. Poupou base, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.5 KOH44. Poutahuhu base, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.6 KOH53. Pare fragment, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.7 KOH1. Part of carving, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.8 KOH3. Fragment of carving, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.9 KOH345. Fragment of spiral from carving, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.10 KOH7. Poutokomanawa figure, Historical Society Area, and modern replica carved by Paki Harrison, Dante Bonica and Wiremu Puke. Plate 7.11 KOH2. Fragment of elaborate carving, Area D. Plate 7.12 KOH6. Fragment of elaborate carving, Area D. Plate 7.13 KOH4. Fragment of elaborate carving, Area D. Plate 7.14 KOH174. Carved handle of bailer, Area D. Plate 8.1a KOH298.5. Fragment of single spiral-wrapped bunches of harakeke (1SWB) resembling a handle. Plate 8.1b KOH300.3. Fragment of 1SWB resembling one half of a pair of two-ply spiralwrapped bunches (2PSW) of harakeke. Plate 8.1c KOH298.1. Short fragment of two-ply spiral-wrapped bundles of harakeke (2PSW). Plate 8.2 KOH303.8–11. Short braided fragments, showing two straight examples (KOH303.8 and 9) and an X and a Y braid (KOH303.10 and 11). Plate 8.3 KOH304.1. Fine twill close-up, showing condition of fibres. Plate 8.4 KOH305.1. A larger piece of fine twill, showing the curvature in the plaiting. Plate 8.5 KOH303.4. Broad checked plaiting, showing one folded-back strip (at lower part of image). Plate 8.6a KOH297. A Grommet with netting still attached. Plate 8.6b KOH297. Small fragment of mesh. Plate 9.1a Greenstone kuru pendant. Plate 9.1b Greenstone chisel pendant. Plate 9.2 Bone tiki pendant (human). Plate 9.3a–c One-piece bone fishhooks (human). Plate 9.4a Bone fishhook blank (human). Plate 9.4b Fishhook point (dog tooth). Plate 9.5a Bone needle (bird). Plate 9.5b Bone needle (dog). Plate 9.5c Bone awl (bird). Plate 9.6a Bone awl (seal). Plate 9.6b Bone chisel (dog). Plate 9.7 Pounamu adze. Plate 9.8a Pounamu chisel. Plate 9.8b Pounamu adze flake. xi
Plate 9.9a Plate 9.9b Plate 12.1 Plate 12.2 Plate 12.3 Plate 12.4 Plate 12.5 Plate 12.6 Plate 13.1 Plate 13.2 Plate 13.3 Plate 13.4 Plate 13.5 Plate 13.6
xii
Sandstone file. Pumice pigment bowl. A sawn section of human cranium. Knife-cut marks on a human femur. Dog cranium with crushed parietal. Dog cranium with cut marks on nasal bone. Dog mandible with ventral margin removed. Dog-tooth marks on snapper bones and barracouta jaw. Examples of coprolites from Kohika. Fishbone extracted from coprolite no.24. Charcoal extracted from coprolite no.19. Egg of Toxocara canis. Egg of Toxocara canis, showing characteristic pitting of the shell. Egg of Capillaria hepatica.
Acknowledgements
For over 30 years this project has accumulated a huge debt to many individuals, some of whom have now passed on, and to many institutions. The whakanoa ceremony at the site was conducted by Jack Fox, Romana Kingi, Mike Mason, Harry Reneti and Albert Te Rere. Professor Hirini Mead, Pouroto Ngaropo and Ngahuia Rawson of Te Runanga o Ngati Awa provided guidance for the return of the Kohika artefacts and for their future. Members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society who first worked at Kohika and then gave generous support to the University of Auckland team included Tiena Jordan, Jack Moller, Ken Moore, Dave White, Errol Westgate and Anton van der Wouden, who was also director of the Whakatane District Museum and Gallery. A later director, Warner Haldane, helped arrange the return of the artefacts to Whakatane. At Kohika, the farmer, Phil Jessop, and the sharemilkers, Les and Graeme Brownlee, could not have been more obliging. Neighbouring farmers, especially Tony Pansier, helped to house the excavators and made gifts of food. The Rangitaiki Plains Dairy Company provided us with showers and evening meals during one winter season. Institutional support and funding was provided by the Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland, the University of Auckland Research Committee, the Lotteries Board of the Department of Internal Affairs, and the New Zealand Historic Places Trust. All of the scholars who contributed to the analysis of archaeological material are named in the list of contents of the book. Technical staff at the university made a magnificent contribution over the years: they include Karel Peters, Rod Wallace and Dilys Johns for conservation; Joan Lawrence, Caroline Phillips and Seline McNamee for illustrations; and Tim Mackrell and Hamish MacDonald for photography. A number of anthropology students carried out preliminary study for research essays and theses, as described in the book. Those friends, colleagues and students who took part in the excavations at Kohika include Harry Allen, Nola Arthur, Barry Baquie, Gary Barnett, Mark Bellingham, Simon Best, Steve Black, Joanna Boileau, Dorothy Brown, Ken Burnett, Linda Burnett, Richard Cassels, Helen Charters, John Coster, Mark de Courcy, Marlene Deans, Sandra Dreifus, Clare Fawsett, Anne Geelen, Roger Green, Don Hanson, Terry Hunt, Joan Hunter, Jill Irwin, Gabrielle Johnston, Garry Law, Ian Lawlor, Jennifer Leighton, Steve Mangan, Bernadine Naus, Tia Negerevich, Mary Newman, Reg Nichol, Peter Pearce, Karel Peters, Caroline Phillips, Michelle Phillips, Pamela Raspe, Pamela Russell, Peter Russell, Bill Shaw, David Stowe, Jan Stowe, Julie Stretton, Doug Sutton, Makiuti Tongia, Alan Walmsley, Graeme Ward, Tony Walton and Lynnette Williams. Apologies to anyone who has been overlooked. The quality of this book has been greatly improved by Janet Davidson, who carefully xiii
read and commented on earlier drafts, and Andrew Mason who edited the text. I am grateful to Elizabeth Caffin and the staff of Auckland University Press including Annie Irving, Katrina Duncan and Amy Tansell. Diane Lowther compiled the index. The project would not have been possible without the support of the Irwin family. Jill made sure the excavation was fed, Sarah and Kate kept watch on the spoil heaps to see that nothing of value was carelessly thrown away, and Tom took his first steps at Kohika. Geoffrey Irwin
xiv
1
An introduction to Kohika in historical and archaeological context G.J. Irwin, R.G. Law, I. Lawlor and P. Ngaropo
Archaeological sites in wetlands are unusually rich because they can preserve organic materials that rarely survive elsewhere. These include all kinds of wooden artefacts, fabrics, food remains, and microfossils that indicate former environments. In their published Rhind Lectures for 1995, J. and B. Coles wrote (1996:133): ‘. . . the wetlands of the world have continued to yield new and often surprising information about the past . . . wetlands have continued to produce archaeological evidence unobtainable from any other environment save the most extreme.’ However, such sites are increasingly rare as wetlands are drained. For Polynesia, Kirch and Green (2001:199–200) estimate that about 20 per cent of material objects were archaeologically durable and the remaining 80 per cent perishable, except in unusual circumstances. This is based on ethnographic inventories of material culture and lexical reconstructions of the names for artefacts. These circumstances apply generally to New Zealand. However, while wet sites offer huge opportunities for research, considerable analytical sophistication and resources are needed to investigate and preserve them. It is in such a context that this 30-year archaeological wetland study reaches publication. At some time around AD 1700, a Maori lake village called Kohika in the Bay of Plenty was abandoned after a flood and fortuitously preserved in peat swamp, together with its contents. It was rediscovered during agricultural drainage in 1974. The site was excavated during the late 1970s and produced a rare and comprehensive inventory of waterlogged remains that are in close association with one another and, as such, represent a technological, economic and cultural entity. The site is of fairly short duration and provides an archaeological snapshot of Maori material culture and the way of life that had developed in the North Island prior to the arrival and influence of Europeans. Although there have been previous excavations of wetland sites in New Zealand, none has produced as much rich and varied material as Kohika and had the benefit of such a range of modern specialist analysis. Kohika is located in the west of the Rangitaiki Plains in what was formerly a great swamp. It is just a few hundred metres east of the Tarawera River and two kilometres inland from the sea. It takes its name from the adjoining Lake Kohika, which lies in the fork of the Tarawera River and Awaiti Stream (Fig. 1.1). A little further downstream the Rangitaiki River formerly joined the Tarawera to form Te Awa o Te Atua, a river estuary that ran three kilometres further westwards behind the coastal dunes to flow into the sea near the present settlement of Matata. The site had good access to the resources of swamp, floodplain and coast. It was strategically located for coastal communication by canoe, and also by river and track to the interior of the North Island; there is evidence for travel and trade in both directions. Kohika was a palisaded village on a small island in the swamp beside the lake, 1
2
Figure 1.1 The former river courses of the Rangitaiki Plains and communication routes recorded in early maps (Gibbons 1990, Hunia 1977)
Kohika
which was larger then than now. Preserved in the swamp are organic remains that give detailed information about former environments and diet. The site has archaeological evidence for a broad range of domestic and social activities. There were houses of varied construction, including the remains of what is currently the oldest-known carved house in New Zealand. There were raised pataka storehouses that have long been elusive in prehistory, plus cooking shelters and semi-subterranean storage pits and bins. In addition to the remarkable inventory of wooden artefacts, there are fibre plaiting, cordage and netting, a large assemblage of flaked obsidian and some miscellaneous artefacts of other materials. The remains reveal many aspects of life, including housing, canoe transport, food production, craft activities, defence and outside communication. There is evidence for music, play, personal status, art and religion. This book contains contributions from 20 scholars, and the various chapters deal with geomorphology, vegetation history, excavation, chronology, wooden artefacts, houses and pataka, fibre work, artefacts of bone, pumice and pounamu, obsidian sourcing, obsidian flake technology, faunal remains and coprolite analysis, followed by a general review of the evidence. The rest of this chapter includes a brief account of
An introduction to Kohika in historical and archaeological context 3
traditional and historical records of Kohika, and a review of archaeological site distribution in this part of the Bay of Plenty. It concludes with a brief history of the archaeological project since 1975, and negotiations that vested ownership of the artefacts with Ngati Awa.
Kohika in history and tradition
According to Ngati Awa oral tradition, a man called Waitahaarikikore, who was descended from Toi and his wife Te Kuraimonoa, lived on Rarotonga. He built a canoe using the maihi (barge-boards) from his meeting house and called the waka Te Paepae ki Rarotonga, which he sailed via the Kermadecs to the Bay of Plenty. He lived for a time near the mouth of the Tarawera River at a place now called Te Otaramuturangi. Before moving on, he buried the canoe there and, looking southwards across the swamplands, said: ‘Te ko hika tera’. ‘Over there is the place I shall light my fires’. By lighting his fires, Waitahaarikikore claimed mana whenua over the place now called Kohika (Anon. 2000:2). More recently, the wider Rangitaiki floodplain was the land of Ngati Awa and sections of Te Arawa and Tuwharetoa. While the area is generally recognised as being Ngati Awa, the other tribes have ‘historical and land affiliations to the area . . .’ (Hunia 1977:x). The location of Kohika, near Matata, is now in the rohe of Ngati Awa but its traditional history is complex (Best 1925:690, Grace 1959:90–1, Gudgeon 1970:8, Lawlor 1979:17–22). The tribal history has fluid relationships and the missionary T.S. Grace refers in his diaries to connections between Maori he met in the Rangitaiki Swamp and Lake Taupo (Grace 1928:132, Grace MS 1850–73, Feb. 1867). The three rivers crossing the plain, the Rangitaiki, Tarawera and Whakatane, plus foot trails, provided access to Rotorua and the central North Island. Europeans came late to the Rangitaiki Plains and included traders, missionaries and soldiers (Lawlor 1979:22–8, see also London 1960). One description of conditions and communications in the swamp is by Cowan (1923:96): This Rangitaiki Swamp . . . was then accessible only by the tracks along the seaward sandhills, or by canoe along the Tarawera River, the Awaiti-Paku, and the Orini River (connecting the Awa-a-te-Atua with Whakatane Harbour) and by the labyrinth of reed-fringed waterways, navigable in small canoes, winding among the islets that rose above the water a few feet and made camping-grounds for eelfishers and wild fowl hunters. Cowan speaks of palisaded ‘island-like forts in the great swamp’ during the military operations of the 1860s (Cowan 1923:96). Two historic pa close to Kohika were Oheu and Te Matapihi, on the west bank of the Tarawera, the latter being where the Rev. T.S. Grace built a storehouse and landing-stage to service his inland mission to Taupo. The village of Matata was sketched in 1865 by H.G. Robley (MS 1858–87:14, MS 1898–1922). It was then on the east bank of the Tarawera at its junction with the Rangitaiki River (Fig. 1.1) but shifted to its present location after the land confiscations. Kohika was a prehistoric forerunner to these musket pa, not simply as a fort but as a site of substantial settlement. We have found only two specific references to Kohika. One is in a note at the end of Cowan’s chapter on military operations at Matata, where he quotes Mr F. Burt, who for many years farmed the Matapihi Block at Matata: ‘The natives tell me when they were spearing eels near the Kohika Lake they came across the remains of an old
4
Figure 1.2 Archaeological sites recorded in the area of the Rangitaiki Plains
Kohika
pa, so there was evidently one between Oheu and the Kohika’ (Cowan 1923:105). In addition, the record of a misadventure in the swamp by the Rev. T.S. Grace around 1860 indicates that Lake Kohika could be reached from the main streams (Grace 1928:133). The experience of the first Europeans to settle in the Rangitaiki Swamp gives a useful insight into the conditions in prehistoric times. Government survey for settlement began in 1890 and allotments were taken up. Then, in 1892, a flood filled the swamp with water and it looked like an inland lake behind the coastal sandhills for several years, and many settlers abandoned the area (Gibbons 1990:vii, 10–11). The first drainage board was formed in 1894, the Rangitaiki was diverted to its new mouth in 1914 and the Tarawera in 1924 (Pullar 1985:8). Once drained, the Rangitaiki Plains became highly suited to dairy farming.
Archaeological site distribution in the area of the Rangitaiki Plains
The Bay of Plenty enjoys a warm, moist climate and fertile soils ideal for horticulture. Together with its fisheries and forests, it offered ideal conditions for Maori settlement.
An introduction to Kohika in historical and archaeological context 5
Table 1.1
Frequency of sites by type in the Rangitaiki Plains and surrounding area
Site type Pa Terrace sites Pit sites Rua Middens Spot finds Ovens Cultivated soil Other Total
Number in area 288 410 120 1 175 4 6 6 38 1048
Notes: • Pa are sites with that site description. • Terrace sites are those with terraces in their description that are not pa. They may also be sites with middens, pits, etc. • Pit sites are those with pits in their description, but not pa or terraces. They may also be sites with middens, etc. • Rua are sites with cave pits in their description, but not the above. • Middens do not include any of the categories above. • Other sites are those coded as Maori. An unusual site is a large grinding stone at Matata (Fulton 1921).
The following account provides an archaeological context for discussing the location of Kohika. Recording of Maori archaeological sites in the area began in the 1960s and was carried on for the next two decades principally by Kawerau resident Ken Moore. Surveying in the Whakatane and Waimana river areas was done by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust in the early 1980s. Other contributions have come from forestry surveys and research and heritage management work at Ohiwa, Moutohora and Kawerau (Hayward et al. 1987, Jones 1983, 1984, 1986, 1991, Lawlor 1983a, 1983b, Moore 1973, 1974, 1980a, 1980b, Phillips 1996). Figure 1.2 plots the recorded Maori sites in the area in the New Zealand Archaeological Association Site Recording Scheme, as at February 2002. For this plot the sites were extracted in a hierarchical manner from the Computerised Index of New Zealand Archaeological Sites (CINZAS), using the site description field. The site type in this field is not necessarily the same as on the site record form but represents a more consistent approach to setting a site type than is often found on the form. The number of sites in Figure 1.2 is shown in Table 1.1 using the same system for classification. The site distribution in Figure 1.2 shows the broad patterns of Maori settlement. Pa are concentrated on higher ground along the coast, around Ohiwa Harbour and on the ridges at the periphery of the Rangitaiki Plains and Whakatane River. Kohika (V15/80) is the only site recorded as a swamp pa in the area, and the other pa shown on the plains close by belong to the historic period. Terraces are the most common site type and are concentrated in the vicinity of Kawerau and Ohiwa, although this could be partly the result of surveys being more thorough there than elsewhere. Pit sites may be underrepresented in the southwestern part of Figure 1.2, which was blanketed by tephra from the 1886 Tarawera eruption that filled many pits on terrace sites (Lawlor 1983a:220). Rua, while known from excavations, are rare as field recorded sites, unlike further west in the Bay of Plenty. However, in the Other category there are sites cautiously described as ‘depressions’ which may be collapsed rua. This low frequency may result
6
Kohika
from the inability of the local natural soils to sustain open rua. Again, in comparison with the western Bay of Plenty, records of cultivation soils are few. Middens are few along the coast west of Matata, which can be attributed to the fact that few soft shore species live in a high-energy beach environment. Along the coast of the Rangitaiki Plains the records are still few, even though there are more estuaries and the beach environment is more conducive to sandy shore species. Local investigations have certainly revealed middens (Jones 1991, Shawcross 1965) and the apparent scarcity could be corrected by further recording. In general, the Rangitaiki Plains have a low site density compared with surrounding areas. However, underrecording may be an issue, and the Tarawera Tephra and outwash will have buried some sites. Much of the seaward part of the plains was swamp in the early 19th century and had clearly been so for centuries, as indicated by the growth of peat. Only raised areas in the swamp would have been attractive for Maori settlement, and Jones (1991) recorded cultivation sites on the beach ridges left stranded by the prograding coastline, as well as on the better-drained river fans in the southern part of the plains. A number of lowland sites have produced wooden artefacts (Mead 1984:200). In general, the site distribution shows the preference of Maori to live along the coast, especially near harbours. Away from the coast, sites are concentrated on soils attractive to Maori horticulturalists and areas enjoying both defensible uplands and access to rivers. Kohika is unusual in the context of the larger sample of sites, being a prehistoric lowland swamp pa in an area with a very low density of recorded sites.
A brief history of the investigations since 1975
The site was discovered in November 1974 during drainage operations near Lake Kohika at the swampy northern end of the farm of Mr P. Jessop of Sutherlands Rd. A digging machine exposed a palisade of kanuka posts in the side of a drain on the eastern side of the site, and various wooden and other artefacts were thrown out with the spoil. During the summer of 1974–75, members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society investigated quite a large area of swamp on the northern side of the site by probing. They dug up many valuable wooden artefacts which were placed in water for safekeeping. The New Zealand Historic Places Trust became involved, and the site was visited in early 1975 by Auckland archaeologists. It was agreed that G. Irwin, who had previously worked at swamp pa in the Waikato excavated by staff of the University of Auckland (Bellwood 1978, Shawcross 1968), would direct an excavation as a University of Auckland project with a grant from the Golden Kiwi Lottery Board (Irwin 1975, Moore 1975). At this time there was little understanding of the site’s complexity, size or significance. A series of major excavations took place in May 1975, January 1976, December 1977 and April 1978, and further fieldwork to resolve particular issues was done in 1979 and 1981 (see Plates 1.1–4). A large-capacity pumping system was developed together with on-site conservation. The fieldwork gradually came to terms with the complex geomorphology and site stratigraphy and, increasingly, the research design became interdisciplinary. Large quantities of archaeological material and other samples were taken to Auckland (in a railway wagon after the 1976 season), but there was no conservation infrastructure waiting to receive them. Waterlogged artefacts were put into temporary tanks while a conservation laboratory was built and equipped in the new Human
Plate 1.1 In 1975, Kohika was an inconspicuous, low-lying grassed mound in an area of agricultural swamp drainage. Plate 1.2 A whakanoa ceremony was conducted by Jack Fox, Romana Kingi, Mike Mason, Harry Reneti and Albert Te Rere, of the Ratana, Anglican, Catholic, Ringatu and Presbyterian churches respectively. The kaumatua placed the site and the artefacts into the interim care of the University of Auckland.
Plate 1.3 After the discovery of artefacts, the first investigations were undertaken by members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society. In this 1976 photograph are (from left) Dave White, Ken Moore and the late Anton van der Wouden. The spoil in the background was removed from the drain by a digging machine. Plate 1.4 The University of Auckland excavations of Area D during the season of January 1976.
An introduction to Kohika in historical and archaeological context 9
Sciences Building at the University of Auckland. Conservation took many years. The analysis (and re-analysis) of archaeological materials followed and many researchers were involved, as described in the following chapters. Several specialist studies were carried out in the late 1990s, and this full report was written from 2000. G. Irwin returned the Kohika artefacts to the Bay of Plenty in May 1998, accompanied by P. Ngaropo, representing a Ngati Awa hapu closely connected with Kohika. The taonga were first acknowledged at Te Umuhika Marae, Matata, before being formally welcomed in Whakatane by representatives of the several iwi of the region, the Bay of Plenty Regional Council, the Whakatane and District Historical Society and the Whakatane and District Museum and Gallery. The few remaining artefacts were returned to Whakatane in the care of P. Ngaropo in 1999. The final artefact, a pounamu adze, is to be presented to Ngati Awa together with a copy of this book. The Kohika Collection presented some complex ownership issues. Initially the landowner, P. Jessop, gave to the Whakatane and District Historical Society, the artefacts excavated by its members. When the Department of Anthropology at the University of Auckland took over direction of the project in 1975, the whole collection was placed in its interim care at a whakanoa ceremony by kaumatua representing local iwi and religious denominations. After its return, ownership of the collection was negotiated between Ngati Awa and the Whakatane and District Historical Society, who had been responsible for recovering the early part of the collection. The issues were resolved by the appointment of a board of trustees to manage the collection, comprising a majority of Ngati Awa representatives as well as a representative each from Ngati Tuwharetoa ki Kawerau and the Whakatane and District Historical Society, in recognition of their associations with the collection. The trustees have placed the Kohika Collection on loan to the Whakatane District Museum and Gallery. In June and July 2000, an exhibition entitled Kohika: a glimpse of life in a wetland pa near Matata, was held at Whakatane museum.
References Anon., 2000. Te Kohika: a glimpse of life in a wetland pa near Matata during the 1600s AD. Pamphlet prepared for the exhibition at Whakatane and District Museum and Gallery, Te Whare Taonga o te Rohe o Whakatane, 1 June–16 July, 2000. Bellwood, P.S., 1978. Archaeological research at Lake Mangakaware, Waikato, 1968–1970. New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No.9. Best, E., 1925. Tuhoe, the children of the mist. New Plymouth: The Polynesian Society. Coles, J. and B. Coles, 1996. Enlarging the past: the contribution of wetland archaeology. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Monograph Series No.11. Exeter: Short Run Press. Cowan, J., 1923. The New Zealand Wars: a history of the Maori campaigns and the pioneering period. Vol. II. Wellington: R.E. Owen, Government Printer. Fulton, R., 1921. An account of a supposed Maori sharpening stone. Transactions of the New Zealand Institute, 53:471–2. Gibbons, W.H., 1990. The Rangitaiki, 1890–1990: settlement and drainage on the Rangitaiki. Whakatane: Whakatane and District Historical Society. Grace, J. Te H., 1959. Tuwharetoa: the history of the Maori people in the Taupo district. Wellington: Reed. Grace, T.S., 1928. A pioneer missionary among the Maoris 1850–1879: being letters and journals of Thomas Samuel Grace. Edited by S.J. Brittan, G.F., C.W. and A.V. Grace. Palmerston North: Bennett. Grace, T.S., MS Papers 191, Mission work Taupo and Tauranga, 1850–73. Alexander Turnbull Library.
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Gudgeon, W.E., 1970. Te heke o Rangihouhiri. Whakatane: Whakatane and District Historical Society. Hayward, B.W., P.R. Moore and P. Bain, 1987. Prehistoric archaeological sites on Whale Island (Motuhora), Bay of Plenty. Tane, 32:73–86. Hunia, L.Te A., 1977. Tangi Putauaki: a Maori history of the Rangitaiki. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Irwin, G.J., 1975. The Kohika site, Bay of Plenty. Historical Review, 23:101–4. Jones, K.L., 1983. Pa in two western segments of the Waiotahi and Whakatane Valleys, Bay of Plenty. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter, 26:165–73. Jones, K.L., 1984. Archaeological investigations in Waiotahi Valley, Bay of Plenty, November 1981. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter, 27:109–18. Jones, K.L., 1986. Polynesian settlement and horticulture in two river catchments of the eastern North Island, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 8:5–31. Jones, K.L., 1991. Maori settlement and horticulture on Rangitaiki Plains, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 13:143–75. Kirch, P.V. and R.C. Green, 2000. Hawaiki, Ancestral Polynesia: an essay in historical anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Lawlor, I., 1979. Palaeoenvironment analysis: an appraisal of the prehistoric environment of the Kohika swamp pa (N68/140), Bay of Plenty. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Lawlor, I., 1983a. Rua Kumara o Kawerau. In S. Bulmer, G. Law and D. Sutton (eds), A lot of spadework to be done: essays in honour of Lady Aileen Fox. New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No.14, pp.212–48. Lawlor, I., 1983b. Maruka investigations, Kawerau, Bay of Plenty: Final Report for Stage IV. Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. London, H.D., 1960. A field day at Matata. Historical Review, 8:109–14. Mead, S.M., 1984. Te Maori: Maori art from New Zealand collections. Auckland: Heinemann. Moore, K.W., 1973. Archaeology at Whakatane, N.Z. Part 1. Historical Review, 21:113–22. Moore, K.W., 1974. Archaeology at Whakatane, N.Z. Part 2. Historical Review, 22:50–63. Moore, K.W., 1975. Kohika site, N68/140, Bay of Plenty: a preliminary report. Historical Review, 23:60–1. Moore, K.W., 1980a. Te tangata whenua, the early people of Te Teko. Historical Review, 28:63–7. Moore, K.W., 1980b. Place names of the Te Teko district. Historical Review, 28:68–71. Phillips, K., 1996. The archaeology of the eastern Bay of Plenty. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Pullar, W.A., 1985. Soils and land use of the Rangitaiki Plains, North Island, New Zealand. Lower Hutt: New Zealand Soil Bureau. Robley, H.G., MS Notebook, 1858–87. Alexander Turnbull Library. Robley, H.G., MS. Letters Robley to Mair, sketches, etc., 1898–1922. Alexander Turnbull Library. Shawcross, F.W., 1965. Report on archaeological investigations at Thornton, Whakatane, Bay of Plenty. Historical Review, 13:186–92. Shawcross, F.W., 1968. The Ngaroto site. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter, 11:2–29.
2
Kohika in the geomorphological context of the Rangitaiki Plains G.J. Irwin
The Rangitaiki Plains are geologically active and the inhabitants of Kohika lived in a landscape of frequent earthquake, volcanic eruption and flood.
Whakatane Graben
The Rangitaiki Plains are a lowland some 340 square kilometres in area. They stretch 22 kilometres along the Bay of Plenty coast between Matata and Whakatane and extend inland for a similar distance. The plains are part of the Whakatane Graben, which is located where the Taupo Volcanic Zone reaches the Bay of Plenty coast and intersects with the north–south-trending North Island Shear Belt (Nairn and Beanland 1989). Within the graben, which is bounded by north–south fault lines (Fig. 2.1), the plain has subsided and the surrounding hills have risen. The rate of subsidence is estimated to be 2–3 mm per year over the last 5000 years. As they have dropped, the plains have filled with sediments from the three large river catchments of the Rangitaiki, Tarawera and Whakatane rivers, and also from the Taupo and Okataina volcanic centres to the south. To put this in strict geological terms, Mesozoic basement rocks have downfaulted and the resulting basin infilled by Quaternary volcanics and sediments. Uplifting and tilting of the graben margins has accompanied subsidence of its floor (Nairn and Beanland 1989).
Faulting and earthquakes
Geological evidence of recent surface faulting has been largely obscured by the very young sediments, mainly of volcanic origin, that form the modern ground surface. The 1987 Edgecumbe earthquake occurred along two known pre-existing faults that had previously moved at some time after the AD 1350 Kaharoa eruption (Nairn and Beanland 1989). The 1987 earthquake also moved at three new surface traces that were presumed to overlie faults that had been concealed by sediments from both the Taupo eruption of c.AD 150 and the Kaharoa eruption. It appears that faulting has occurred independently at Matata and Edgecumbe, that is on the western and eastern sides of the graben respectively (Fig. 2.1), which suggests that the Rangitaiki Plains may experience moderate to severe shaking more often than if the two graben margins were to move at the same time (Ota et al. 1988). The study of a trench excavation across a fault at Matata revealed that the most recent earthquake occurred there after the Kaharoa Tephra and possibly during the last 250 years, according to radiocarbon dating (Ota et al. 1988). In fact, it transpired that this earthquake occurred during 11
12 Kohika
Figure 2.1 The geomorphology of the Rangitaiki Plains
the human occupation of Kohika, where its secondary faulting offsets could be more closely dated.
Volcanic eruptions and coastal progradation
About 7000 years ago the shoreline probably lay along the cliffs at Whakatane, Awakeri, Te Teko and Onepu (Pullar 1985). Since then it has prograded about 10 kilometres as the lowland has formed. From time to time the Bay of Plenty has been showered by volcanic tephra, and the plains have been formed largely from outwash of tephra by the Rangitaiki, Tarawera and Whakatane rivers (Pullar and Selby 1971). Thus, on the plains, tephra occurs both in airfall bands and as reworked alluvial sediments. A series of identified tephra has fallen on the plains over the last 5000 years or more and, as younger beds overlap the older, Pullar and Selby (1971:419) have ingeniously found that ‘a succession of possible shorelines of decreasing age could be plotted at successive points where each older ash disappears’. They regard the position on the ground where an airfall ash bed cuts out as a possible shoreline, whereas the position where sea-rafted pumice boulders occur is a probable shoreline. Coastal progradation evidently occurred in fits and starts and was rapid after each volcanic eruption.
Kohika in the geomorphological context of the Rangitaiki Plains 13
Volcanic ashes
The main tephra are the Whakatane Ash of c.5500 years BP, the Taupo Pumice of c.1850 years BP (Froggatt and Lowe 1990, Nairn and Beanland 1989), the Kaharoa Tephra of cal. 600 BP (Lowe et al. 1998), and the Tarawera Tephra of AD 1886. The three younger of these ashes have been identified at Kohika and the following descriptions of them as they occur on the plains are based on the extensive observations of Alan Pullar (Pullar and Selby 1971:423). The Taupo Ash is 10–13 cm thick. The grade is coarse ash and small vesicular lapilli. In peat swamps the colour is pale olive (5Y 6/3) becoming brownish-yellow where the swamp is drained (10YR 6/6). On dunes the bed is brown in colour (10YR 4/3). The Kaharoa Tephra is usually 10–15 cm thick. In peat swamps the bed is white ash (5Y 8/1) and is finely shower-bedded. On dune ridges the ash bed is masked by black topsoil and is difficult to identify. In dune swales the upper 5 cm is light yellowish-brown fine ash (2.5Y 6/4), and the lower 10 cm is darker (10YR 4/4). The Tarawera Tephra is often 2–7 cm thick but may be up to 12 cm in dune swales. In peat swamps the Tarawera is very dark greyish-brown (10YR 3/2); on dune ridges it is dark greyish-brown (2.5Y 4/2), becoming darker in the swales. The sea-rafted Taupo Pumice of c.AD 150 also occurs at Kohika and is of unique appearance for Holocene times, ‘a light yellowish-brown colour [with] coarse irregular gas cavities. It is easily broken and can be crushed in the hand’ (McFadgen 1994:196).
Landforms of the Rangitaiki Plains
These comprise coastal and inland dunes, back-swamp lowlands and peat swamps, natural levee systems of rivers and streams, and floodplains of largely mixed pumiceous alluvium with minor greywacke alluvium. Dunes
The dunes are linear, and stranded ones lie generally parallel to the coast (Fig. 2.2). The system has formed over some 7000 years as the coast has prograded. Much of the dune sand came from the ash beds that still mantle the uplands drained by the three rivers, while the dune surfaces have been created by long-shore drift from west to east (Pullar and Selby 1971). The dune system is well developed only at the Whakatane end of the plains and near Matata in the west. Near Kawerau, dunes reach a height of about 30 m above sea level but elsewhere, due to subsidence, have been found buried under peat some 3 m below sea level. The various dunes are dated by the particular tephra that lies on them. Those of the Taupo shoreline sometimes occur near sea level or they may be exposed up to 3–4.5 m above sea level, except at Matata where they are higher. Kohika was built on a remnant of the pre-Taupo shoreline that dates to approximately 2000 BP. Kaharoa and Tarawera shorelines lie closer to the sea than Kohika, parallel to the existing coast and higher in elevation. The destruction of vegetation following human settlement evidently caused the coastal dunes to be eroded and wind-blown during the 500 years bracketed between the Kaharoa and and Tarawera tephra (Pullar and Selby 1971). Rivers, plains and swamp
Three major rivers cross the plains. Several considerable streams join them as tributaries and these have formed fans where they emerge from the surrounding hills. Over time, the rivers have changed their courses and these can be traced from palaeo-channels across the floodplains. The rivers have also cut the stranded marine dunes that now
14 Kohika
Figure 2.2 Former shorelines and river courses on the Rangitaiki Plains
sometimes survive as discontinuous strips parallel to the coast and were sometimes islands in prehistory. The general pattern of rivers and streams that existed from the time of the Kaharoa eruption c.AD 1350 until swamp drainage began early in the 20th century is shown in Figure 2.2. The Rangitaiki had no mouth of its own and a major distributary, the Orini Stream, flowed east to join the Whakatane River at its mouth, while the Rangitaiki itself ran west behind the coastal sand dunes. The Awaiti Stream was another main distributary of the Rangitaiki; it flowed west towards Matata and joined the Awaiti Paku, a distributary stream of the Tarawera, on the way. The combined waters of the Awaiti, Awaiti Paku, Rangitaiki and Tarawera were called Te Awa o te Atua, which entered the sea at what is now the western end of Matata (Gibbons 1990). This common river mouth and estuary was influenced by a tidal regime, but was altered in modern times when direct cuts were made to the sea (Plates 2.1 and 2.2). The Rangitaiki and Tarawera rivers flow through floodplains built up by their own deposits of silt and tephra. In the past they frequently overflowed their banks and inundated surrounding land. Two main deposits shown in Figure 2.1 are of Taupo Pumice alluvium, closely associated with the Rangitaiki River and deposited after AD 150, and Kaharoa alluvium deposited after AD 1350. These are extensive areas over the surface of the plains (Nairn and Beanland 1989). Further areas of Tarawera Ash alluvium have been deposited since AD 1886. In addition, over time there have been frequent flood episodes that have locally redeposited pumiceous alluvium around the swamp. In the back-swamp lowlands, peat horizons formed on Taupo Pumice over much of the plains and again, in places, on ash from the Kaharoa and Tarawera eruptions, resulting in complex interbedding. The youngest deposits of the Rangitaiki Plains
Plate 2.1 The new mouth of the Tarawera River. The former course of the Rangitaiki River is at the left of the entrance and the former Te Awa o te Atua estuary, which carried the combined waters of the two rivers, lay to the right of the entrance and flowed west to Matata. The current road bridge is on the Kaharoa shoreline, and a short distance upstream is the junction of the Tarawera and the Awaiti Stream. Canal 109 runs inland from the Awaiti past the remains of Lake Kohika. Plate 2.2 Looking seawards, a canal and stopbank now separate Lake Kohika from the archaeological lake village, which formerly lay on its southwestern shore. The site itself is located on a remnant of sand-dune that dates from the coastline of 2000 years ago. The archaeological excavation can be seen at the end of the farmer’s cattle-race.
16 Kohika
are coastal sand dunes, levees and meander sediments associated with very recently or currently active floodplains (Nairn and Beanland 1989). In summary, the landscape of the Rangitaiki Plains has been formed by continuing processes of coastal progradation, land subsidence, alluvial infilling, swamp growth, and the formation of shallow freshwater lakes and ponds. All of these have been supplemented intermittently by airborne showers of tephra, and by earthquakes, and affected by frequent flooding. The final episode has been the near-complete drainage of the swamp in the early part of last century to create the rich agricultural landscape of today.
Soils and stratigraphy around the Kohika site
Dunes, back-swamps and floodplain deposits interfinger near the coast where rivers and streams converge and shallow freshwater lakes have formed. Figure 2.3 describes the soils in the vicinity of Kohika as taxonomic and physiographic units, as mapped and described in detail by A. Pullar on the basis of a large number of cores and examined sections (Pullar 1985). Several of these units were encountered during archaeological excavations at Kohika, and it is necessary to take account of the others to follow the geomorphological history of the area immediately surrounding the site. Soils of the dunes
Pki (Pikowai) sand occurs as recent wind-blown sands on the current foredunes with a very thin cover of Tarawera ash. Koe (Kopeopeo) soils are further inland on older stranded dunes and have Taupo and Kaharoa tephra (both rhyolitic) on wind-blown sand, with a thin cover of Tarawera (basaltic) tephra. The Kohika site has a natural core of Taupo-age dune. Soils of the former tidal flats
Muw (Muriwai) silt loams are weakly saline soils derived from mixed pumiceous and greywacke alluvium on former tidal flats now cut off from river estuaries. Soils of the present floodplains
Ran (Rangitaiki) soils consist of rapidly accumulating pumiceous alluvium deposited in former meander troughs of streams. The area of Ran shown in Figure 2.3 was deposited during floods in 1964. Ou (Opouriao) and Ori (Orini) fine sandy loams are from slowly accumulating pumiceous alluvium and found on the levees of rivers and their distributaries. Soils of the former floodplains
Ats (Awaiti) sandy loam is a recent soil with a thin cover of Tarawera Tephra on pumiceous alluvium derived from Kaharoa Tephra. Ome (Omehue) sandy loam and Omp (Omehue) sandy loam on peat are poorly drained gley soils from fine pumiceous alluvium derived from Kaharoa Tephra with a thin cover of Tarawera Tephra. Onc (Omehue) coarse sandy loam is another poorly drained gley soil with a thin cover of Tarawera Tephra over layered pumiceous Kaharoa alluvium (reworked tephra), on a sub-surface of sand and gravels and with occasional thin layers of diatomaceous earth.
Kohika in the geomorphological context of the Rangitaiki Plains 17
Soils of the back-swamp lowlands
Ag (Awakaponga) silt loam and Agp (Awakaponga) silt loam on peat are recent soils from silty pumiceous rhyolitic alluvium. Pr (Paroa) silt loam and Prp (Paroa) silt loam on peat are poorly drained gley soils from very fine pumiceous alluvium. Soils of the peaty swamps
Awi (Awakeri) sandy loam on peat is a poorly drained gley soil with a clearly layered profile of Tarawera and Kaharoa tephra, peat, silts, pumiceous alluvium underlain by (dune) sand derived from Taupo Pumice. There are sharp discontinuities. Mtk (Matuku) silt loam is a poorly drained gley soil consisting of layered materials, including diatomaceous earth which has formed in freshwater lakes, peat and pumice alluvium, with a very thin cover of Tarawera Tephra. Aro (Awaroa) soils are organic and formed from peat with a thin cover of basaltic ash. Soil profiles in the Rangitaiki Plain show that there was rapid infilling immediately after the Kaharoa eruption and there are no buried soil horizons from this time. However, intermittent infilling since about 400 years BP is indicated by buried palaeosols. The peat that has grown near Kohika is mainly sedge formed from Baumea spp. There are patches of diatomaceous earth, which can form during the open-water stage of bog development. Diatoms increase markedly following rhyolitic volcanic eruptions such as the Kaharoa (Pullar 1985:36), and have been identified at Kohika. Shallow freshwater lakes were a feature of the floodplain around the site.
Summary of the geological situation of Kohika
• The site is on a low island remnant of the 2000 BP shoreline dune that rises above
Figure 2.3 Soils of the Rangitaiki Plains in the vicinity of Kohika (after Pullar 1985)
18 Kohika
lake level. Archaeological correlations of stratigraphy between different areas of excavation around the edge of the mound are supported by the natural swamp stratigraphy, which includes three distinctive tephra beds separated by silts, peat and diatomaceous earth, and in the upper deposits by palaeosols. • A band of cultural material occurs in the peat between the Kaharoa Tephra of cal. AD 1350 and the Tarawera Tephra of AD 1886. A greater depth of peat lay below the archaeological site than above it, indicating that occupation was in the later part of the deposit. This will be supported by radiocarbon evidence in Chapter 5. Moreover, the peat above the cultural deposit was sterile, indicating the absence of occupation for a period prior to the Tarawera Tephra. Further soils developed in the swamp above the Tarawera. • Neither the Taupo nor the Kaharoa tephra remains intact on the mound itself, although each forms components of the soil there. This is also true of the Tarawera Ash which lies like a continuous tidemark around the mound but which, everywhere above this, has been mixed into the soil. Evidently the dune at Kohika was gardened both before the lake village was occupied and after it was abandoned. • Evidence for substantial occupation ends with the arrival of bands of pumiceous alluvium and silt, derived mainly from reworked Kaharoa Tephra, which represent a local flood around parts of the site exposed to floodwaters from the Tarawera River. Parts of the shallow lake edge suddenly filled and it was no longer easy to reach the island by canoe. • Core samples around Lake Kohika, both by A. Pullar and the University of Auckland, show that the lake was more extensive than today (Lawlor 1979, Figs 3.1 and 3.2). However, this has to be seen as the result of modern drainage as well as prehistoric infilling. • Finally, there is evidence that an earthquake occurred while people were living at Kohika and that this event relates to the Matata Fault nearby (Ota et al. 1988). This account has described mainly the natural stratigraphy. The complex interplay of natural and cultural stratigraphy will be unravelled in Chapter 4.
Climate
The following information is compiled from Aldridge (1985), Jones (1991) and the New Zealand Meteorological Service (n.d.). The Rangitaiki Plains are today noted for their sunny climate. The duration of sunshine hours is among the highest in the North Island and the mean daily maximum temperature in January is 25.5 degrees Celsius at Kawerau and 25.3 degrees at Te Teko. Plant growing days above 10 and 15 degrees Celsius show the area to be warmer than much of the North Island. The mean annual rainfall is 1304 mm on the coast at Whakatane. The number of days with rainfall equal to or greater than 1.0 mm averages ten per month from May to October and eight per month from November to April. Heavy rainfall is associated with the passage of cyclonic systems from the north and northeast in summer. Other rainfall follows the usual pattern of frontal passages. Frost-free days (screen frosts) average 328 per year. While frosts are expected every year, between 1948 and 1975 the earliest frost day recorded at Whakatane was 5 May and the latest 10 September. The average yearly incidence of ground frost is 24 at Te Teko on the plains away from the Rangitaiki River levee, 24 at Edgecumbe on the Rangitaiki levee, and 15 at Whakatane (Jones 1991). Whatever differences may exist between the present and the time when people were living at Kohika, the climate was certainly favourable.
Kohika in the geomorphological context of the Rangitaiki Plains 19
A brief historical observation about vegetation
According to Pullar (1985:6), at the time of European settlement swampland west of the Rangitaiki River was densely covered with raupo and rushes. Cabbage trees flourished on natural levees of rivers and streams with kahikatea, titoki, toetoe and flax on the back-swamp lowlands. On the coastal dunes there was manuka, bracken fern and mingimingi while small teatree and cabbage trees grew on the inland dunes. Clearly, this landscape was transformed by Maori and influenced by volcanic eruption. Buried stumps show that totara grew in the Omeheu locality (inland from Kohika) before the Kaharoa eruption and soil profiles on inland dunes suggest that podocarp forest flourished before the Taupo eruption. Some waterlogged tree-trunks survive in the dune at Kohika. A detailed account of vegetation history follows in the next chapter.
References Aldridge, R., 1985. Climate. In W.A. Pullar, Soils and land use of the Rangitaiki Plains, North Island, New Zealand. Lower Hutt: New Zealand Soil Bureau, pp.9–10. Froggatt, P.C. and D.J. Lowe, 1990. A review of late Quaternary silicic and some other tephra formations from New Zealand: their stratigraphy, nomenclature, distribution, volume, and age. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 33:89–109. Gibbons, W.H., 1990. The Rangitaiki, 1890–1990: settlement and drainage on the Rangitaiki. Whakatane: Whakatane and District Historical Society. Jones, K.L., 1991. Maori settlement and horticulture on the Rangitaiki Plains, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 13:143–75. Lawlor, I., 1979. Palaeoenvironment analysis: an appraisal of the prehistoric environment of the Kohika swamp pa (N68/140), Bay of Plenty. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Lowe, D.J., B.G. McFadgen, T.F.G. Higham, A.G. Hogg, P.C. Froggatt and I.A. Nairn, 1998. Radiocarbon age of the Kaharoa Tephra, a key marker for late-Holocene stratigraphy and archaeology in New Zealand. The Holocene, 8:487–95. McFadgen, B.G., 1994. Coastal stratigraphic evidence for human settlement. In D.G. Sutton (ed.), The origins of the first New Zealanders. Auckland: Auckland University Press, pp.195–207. Nairn, I.A. and S. Beanland, 1989. Geological setting of the 1987 Edgecumbe earthquake, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 32:1–13. New Zealand Meteorological Service, n.d., Summaries of climatological observations to 1980. New Zealand Meteorological Service Miscellaneous Publication No.177. Ota, Y., S. Beanland, K.R. Berryman and I.A. Nairn, 1988. The Matata Fault: active faulting at the north-western margin of the Whakatane Graben, eastern Bay of Plenty. New Zealand Geological Survey Record, 35:6–13. Pullar, W.A., 1985. Soils and land use of the Rangitaiki Plains, North Island, New Zealand. Lower Hutt: New Zealand Soil Bureau. Pullar, W.A. and M.J. Selby, 1971. Coastal progradation of Rangitaiki Plains, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Science, 14:419–34.
3
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty M.S. McGlone and K.L. Jones
Figure 3.1 The Bay of Plenty lowlands with pollen sites underlined
The coastline of the Bay of Plenty forms a great bight, opening north and northeast towards the central Pacific, creating a natural landfall for voyagers from the tropics (Fig. 3.1). It enjoys a warm, mild, moist climate and has light, fertile soils, ideal for horticulture. Migrants from northern latitudes in prehistoric times are likely to have established some of their first settlements in this region, as traditions about canoe landing-places at Whangaparaoa imply. The Bay of Plenty coast is therefore central to our understanding of the settlement process. This chapter looks in detail at the vegetation history of the Kohika swamp, and some other sites in the surrounding region, in order to reconstruct the original vegetation that would have confronted those first settlers, to date the beginning of human influences, and to chart the profound effects of Maori settlement on the local environments. Intense human use has destroyed or disrupted nearly all of the original vegetation cover in the lowland coastal Bay of Plenty and similar areas throughout the country. Only where rugged hill country comes down to the coast does substantial undisturbed vegetation remain, as in the steep coastal country of the eastern Bay of Plenty (Nicholls
20
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 21
1971). While remnant stands of coastal vegetation give some picture of previous vegetation cover, they are often themselves modified (Jones and Moore 1985) and unlikely to represent the full range of original coastal communities. Palaeoecological investigations are therefore an essential aspect of archaeological studies in which reconstruction of original vegetation is important. Organic sediments formed over thousands of years in wetlands preserve abundant pollen and spores which, when extracted and characterised, permit construction of detailed vegetation histories. Analysis of the pollen and spore content of peats and muds in wetland profiles from throughout New Zealand has given comprehensive insights into the unmodified environment, the timing of the Polynesian environmental impact, and the subsequent changes to vegetation resulting from settlement (McGlone 1983a, McGlone and Wilmshurst 1999, Newnham et al. 1998). The Bay of Plenty lies in a major zone of active volcanism. Three tephra layers – the Tarawera, Kaharoa and Taupo – are commonly found in the upper sediments of deposits throughout the region, thus providing an excellent chronology for palynology. These tephra falls have also had a profound impact on the vegetation. In this chapter we present the full pollen analysis of the Kohika pa site (abbreviated versions have been published previously), new analyses of two other lowland coastal Bay of Plenty wetland sites (Thornton and Tunapahore), and discuss the environmental history of the Bay of Plenty coastal zone in relation to Maori settlement.
Methods
Most pollen samples were taken directly from cleaned faces of excavation units, although the lower section of the Kohika site was sampled with a Hiller corer. Standard palynological preparation techniques were used (Moore et al. 1991): disaggregation in potassium hydroxide, wet sieving, digestion in 40 per cent hydrofluoric acid, acetolysis, bleach where needed to remove resistant lignin fragments, and mounting in glycerine jelly. Pollen results are presented as relative percentages of varying pollen sums. A terrestrial pollen sum is used for all dryland plants, which excludes tree ferns and all ground ferns (except for bracken, which is treated as a shrub because of its ecological behaviour). Tree ferns are expressed as a percentage of a terrestrial pollen sum that includes tree ferns. Wetland and aquatic taxa are expressed as a percentage of total pollen and spores. Note that Leptospermum type (Leptospermum scoparium and Kunzea ericoides) is not included as a terrestrial pollen type, as it has poorly dispersed pollen and is likely to have been derived mainly from manuka (Leptospermum scoparium) growing on peaty wetland soils. Nothofagus subgenus Fuscospora includes all Nothofagus spp. with the exception of N. menziesii. Charcoal counts were made by a grid point technique (Clark 1982) in which eleven points per field of view are scored for presence or absence of charcoal at the same time as the pollen count. Counts are expressed as percentages of the terrestrial pollen sum.
Site locations, stratigraphy and chronology Rangitaiki Plains: Kohika Pa archaeological site (Figs 3.1 and 3.2)
As the Rangitaiki Plains are intensively farmed, no unmodified natural vegetation remains. At the time of first European settlement, swampland to the west of the Rangitaiki River was densely covered with raupo and rushes (Pullar 1985). Sufficient flax (Phormium tenax) was present in this area to support a flax mill at Matata. Ti
22 Kohika
Figure 3.2 Pollen site stratigraphy: Kohika pollen site (excavation Square D17), Tunapahore archaeological site complex and ThorntonAtkinson archaeological site
(Cordyline australis) and manuka (Leptospermum scoparium) grew on the natural river and stream levees, and kahikatea (Dacrycarpus dacrydioides), titoki (Alectryon excelsus), toetoe (Cortaderia) and flax on back-swamps. Bracken (Pteridium esculentum), mingimingi (Leucopogon fasciculatus) and manuka grew on the coastal dunes. Subsurface diatomaceous earth – mainly immediately postdating the Kaharoa Tephra – occurs on the floodplains of the Rangitaiki and Tarawera rivers between Thornton and Matata, indicating the presence of shallow lakes of clear, fresh water (Pullar 1985). Several small lagoons ringed by raupo (Typha orientalis) and willow (Salix spp.) persist close to Kohika. The location of the pollen site (Square D17) is shown in Figure 4.13 (below). The peat was sampled by digging a hole 1.5 m square to a depth of 2.2 m and then coring with a Hiller peat corer a further 1.3 m to the underlying sand dune. Total sediment depth from the base of the Tarawera Ash (datum for all measurements) to the surface of the buried sand dune is 3.3 m. The pollen site stratigraphy (Fig. 3.2) relies for its chronology on the three included tephra layers and seven radiocarbon dates (Table 3.1). The site is capped by the Tarawera Tephra of AD 1886. Two radiocarbon dates in the underlying peat of 353 ± 57 BP and 535 ± 57 BP indicate typical swamp accumulation rates of 1–2 mm per year. The three radiocarbon dates from this site bracketing the Kaharoa Tephra have a reversed stratigraphy. NZ4804 (656 ± 57 BP) is from organic muds immediately below the Kaharoa, and NZ4803 (678 ± 75 BP) on a diatomaceous organic silt immediately above it. NZ4802 (729 ± 58 BP) is from a grey, largely inorganic fine silt, 22 cm
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 23
above the Kaharoa Tephra. The two dates bracketing the Kaharoa Tephra are statistically indistinguishable. NZ4802 is 63 years older than NZ4804, but still within one standard error. NZ4804 is no more than 10 radiocarbon years different from the established age of the Kaharoa Tephra of 665 ± 17 BP, or c.AD 1350 when calibrated, based on 22 screened dates over its entire distribution (Lowe and Hogg 1992) and is almost certainly correct. However, swamps are particularly prone to contamination by old organic material washed in to the lakes after forest clearance (McGlone and Wilmshurst 1999), and it is clear from NZ4801 that there was very rapid accumulation (c.5 mm per year) of silt-rich sediments after the deposition of the Kaharoa Tephra. Therefore, as there is a high probability that NZ4803 and NZ4802 are based on sediments contaminated with old organic material incorporated during deposition, they will be ignored in subsequent discussion. On the basis of NZ4805 and NZ4806, organic sedimentation was a moderate 1–2 mm per year- in the years leading up to the Kaharoa Tephra eruption, but rapid in the silt-rich sediments following the Taupo Tephra (c.5 mm year). Table 3.1
Radiocarbon dates, Kohika pollen site (Square D17)
C14 age (conventional) 353 ± 57 535 ± 57 729 ± 58 678 ± 75 656 ± 57 1365 ± 75 1605 ± 65
Depth below datum (cm) 45–50 65–69 105–110 130–132 (immediately above Kaharoa Tephra) 145–146 (immediately below Kaharoa Tephra) 180–182 220–222
Material peat peat weakly organic silt diatomaceous silt
Radiocarbon number NZ4800 NZ4801 NZ4802 NZ4803
lake mud
NZ4804
fine peat fine peat
NZ4805 NZ4806
Rangitaiki Plains: Thornton-Atkinson archaeological site complex
The Thornton-Atkinson archaeological site (W15/121) is on the inland side of a preTaupo sand dune on the Rangitaiki flood plain, some ten kilometres west of Whakatane (Fig. 3.1). The crests of these dunes are mantled with ash soils that are easily disturbed, mobilising loose sand that can drift down the dune faces. The site consisted of a surface scatter of shell and blackened soils underlain by pits cut through the ash soils of the crest of the dune. A C14 date for shell in one of the pits has a date of 595 ± 50 yrs BP (NZ7543) with a marine calibration of cal. AD 1553–1860 at the 2 sigma limit (Jones 1991:153–9). The pre-European settlement vegetation at this site was similar to that at Kohika. The pollen profile is in a section in a drainage ditch south of the dune crest and close to the Rangitaiki River cut. The sediment profile (Fig. 3.2) is undated, but postdates the Taupo Tephra. Tephra within the profile is lensed with sand and has therefore been reworked from tephra deposits within the dune sand. Hawai Bay: Tunapahore archaeological site complex
Hawai Bay lies 20 kilometres east of Opotoki (Fig. 3.1). The coastal lowlands are only 800 m wide and consist of partly dissected tephra-covered uplifted marine terraces backed by steep hills. Immediately west of the two pollen profiles is an area of terraces. The area was heavily used by Maori in pre-European times and there are at least ten pa around the bay.
24 Kohika
Two sites were sampled for pollen (Fig. 3.2). Tunapahore A is from a drainage ditch through a swampy area immediately inland of the beach ridge and 150 m from high-water mark. Tunapahore B is at the toe of the slope of a terrace and is close to a now-destroyed swamp pa (X15/105). It is at the extreme inland margin of the same gleyed silt and peat deposit as Tunapahore A, 200 m distant. Tunapahore A contains airfall Kaharoa Tephra but is otherwise undated because of the unsuitable weakly organic clay silts that make up most of the section. Tunapahore B has water-laid Taupo Tephra (absent in Tunapahore A) at the base overlying a yellow-brown pumice-rich soil (Whakatane Hill Soil). A date of 1252 ± 87 BP (NZA3485) on a grey pumice-rich silt immediately above the tephra confirms the identification. From the 65 cm level in the profile, macroscopic charcoal fragments occur in a grey silt matrix and probably derive from reworking from the slopes of the nearby terraces. A discrete lens of grey tephra at the 60 cm level surrounded by charcoal-rich silt dating to 781 ± 69 yrs BP (NZA3479) gives a maximum age for the start of charcoal influx. The base of a mottled dark grey silt at 40 cm yielded a date of 1824 ± 142 yrs BP (NZA3484) that is nearly identical with the standard date of 1850 ± 20 BP for the Taupo Tephra (Froggatt and Lowe 1990). It is apparent that charcoal associated with the deposition of Taupo Tephra has been reworked into the profile at a much later date.
Pollen stratigraphy
The pollen diagrams are zoned on the basis of changes in pollen and spore occurrences, for convenience of description and discussion. Kohika Pa (Figs 3.3a–d)
Zone KO-1: immediately before Taupo Tephra; 1850 yrs BP
This zone is dominated by local swamp shrubs and trees, most notably Leptospermum cf. scoparium, Coprosma (probably small-leaved shrubs such as C. propinqua), Myrsine cf. divaricata and Elaeocarpus cf. hookerianus (pokaka). Wood fragments within the sandy peat at this level indicate that shrubs were growing directly on the site. There are indications of well-drained sandy soils within the developing swamp/dune complex: Paesia scaberula (hard fern) characterises open dryland sites and is abundant in this zone; Phyllocladus cf. trichomanoides (probably tanekaha) and increasing Metrosideros (rata type) point to the presence of a coastal forest. Zone KO-2: 1850–1600 yrs BP
Interpretation of this zone is complicated by the eruption of the Taupo Tephra and subsequent in-wash of pumice from the Rangitaiki River system. The Rangitaiki River headwaters drain the beech-clad (Nothofagus) axial ranges of the east central North Island, an area partly covered with Taupo ignimbrite deposits and totally blanketed with thick volcanic tephra fall (Wilson and Walker 1985). Two discrete lenses of silt at this location above the Taupo Tephra are accompanied by high levels of microscopic charcoal fragments of Fuscospora (Nothofagus subgenus Fuscospora, including all but N. menziesii of the New Zealand species) and Cyathea smithii-type tree-fern spores. The first lens of silt has much higher levels of these elements than the second. Bracken spores increase during the first silt episode, peak between the silts, and decline abruptly above the second silt. Grass and tutu (Coriaria spp.) percentages rise between the two silts, both peaking in the second silt, with grass continuing on in significant amounts to the end of the zone. The most likely interpretation is that the Fuscospora charcoal
Figure 3.3a Kohika, percentage pollen diagram
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 25
Figure 3.3b Kohika, percentage pollen diagram
26 Kohika
Figure 3.3c Kohika, percentage pollen diagram
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 27
Figure 3.3d Kohika, percentage pollen diagram
28 Kohika
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 29
and Cyathea smithii-type spores have in-washed with the silt, and most probably came from the extensive Taupo Formation pumice deposits in the Rangitaiki River headwaters. Neither the Fuscospora charcoal nor the Cyathea spores are highly corroded, suggesting that they are mainly contemporaneous with the tephra rather than reworked from older soils. Bracken covered extensive areas of the central North Island after the Taupo Tephra eruption (Wilmshurst and McGlone 1996), and it is not clear whether the bracken is derived from this source or from local stands induced by damage to the forest through airfall tephra and alluvium deposition. The local swamp flora reacted to the influx of silt during this zone. Raupo and sedge increase throughout the silty bottom half of the zone, and the aquatics Myriophyllum and Potamogeton peak with them immediately after the second silt. Muehlenbeckia, Rubus and Leucopogon fasciculatus are common also in the basal silty sediments. The increase in these scrubby dryland elements suggests that the influx of silt provided a suitable substrate for a limited time, while flooding and nutrientenrichment through silt deposition favoured aquatics, raupo and tall sedges. The zone terminates with increased levels of manuka, Coprosma, flax and the swamp fern kiokio (Blechnum novae-zelandiae type), suggesting a reversion to flax swamp or shrubland. There is little convincing evidence that the extra-local pollen rain, largely from tree conifers growing on the floodplain and the surrounding hills, was affected by the Taupo eruption. The influx of Taupo Formation sediments was probably accompanied by further progradation of the coast and rapid shifts in the courses of the Tarawera and Rangitaiki river distributaries. Zone KO-3: 1600–1300 yrs BP
This zone represents a period of prolonged stability during which a flax-dominated swamp, interfingered with manuka and Coprosma shrubland, occupied the site. Dune ridges and levees throughout the swamp complex must have had forest cover. Kahikatea, totara (Podocarpus totara), tanekaha (Phyllocladus trichomanoides), pahautea (Libocedrus plumosa), pukatea (Laurelia novae-zelandiae), rata trees and vines (Metrosideros spp.), rewarewa (Knightia excelsa), Pittosporum and pokaka (Elaeocarpus hookerianus) all have pollen percentages that are consistent with their being present in the swamp complex. Zone KO-4: 1300–660 yrs BP
Closely spaced sampling of the profile was carried out in this and the next zone in order to locate the first signs of possible disturbance to the vegetation. Sedge, raupo, ground ferns (monolete fern spores) and Myriophyllum all peak or are more common within this zone than in the last, while wetland shrubs are less common, suggesting higher water levels in the swamp. The fine structureless peats which include a band of lacustrine organic silt in these two zones are typical of sediments laid down under open water. Grass pollen is consistently present in low amounts, peaking immediately beneath the Kaharoa Tephra, as does bracken at three per cent of the pollen sum, but there is no charcoal. Therefore, other than changes resulting from higher water levels, there is only slight evidence for disturbance. Zone KO-5: 660–615 yrs BP
The Kaharoa Tephra erupted from the Okataina complex 40 kilometres to the west and fell at the site, and the tephra-derived sediments of this zone are in-wash from the Tarawera River catchment. The zone is estimated from accumulation rates to be 45 years or more in duration. The wetland types within it undergo a distinct succession
30 Kohika
in which raupo is followed by sedges, ground ferns and swamp kiokio. The wetland scrub types manuka and Myrsine follow a U-shaped pattern in that they are abundant in the first sample immediately above the Kaharoa, decline, and then recover by the zone end. A similar pattern is seen in the trees rata, tanekaha and pahautea. Charcoal and bracken are not at high levels initially, but rise abruptly towards the upper boundary. At this point all tree types plunge to low levels. Most affected are totara, kahikatea, kauri (Agathis australis), pahautea, maire (Nestegis spp.) and hutu (Ascarina lucida), which suggests that fires swept through the lowland forest. The sequences immediately following the Kaharoa Tephra reflect the response of the swamp community to flooding and the increased nutrient influx in the first few years following the tephra deposition, then recovery of the woody swamp vegetation. While swamp herb successions can occur within a few years or less, this is not so with tall swamp scrub and trees. This pattern of decline and recovery of scrub and slow-growing trees suggests that at least 50 years elapsed between the Kaharoa Tephra and the beginning of full-scale deforestation. Major fire impact therefore probably occurred at around 600 BP. Zone KO-6: 615–350 yrs BP
This zone documents the full impact of fire on the Kohika wetlands. Bracken percentages peak at over 80 per cent of the terrestrial pollen sum at the beginning of the zone, but decline gradually to c.50 per cent at the top, mainly as a consequence of increasing grass and tutu percentages. Charcoal levels rise steeply, increasing throughout the zone. Seral woody plants including wineberry (Aristotelia serrata) and Hebe are present throughout, and rewarewa (Knightia excelsa) and kamahi (Weinmannia racemosa) are consistently recorded. The swamp vegetation indicates wetter conditions; aquatics Myriophyllum and Potamogeton are abundant, as are the tall jointed rush, oioi (Leptocarpus similis), raupo and sedges. Flax is less well represented in the pollen rain but, as it is normally greatly underrepresented in the pollen rain, it would still have been important in the swamp vegetation. Swamp shrubs manuka and Coprosma clearly played a less important role, but were still present as substantial stands close to the site. Maori presence is indicated late in this zone by the presence of dog bones, wooden implements, stone, bracken fibre, gourds, shell and wood chips, all of which would have been discarded into the surrounding swamp by the inhabitants. [Editorial note. Nowhere else in the 120 square metres of excavations in Area D were cultural materials found at this level; they were consistently higher. While it is possible that they were trodden down in prehistory – because this part of the soft lakeshore was a busy place – it is almost certain that most of the treadage occurred during the pollen sampling itself. The 1.5 m pit of D17 was the only part of Area D not excavated archaeologically. Boards to protect the soft deposit were not used, and any items in the peat would be carried down underfoot. However, it is important to note that the samples for pollen, sediment and C14 were taken from the sides of D17, not from the floor, and their integrity is not in question.] Zone KO-7: 350 yrs BP–1886 AD
The sediment changes to raupo peat and the wetland pollen are dominated by raupo. Swamp scrub taxa are at very low levels and bracken percentages fall steeply. In the sample immediately below the Tarawera Tephra, introduced plants including willow appear. No Maori artefacts or midden material were recovered from the raupo-rich peat above the 35 cm level, suggesting that the pa was abandoned during this zone. Sand and silt bands occur immediately above this level.
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 31
Thornton-Atkinson archaeological complex (Figs 3.4a–b)
Zone TH-1
High percentages of manuka, Coprosma, bracken and charcoal fragments, the presence of sedge and peat and the low occurrences of tree types all indicate a fire-affected, scrub-covered swamp in a largely deforested bracken-covered landscape. Zone TH-2
Coprosma and manuka decline; bracken, grass and tutu increase, while the range and abundance of tree types decline, showing increased fire pressure. Sporadic high percentages of Potamogeton, Haloragis and corroded tree-fern spores and charcoalrich silts all indicate that the swamp was subject to continuing in-wash of alluvial material after fire and in-wash as a consequence of human activities, including disturbance of neighbouring dune soils. The pollen profile is probably late (after 400 BP) in the pre-European sequence. Tunapahore A (Fig. 3.5)
There is insufficient significant change to zone this site. The silty sediments and high levels of Myriophyllum show this to have been a pond or very wet swamp behind a recently formed (possibly post-Taupo Tephra) dune crest. Rarely recorded pollen types, ngaio (Myoporum laetum) and kohekohe (Dysoxylum spectabile), along with hutu, Dodonaea viscosa, tanekaha, Myrsine and rata, place the site in scrubby coastal forest. High percentages of Fuscospora and podocarp trees reflect pollen transport from the steep surrounding hills that are in forests of beech, rimu (Dacrydium cupressinum) and tawa (Beilschmiedia tawa). Rata and kahikatea fall to low levels and tanekaha and tree ferns increase after the fall of the Kaharoa Tephra, which suggests that there may have been some temporary damage to coastal forest, but no major disruption. Tunapahore B (Figs 3.6a–b)
Zone TB-1: before and during the Taupo Tephra deposition, 1850 BP
This zone has a close resemblance to Tunapahore A, except that ngaio and kohekohe are absent, podocarp trees, tree ferns and hutu more abundant and Fuscospora much less common. As the site is closer to the terrace scarp and at the edge of the swamp, it is likely to have been beyond the coastal scrub-forest zone and within the margin of taller coastal conifer-dominant forest. Zone TB-2: 1850 BP to beginning of Maori clearance
All forest and scrub pollen types are at very low percentages in the sample immediately overlying the Taupo Tephra, with the exception of Fuscospora, and bracken, grass, tutu and charcoal fragments are abundant. The tephra fall was presumably accompanied by extensive damage to the coastal forest and subsequent fire that resulted in dense bracken, grass and tutu on the coastal strip (Wilmshurst and McGlone 1996). The sediments higher in the sequence show progressive recovery through a hutu–Dodonea seral phase to a forest type similar to that before the eruption, but with more kahikatea and totara than previously. At 60 cm there is a further disruption through fire that did not affect the forest as severely, but induced reworking of tephra into the swamp and was accompanied by flooding and a temporary abundance of raupo. Charcoal associated with the tephra layer dates to c.780 BP, but this must be taken as a maximum age as there is a likelihood of the charcoal being derived from wood decades to centuries older. The uppermost sample in the zone shows undisturbed forest once more.
Figure 3.4a Thornton-Atkinson complex, percentage pollen diagram
32 Kohika
Figure 3.4b Thornton-Atkinson complex, percentage pollen diagram
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 33
Figure 3.5 Tunapahore A, percentage pollen diagram
Figure 3.6a Tunapahore B, percentage pollen diagram
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 35
Figure 3.6b Tunapahore B, percentage pollen diagram
36 Kohika
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 37
Zone TB-3: Maori clearance (maximum age: 780 BP)
All forest and scrub pollen types are at low percentages in these two samples and bracken, grass and charcoal fragment percentages are high, indicating destruction of forest in the coastal strip. Increased flooding and nutrient enrichment of the swamp are shown by high levels of raupo. The date of first Maori clearance is problematic, as discussed below.
Prehistoric vegetation of the Bay of Plenty coast
The natural vegetation of the lowland Bay of Plenty has been removed from a wide crescent extending from Waihi in the northwest to the Motu River in the east, and up to 20 kilometres from the coast. In the western and central Bay of Plenty the forest that remains has been extensively logged and much is second-growth broad-leaved bush (Nicholls 1974a, 1974b). Only west of the Motu River do largely unmodified forests extend nearly to the coast. From extant western forest tracts and the pollen results presented here and in Giles et al. (1999) and Newnham et al. (1995), the prehistoric lowland forest consisted for the large part of conifer/broad-leaved associations in which matai (Prumnopitys taxifolia), rimu, miro (Prumnopitys ferruginea) and kahikatea formed a conifer overstorey above a canopy of tawa, hinau (Elaeocarpus dentatus), maire, rewarewa, kamahi and northern rata (Metrosideros robusta). A large range of broad-leaved trees and shrubs also occurred in these forests. Where the forest structure was disturbed, rewarewa, tanekaha, kanuka and kamahi often formed a low forest as part of the pathway back to tall conifer forest. Tree ferns were abundant throughout. Within a few kilometres of the coast a number of tree and shrub species became more prominent, including kohekohe, pukatea, pohutukawa (Metrosideros excelsa), ngaio and Dodonaea viscosa. Wetlands covered much of the Rangitaiki Plains and the Maketu Basin (Campbell et al. 1973, Newnham et al. 1995). Movement of alluvium in river channels and river levees, and migrating sand-dunes associated with episodic coastal progradation created a dynamic, diverse topography. Raised bogs were common and dominated by jointed rushes, wirerush (Empodisma minus) and Sporodanthus, nearly always in association with a manuka shrubby cover (Campbell et al. 1973). Drier peats tended to be formed by Gleichenia fern and manuka. Swampy wetlands were characterised by the tall sedge Baumea complanata, flax, raupo and toetoe. At Kohika, the abundance of tanekaha, Metrosideros, manuka, Coprosma, kahikawaka, pukatea, kahikatea and totara suggests that a diverse scrub and forest grew on levees and sand-dunes within the swamp complex, and identification of pukatea and kahikatea macro-remains from peats further inland on the southeastern Rangitaiki plains (Campbell et al. 1973) confirms their local presence. The swamp areas at Tunapahore represent poorly drained clearings within dense coastal forest and appear to have had a scrub/sedge cover. The range of some species appears to have changed markedly since human occupation. Kohika differs from other lowland Bay of Plenty sites in having a significant presence of kauri and pahautea pollen. The nearest extant occurrences of kauri are on the Mamaku Plateau, just north of Lake Rotorua (60 kilometres distant), and Te Puke (40 kilometres distant) (Nicholls 1974a). Kauri pollen is consistently present throughout zones KO-2 to KO-5, at levels of 0.5–4.0 per cent. These percentages are similar to those for kauri from lakes in the Hamilton Basin (Newnham et al. 1989) and in the northern Bay of Plenty (Newnham et al. 1995), both areas within its current range. On the other hand, kauri pollen is recorded at 20–40 per cent in pre-Kaharoa sediments on Matakana Island, 80 kilometres northwards along the coast (Giles et al. 1999). It
38 Kohika
is likely that stands of kauri forest grew south of its current range within the Tarawera River catchment close to the Kohika site, although wind transport of pollen from the north cannot be definitively ruled out. Pahautea is now sporadic in the Bay of Plenty and its pollen is absent at all other Bay of Plenty pollen sites (Giles et al. 1999, McGlone 1983b, Newnham et al. 1995). However, it was once an important component of the lowland floodplain forest community at Kohika. Hutu is now rare in the Bay of Plenty, being recorded at only a few sites in forest-covered broken hill country behind Whakatane and Opotoki at altitudes between 150 and 650 m. Hutu is consistently recorded at low percentages in the western Bay of Plenty (Giles et al. 1999, Newnham et al. 1995) and at Kohika, but, as this small tree is wind-pollinated, this pollen could derive from long-distance dispersal. However, at Tunapahore the levels of hutu encountered (up to 15 per cent) indicate local occurrence. The mild, drought-free conditions most favoured by this species (McGlone and Moar 1977) were evidently best met in sheltered coastal sites backed closely by hills.
Volcanic disturbance and fire
The Taupo Pumice and the Kaharoa Tephra occur in sites throughout the Bay of Plenty, including Kohika, Tunapahore, the Rangitaiki Plains and western Bay of Plenty sites (Campbell et al. 1973, Giles et al. 1999, Newnham et al. 1995). Inland, close to the eruptive centre, there was widespread destruction of forest by ignimbrite flows and an extensive halo of forest disruption to the east (Wilmshurst and McGlone 1996). The Bay of Plenty was beyond the reach of the ignimbrite flows, but probably large areas of forest devastation and tephra plains occurred in the modern Kawerau–Edgecumbe district associated with flooding by tephric alluvium. In the most northern of the Bay of Plenty sites, Waihi Beach Swamp in the western Bay of Plenty (Newnham et al. 1995) and inland at Holdens Bay (McGlone 1983b), the vegetation shows little discernible reaction to the deposition of the Taupo Pumice, while at Papamoa Bog, Maketu Basin (Newnham et al. 1995), on the Rangitaiki Plains (Campbell et al. 1973) and Tunapahore, there was a variable but marked disruption of the vegetation. At Papamoa and the Rangitaiki sites, the Taupo Tephra was followed by increased bracken. At Kohika, the most rapidly accumulating site, bracken and grass do not increase until after the first alluvial silt deposit following the Taupo. They do not peak with Fuscospora, tree-fern spores and charcoal, suggesting the later spread of bracken and grass. This appears to represent both a delayed successional response in the hinterland to volcanic devastation, and possibly a local response to direct tephra damage to forest and scrub by providing fresh alluvial surfaces for them to pioneer on (Wilmshurst and McGlone 1996). Of the forest types, only kahikatea and tanekaha decline, suggesting that the major effect at Kohika was flooding due to the choking of waterways with Taupo Tephra alluvium. The Maketu catchment (Papamoa), however, would have had no alluvial flooding, and at Fermah Rd (Waihi) no alluvium flooded onto the site. Nevertheless, bracken still showed an increase, suggesting that there was a direct effect of tephra-fall on the surrounding dryland vegetation that led to some temporary replacement of forest or scrub with bracken. It has been often claimed that the Taupo eruption permanently altered the vegetation of the central North Island, but this appears to be a gross overstatement. The direct impact of the Taupo Tephra on the vegetation at Kohika was over within 200 years. Tunapahore, despite lying at the very edge of the major depositional area of the Taupo Tephra (less than 10 cm thickness), shows an extreme reaction. The most likely explan-
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 39
ation is that the coastal bush was vulnerable to acidic ash-fall, and widespread dieback resulted in fires lit by lightning that opened up ground for bracken and grass (Wilmshurst and McGlone 1996). As at the sites further west, the forest rapidly and completely recovered. The impact of the Kaharoa Tephra is complicated by the fact that Maori settlers were almost certainly in the region at the time it fell. The previously dominant kauri declined after the Kaharoa Tephra fall at Matakana Island, but the decline coincides with the first appearance of charcoal and bracken. Giles et al. (1999) are unsure whether this decline was induced volcanically or by humans. At Waihi Beach Swamp, the 4 cm-thick Kaharoa Tephra seems not to have caused any forest destruction (Newnham et al. 1995), nor did a 10 cm fall at Tunapahore. At the Papamoa site, the 5 cm-thick tephra is followed immediately by bracken and charcoal, but it is very near the surface of the bog and the Polynesian and European records are blended, so it is impossible to tell whether there was a direct effect (Newnham et al. 1995). On the Rangitaiki Plains near Kohika, the Kaharoa Tephra ranges from 10 to 15 cm thick (Pullar 1973) and may have had an effect independent of Maori burning. Metrosideros, tanekaha and swamp shrubs all decline after the eruption and then recover, accompanied by a brief pulse of charcoal influx and bracken, suggesting that either the tephra directly affected the vegetation, or that Maori took advantage of tephra-damaged vegetation to do some initial clearance, as suggested by McGlone (1981).
Anthropogenic fire and timing of first settlement
Most peat deposits in the Bay of Plenty show evidence of having been burnt in prePolynesian times. Campbell et al. (1973) recorded charred wood, peat and charcoal throughout late Holocene deposits at Maketu and on the Rangitaiki Plains. The Papamoa and Waihi Beach sites also have a long record of microscopic charcoal (Newnham et al. 1995). In all likelihood, these fires were confined mainly to the swamps and bogs, and the surrounding dryland vegetation suffered only infrequent fire. The Kohika site seems to have been less vulnerable to fire, probably because of consistently high water-levels and, aside from the charcoal associated with the Taupo Tephra, there is no clear record of natural fire. Consistent influxes of charcoal and permanent conversion to bracken and grass of landscapes previously covered with forest or scrub are the best palynological criteria for inferring human presence (McGlone 1983a, McGlone et al. 1994, Newnham et al. 1998). However, against a background of intermittent natural fire, it is difficult to pinpoint exactly when the first Polynesian burning began, as there are no distinctive markers to distinguish anthropogenic burning from natural burning. Evidence for anthropogenic burning before the Kaharoa Tephra in lowland Bay of Plenty is equivocal. At Waihi Beach Swamp, charcoal abundance immediately below the Kaharoa Tephra is no different from that deeper in the profile, and there is no bracken or grass. At Papamoa Bog, charcoal increases immediately below the tephra, but not bracken or grass. Detailed sampling at Kohika revealed consistent but low levels of bracken in the 6 cm directly below the Kaharoa Tephra, but no charcoal. On the basis of accumulation rates, if the presence of bracken is equated with human intervention, the first human impact may have occurred at Kohika around 750 BP. At Tunapahore, there is no indication of disturbance immediately before or after the Kaharoa Tephra. However, the temporary influx of tephric silt and charcoal accompanied by bracken and grass, dated at 781 BP, is only a little outside the range for first major environmental impact, as estimated from the total New Zealand set of
40 Kohika
palynological sites (McGlone and Wilmshurst 1999), and may possibly represent an early temporary clearance. The Tunapahore area was not permanently settled until after the Kaharoa eruption but, because of the problem of dating silts with reworked charcoal inclusions, we cannot be sure when. There are many pa in this area which are likely to have been established from AD 1500. The earliest ages for archaeological sites in the Bay of Plenty support the interpretation from the pollen profiles that major human impact did not begin until after the deposition of the Kaharoa Tephra. In the western Bay of Plenty, there are relatively early dates for the archaeological site of Kauri Point swamp of between 629 ± 60 (NZ593) and 533 ± 82 yrs BP (NZ813) (O’Keeffe 1991:128, 171–4). However, the inbuilt age of the wood and charcoal is not known. In the Whakatane district, a charcoal sample giving a maximum age for a gravel-added soil on the Opouriao Plains has an age of 540 ± 67 (NZ6838). When calibrated, these radiocarbon dates in the range 550–650 BP enter an area of ambiguity, giving calibrated ages of between the calendar years AD 1250 and 1450. Obsidian hydration dates for the Tokitoki site, Ohiwa Harbour are in the range 650–690 BP, consistent with the age of the Kaharoa Tephra on which the site was laid down (McGovern-Wilson pers. comm. 1996). Despite its convenient location for settlement, benign climates and fertile soils, there is no evidence that the Bay of Plenty was settled earlier than any other district in New Zealand. Continuous traces of bracken recorded immediately below the Kaharoa Tephra might indicate small-scale burning as Maori exploration of the central North Island began.
Use and impact of fire during the Maori settlement phase
Lowland coastal Bay of Plenty was largely covered in tall, species-rich, conifer/broadleaved forests in the years before Maori settlement. Dense vegetation, including complex mosaics of swamp forest, scrub and tall sedges, jointed sedges and flax, covered the extensive wetlands of the Rangitaiki Plains. While this vegetation cover supported a large variety of plants and animals, it was inimical to human settlement. The densely wooded, tangled vegetation of lowland swamps and surrounding slopes would have been difficult to penetrate. Once the easily harvested forest birds had been depleted, the primary forests would yield little aside from berries and some minor vegetable foods. Destruction of forest therefore increased the potential of the Kohika area to support humans. Burning of the forest and swamp forests created easier access to the hinterland along valley bottoms and ridge crests, and encouraged the spread of bracken, ti (Cordyline) and tutu, all of which yielded highly valued carbohydrate foods. Plant remains recovered from the archaeological site (Lawlor 1979), including seeds of titoki and hinau, indicate that there was continuing use of the remaining forest patches. Freshwater swamp resources such as flax, raupo, eels, other fish and water birds were also highly important, and these were increased and made more accessible through burning. Analysis of gardening patterns in the Whakatane catchment (Jones 1986) shows that a range of sites was used for cultivation. Choices were based on soil type (light, free-draining soils were preferred) and microclimatic factors, such as north-facing slopes, which increased sunlight and warmth, and those that lengthened the frost-free season (cold air drainage and proximity to the coast). Patches of suitable soils occurred throughout the coastal area, thus further encouraging widespread burning. Decline in all tall-tree pollen reflects widespread deforestation, and the increased influx of bracken spores indicates that fern was a major vegetation cover. The densely
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 41
wooded landscape gave way to one in which most of the suitable soils were either under cultivation or in some sort of fire-induced vegetation, with only small patches of forest surviving. Continuous forest was confined to hilly areas, although even here fire burnt up steep faces and was used to clear tracks along ridges and other natural pathways. Clearance of the surrounding landscape and the wetland vegetation itself may have led to faster run-off from the catchment, and therefore greater flooding and less interception and re-evaporation of rainfall by the vegetation cover (McGlone 1983b). Both processes would tend to make the low-lying areas wetter, replacing bog forest and scrub with tall, regularly flooded, herbaceous flax and raupo associations such as those which came to predominate around the Kohika pa site. More navigable networks of streams and lagoons, and easy access to the hinterland through cleared valleys and ridges, would have increased the effective size of the resource catchment available to the inhabitants. Once begun, firing continued regularly, as attested to by the continuing dominance of bracken and grass. However, dryland vegetation change was relatively slight after the major burn-off at Kohika. Jones and Moore (1985) found coastal forest at Whangara on the East Coast to have been replaced early in the occupation sequence by repeatedly burnt shrublands and open mobile dunelands, and this was probably the same as near the coast on the Rangitaiki Plains. However, most scrub species and broad-leaved trees are poorly represented in the pollen rain and, at most sites, we can only infer that they played an important role in the post-settlement vegetation. It seems likely that the rather monotonous background of generic pollen types conceals a more varied vegetation history. There was a constant low level of input of forest-type pollen, some indicating long-distance transport from the forested hinterland and others the nature of the local remnant forest patches. Kamahi pollen, sporadic before the Kaharoa Tephra, was continuously represented afterwards, while rewarewa pollen continued to be well represented. The upper sediments at Thornton-Atkinson also have high levels of kamahi. Kamahi and rewarewa are prominent in regenerating forest in the Bay of Plenty (Nicholls 1991), and this suggests that the current situation of remnant forest patches surrounded by regenerating forest and scrub was established early in the course of Maori settlement. The upsurge of raupo in Zone KO-7, disappearance of Maori cultural material and influx of sand and silt argues for major change in local land use, probably associated with the introduction of European-style agriculture consequent on intensive European colonisation of the region from the 1850s onwards. Eutrophication of the swamp with the arrival of stock and later the introduction of fertilisers may account for the raupo increase.
Conclusions
The pre-human lowland Bay of Plenty was densely forested and even wetland areas were predominantly covered with tall swamp forest and scrub. Only deep, wet organic soils and regularly flooded areas had a mainly herbaceous vegetation. Air-fall deposition of tephra after volcanic eruptions caused marked but temporary declines and altered the forest and wetland cover through the direct influence of tephra and through flooding of volcanic alluvium down rivers. Maori settlement pervasively altered this natural setting through systematic and repeated firing of the vegetation. Dense forests, swamp forests and wooded wetlands were replaced with scrub/fernland, raupo-, reed-, sedge- and fern-covered wetlands and lagoons, interspersed with cultivations on fertile and climatically favoured patches of lowland alluvium soils, and forest stands. Maori
42 Kohika
settlement coincides largely with tawa-dominant forest and, in turn, indicates a mild, not overly wet, benign climate within which kumara cultivation was possible and an abundance of fruits and birds of the diverse lowland forest available. Within this climatic zone areas with easy access from the coast and rivers were heavily settled. The process of destroying the original forest appears to have been as follows. Some minor destruction may have occurred between c.800 BP and the Kaharoa eruption at 665 BP, but major settlement can have occurred only after that date. In seasonally dry areas and on fragile dune lands, sustained forest clearance occurred. In inland districts and Tunapahore, the Kaharoa tephra-fall may have had a considerable impact, but some recovery ensued over one or two centuries, only to succumb to widespread burning. On the eastern Bay of Plenty terrace lands, sporadic settlement may have occurred early on, followed by sustained settlement relatively late in the pre-European sequence compared with elsewhere in the Bay of Plenty, East Coast and Hawkes Bay. Throughout the period of sustained settlement, the Rangitaiki Plains, Tunapahore and Whangara could be described as ‘degraded’ landscapes, as have been described for eastern Polynesia in the period of human settlement (Kirch 1984:139–46). However, as the observations made by James Cook at Tolaga Bay suggest, they are better viewed as landscapes maintained by repeated firing at certain stages in a seral succession from bracken, scrub and grassland to forest. The timing of permanent Maori settlement is still not entirely certain. The Bay of Plenty palaeoecological data suggests that permanent occupation may have been as late as 750–700 BP, if uncertainty over dating is taken into account. The archaeological and environmental evidence clearly cannot rule out the presence of small, transient populations much earlier. Continuous traces of bracken recorded immediately below the Kaharoa Tephra at a number of locations in the central North Island (Newnham et al. 1998) might therefore indicate small-scale burning as Maori exploration began. On balance, we favour an interpretation in which a limited amount of exploratory activity and transient settlement occurred in the Bay of Plenty just before the eruption of the Kaharoa Tephra, followed by mass settlement and rapid population growth fuelled by the initial plentiful wild resources and productive soils of the region. The relatively late occupation of an area that could be confidently predicted to be a prime focus for Maori activity (Jones 1989) raises questions about when New Zealand was settled. Currently, there are an ‘early’ model proposing first settlement at around 2000 BP (Sutton 1987), an ‘orthodox’ model of settlement at about 1000 BP (e.g. Davidson 1984) and a ‘late’ model of settlement at c.700 BP (Anderson 1991). Palynological research has been undertaken specifically to help distinguish between the settlement models (e.g. Elliot and Neall 1995, Horrocks et al. 2001, Newnham et al. 1998), with some suggestions being made of early human impact before 1000 BP. In addition, kiore bones have been dated to as early as around 2000 BP, with the implication that early contact must have taken place (Holdaway 1996), and a debate on this continues. However, McGlone and Wilmshurst (1999) concluded from a survey of deforestation dates that Maori environmental impact was first experienced somewhere between 750 and 550 calendar years BP, and that suggestions that this impact occurred earlier is a result of misinterpretation of the significance of charcoal and bracken spore traces, combined with reliance on inherently risky sites for dating. The Bay of Plenty palaeoecological data strongly support the late model, as it is improbable that such a favoured area in climate and resources, strategically placed at the heart of the intensively settled region of the New Zealand archipelago, would be neglected for hundreds of years after first settlement. The subsequent ecological history of Maori settlement in the Bay of Plenty after the
The impact of Polynesian settlement on the vegetation of the coastal Bay of Plenty 43
major clearance of forest reveals no further major alterations to the vegetation cover until European settlement. Regular burning maintained a matrix of cultivable ground, forest, fern, scrub and swamp, within which all the requirements for sustaining the relatively dense network of settlements could be found.
References Anderson, A.J., 1991. The chronology of colonization in New Zealand. Antiquity, 65:767–95. Campbell, E.O., J.C. Heine and W.A. Pullar, 1973. Identification of plant fragments and pollen from peat deposits in Rangitaiki Plains and Maketu Basin. New Zealand Journal of Botany, 11:317–30. Clark, R.L., 1982. Point count estimation of charcoal in pollen preparations and thin sections. Pollen et Spores, 24:523–35. Davidson, J. M., 1984. The Prehistory of New Zealand. Auckland: Longman Paul. Elliot, M. and V.E. Neall, 1995. A twelve hundred year history of deforestation and a new age for the Rangitoto Ash from Motutapu Island, Hauraki Gulf, New Zealand. Geological Society of New Zealand, Miscellaneous Publication No.81A. Froggatt P.C. and D.J. Lowe, 1990. A review of late Quaternary silicic and some other tephra formations from New Zealand: their stratigraphy, nomenclature, distribution, volume and age. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 33:89–109. Giles, T.M., R.M. Newnham, D.J. Lowe and A.J. Munro, 1999. Impact of tephra fall and environmental change: a 1000 year record from Matakana Island, Bay of Plenty, North Island, New Zealand. In C.R. Frith and W.J. McGuire (eds), Volcanoes in the Quaternary. London: Geological Society, Special Publications, 161:11–26. Holdaway, R.N., 1996. Arrival of rats in New Zealand. Nature, 384:225–6. Horrocks, M., Y. Deng, J. Ogden, B.V. Alloway, S.L. Nichol and D.G. Sutton, 2001. High spatial resolution of pollen and charcoal in relation to the c.600 year BP Kaharoa Tephra: implications for Polynesian settlement of Great Barrier Island, northern New Zealand. Journal of Archaeological Science, 28:153–68. Jones, K.L., 1986. Polynesian settlement and horticulture in two river catchments of the eastern North Island, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 8:5–32. Jones, K.L., 1989. “In much greater affluence”: productivity and welfare in Maori gardening at Anaura Bay, October 1769. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 98:49–75. Jones, K.L., 1991. Maori settlement and horticulture on the Rangitaiki Plains, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 13:143–75. Jones, K.L. and P.R. Moore, 1985. An archaeological survey and environmental interpretation of the Whangara dunes, East Coast, North Island. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter, 28:81–101. Kirch, P.V., 1984. The Evolution of the Polynesian Chiefdoms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Lawlor, I., 1979. Palaeoenvironment analysis: an appraisal of the prehistoric environment of the Kohika swamp pa (N68/140), Bay of Plenty. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Lowe, D.J. and A.G. Hogg, 1992. Application of new technology liquid scintillation spectrometry to radiocarbon dating of tephra deposits, New Zealand. Quaternary International, 13/14:135–42. McGlone, M.S., 1981. Forest fire following Holocene tephra fall. In R. Howarth, P.C. Froggatt, C.G. Vucetich and J.D. Cullen (eds), Proceedings of Tephra Workshop. Department of Geology Publication, No.20. Wellington: Victoria University of Wellington, pp.80–6. McGlone, M.S., 1983a. Polynesian deforestation of New Zealand: a preliminary synthesis. Archaeology in Oceania, 18:11–25. McGlone, M.S., 1983b. Holocene pollen diagrams, Lake Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 13:53–65. McGlone, M.S., A.J. Anderson and R.N. Holdaway, 1994. An ecological approach to the
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Polynesian settlement of New Zealand. In D.G. Sutton (ed.), The Origins of the First New Zealanders. Auckland: Auckland University Press, pp.136–63. McGlone, M.S. and N.T. Moar, 1977. The Ascarina decline and post-glacial climatic change in New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Botany, 15:485–9. McGlone, M.S. and J.M. Wilmshurst, 1999. Dating initial Maori environmental impact in New Zealand. Quaternary International, 59:17–26. Moore, P.D., J.A. Webb, and M.E. Collinson, 1991. Pollen analysis. Oxford: Blackwell. Newnham, R.M., D.J. Lowe and J.D. Green, 1989. Palynology, vegetation and climate of the Waikato lowlands, North Island, New Zealand, since c.18,000 years ago. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 19:127–50. Newnham, R.M., D.J. Lowe and G.N.A. Wigley, 1995. Late Holocene palynology and palaeovegetation of tephra-bearing mires at Papamoa and Waihi Beach, western Bay of Plenty, North Island, New Zealand. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 25:283– 300. Newnham, R.M., D.J. Lowe, M.S. McGlone, J.M. Wilmshurst and T.F.G. Higham, 1998. The Kaharoa Tephra as a critical datum for earliest human impact in northern New Zealand. Journal of Archaeological Science, 25:533–44. Nicholls, J.L., 1971. Raukumara Forest Class Map. Forest Service Mapping Series 6. Sheet 6. Wellington: New Zealand Forest Service. Nicholls, J.L., 1974a. Rotorua Forest Class Map. Forest Service Mapping Series 6. Sheet 5. Wellington: New Zealand Forest Service. Nicholls, J.L., 1974b. Urewera Forest Class Map. Forest Service Mapping Series 6. Sheet 7. Wellington: New Zealand Forest Service. Nicholls, J.L., 1991. Native Forests. In B.D. Clarkson, M.C. Smale and C.E. Ecroyd (eds), Botany of Rotorua. Rotorua: Forest Research Institute, pp.15–22. O’Keeffe, M.P., 1991. Prehistoric settlement in the western Bay of Plenty. Unpublished MLitt thesis, University of Auckland. Pullar, W.A., 1973. Isopachs of tephra, Central North Island, New Zealand. Scale 1:1,000,000. New Zealand Soil Bureau Maps 133/1–7. New Zealand Soil Survey Report No.31. Pullar, W.A., 1985. Soils and land use of the Rangitaiki Plains, North Island, New Zealand. Lower Hutt: New Zealand Soil Bureau. Sutton, D.G., 1987. A paradigmatic shift in Polynesian prehistory: implications for New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 9:135–55. Wilmshurst, J.M. and M.S. McGlone, 1996. Forest disturbance in the central North Island, New Zealand, following the 1850 BP Taupo eruption. The Holocene, 6:399–411. Wilson, C.J.N. and G.P.L. Walker, 1985. The Taupo Eruption, New Zealand. I. General aspects. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London, A314:199–228.
4
Excavations and site history at Kohika G.J. Irwin
An archaeological and environmental context for Kohika has been established in Chapters 1–3, and it is now time to consider the structure of this remarkable site. Figure 4.1 is a contour map showing several areas of excavation and Plate 4.1 is an aerial photograph taken during the season of January 1976. This chapter describes and interprets the excavations in the University Areas A, B, C and D, followed by an account of the Whakatane and District Historical Society investigations. Figure 4.1 shows a Regional Council stopbank and canal to the north of the site, running east–west to join Canal 109, which runs northwards alongside Sutherlands Road (shown in Fig. 2.3). North of the stopbank is what remains of Lake Kohika, and immediately to the south is an east–west belt of remnants of pre-Taupo age dune that extends on both sides of the Tarawera River. Site V15/80, Kohika, is one of these and, at the time of occupation, was a small island that stood in freshwater lake and swamp. The contours in Figure 4.1 are at 10 cm intervals and show heights above sea level (mean high-water springs) as measured from a Regional Council benchmark on the stopbank beside Canal 109. During our fieldwork the freshwater level to the north of
Figure 4.1 A contour map of Kohika showing the location of the excavations
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46 Kohika
the stopbank varied with tide and weather, and the water table in the swamp around the site lay typically between the 40 cm and 60 cm contours. When drains were dug on Mr Jessop’s farm in 1974 the machine skirted the eastern edge of the mound, leaving the zig-zag to be seen in Figure 4.1. It exposed a palisade of kanuka posts that were rotted off at the water table, and it threw out various waterlogged artefacts that were found in the spoil heaps. It later transpired that this cultural material came from peat lying below a thick band of alluvium composed of reworked tephra, laid by floodwaters from the Tarawera River that flowed northwards around the eastern side of the site. This flood deposit was much less in evidence in the sides of the drain along the northern side of Kohika which lay in the shelter of the mound, and it was in this area where members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society concentrated their efforts (Fig. 4.1). Artefacts could be found much more easily by probing and digging in the peat here than where it was covered by floodwash. The dynamic geology of the Rangitaiki Plains has been described in Chapter 2. All of the layers and stratigraphical events at Kohika have both natural and cultural dimensions and it is not possible to explain the prehistoric occupation without close attention to both. The geomorphological setting of Kohika, in summary, is that it was at the 2000 BP shoreline and has a core of dune sand. The Taupo, Kaharoa and Tarawera tephras are present, plus the Taupo sea-rafted pumice. All three tephras have been mixed into the soil of the dune but survive intact as beds in the surrounding swamp, where they are interstratified with peats, silts and diatomaceous earth that formed in swamp and freshwater lake. Also in the immediate area of the site is the band of reworked Kaharoa Tephra alluvium, mentioned above, that was redeposited during a local flood event when the Tarawera River overflowed its banks. As described in Chapter 2, in Pullar’s (1985) scheme the dune sand is Koe and the diverse soil types immediately adjacent to Kohika conform to his Mtk and Onc categories. Other soil types lay close by. Thus Kohika was not entirely artificial, as are some swamp sites in the North Island. Its sand core was natural but, as will be shown, it expanded laterally with the spread of occupation debris and artificially laid floors, which were found to interdigitate with the swamp deposits at the margins. The excavations of each season followed the developing knowledge of the site. 1. Area A was in a high and dry part of the site with evidence for intercutting storage pits and bins with a later episode of cooking structures. After the site was abandoned there were late intrusive burials. Excavation began in 1975 and continued in 1976, with final investigations in 1978. 2. Area B lay at the eastern palisade, and the exposed sections of the drain offered a key to site structure. Artefacts thrown out with the ditch spoil included hair combs and a greenstone pendant and chisel. In 1975 Squares B1 and B2 were dug inside the palisade, and in 1976 Square B3 was dug outside the palisade while Square B4 straddled it. 3. In Area C in 1975, Squares C1 and C12 were dug adjacent to the Historical Society area at the edge of the swamp, and two further squares, C7 and C10, were placed on higher ground to the south. No further work was done in later years. 4. Area D lay marginal to the water table on the northern side of the site at the former lakeshore. In 1975 Squares D1 and D2 discovered a number of superimposed artificial living floors and these were pursued horizontally in 1976 in Squares D1 to D11, and D16. Rich waterlogged remains included houses and their contents, a pataka storehouse, cooking shelters and canoes. 5. In 1977 and 1978 excavation dealt with particular problems that remained: • Square DD was dug in Area D on a different orientation to the previous grid to investigate the lowest level.
Excavations and site history at Kohika 47
• Squares D12–15 were dug as a discontinuous trench to establish the stratigraphic relations between Area A at the top of the mound and Area D at its edge. • Square D17 was dug to collect samples of pollen and sediment. • An effort was made to locate the palisade on the western side of the site. • Other miscellaneous tasks included making a contour map, establishing elevation in relation to the tidal data, and the burial and retrieval of thermal cells for obsidian hydration calibration. 6. An extensive survey of stratigraphic cores was made in the vicinity of Kohika. In 1967 A. Pullar of the Soil Bureau made 11 cores in this part of the Rangitaiki Plains. He visited Kohika during the excavations in 1975 and 1976 and made a further 27 cores; the information is shown in Figure 2.3. The University of Auckland team made some 20 cores both within and close to Kohika in 1976, and another 10 in association with M. McGlone in 1978. In the same year, I. Lawlor inspected the agricultural drain sections near Kohika as part of his thesis research (Lawlor 1979). This chapter concludes with a discussion of the area, very rich in waterlogged artefacts, previously dug by Whakatane and District Historical Society members. Henceforth it is referred to as the HS Area. The account is based on their brief notes and sketches made at the time, some discussions with this author and also on information extrapolated from the university investigations.
Excavations in Area A
Area A was on the dry part of Kohika and expected to produce different evidence from the swampy margins of the mound. A continuous area of more than 70 square metres was investigated.
Volcanic ash and disturbance on the mound
Excavations revealed only a few small patches of intact Taupo Ash on the dune itself. No intact Kaharoa Tephra was found either, but this was to be expected because it is generally masked by black topsoil on the dune ridges of the Rangitaiki Plains and difficult to identify (Pullar 1985). However, the upper layers in Area A also have the appearance of a mixed deposit. We know that the inland dunes of the plains were favoured for gardening in prehistory and can be confident that this took place at Kohika. Moreover, the bed of Tarawera Ash that lay undisturbed in the swamp was also missing on the mound and has been mixed into the soil since AD 1886. Whether this was due to Maori gardening or recent conversion of the land to pasture is not known. If the upper part of the deposit was mixed by machine, it did not reach very deep, because several late intrusive burials in the site, which were the highest cultural features, were not badly smashed up. However, we found them to be in generally poor condition, due to exposure to severe weathering.
Stratigraphy
Excavation followed the natural stratigraphy in 5 cm spits. Cultural items were mostly hand-picked but samples were taken regularly for sieving and flotation. Soil samples were collected from every layer and further bulk samples were returned to the laboratory
48 Kohika
Figure 4.2 Some representative section drawings from Area A
for processing (Lawlor 1979). Some representative section drawings in Squares A1 and A5 are shown in Figure 4.2. Plate 4.2 shows the excavation in Square A1 Extension in progress. Layer A consisted of currently grassed black topsoil. Layer B was a mixed sandy subsoil with pumice dispersed throughout. Pieces of pumice up to about 1 cm in diameter occur in the airborne Taupo Ash at Kohika while larger pieces were sea-rafted. These normally ranged in size up to about 10 cm but some large pumice boulders were discovered. Layer B was usually divided into upper and lower levels, B1 and B2. While they were similar in texture and composition, B1 was commonly more brown in colour and B2 rather more stained grey with charcoal. Much of the charcoal scattered through Layer B is likely to result from burning of vegetation and tillage of the soil. However, lower down in the deposit, and especially where associated with features, the charcoal has a different origin and more integrity. It is likely that much of the obsidian and the scattered small cooking stones in Layer B are out of primary context, too. Notwithstanding the mixing, there is variability in the layer – as shown, for example, by lenses of denser pumice in some places. Layer C consisted of the brown sterile sand of the former dune without the pumice that arrived some time after its formation. At the Layer B/C interface was a few centimetres’ depth of mottled material resulting from the interaction of the layers by natural soil processes. This was also the zone in which excavation detected many features and some disturbances that were dug into Layer C. The fills of these features showed some variation in colour and texture, but all shared a basic composition similar to the material of lower Layer B.
Features and chronology
A plan of excavated features is shown in Figure 4.3. Most of these were found at essentially the one level, the top of Layer C, but clearly they were not all of the same age. Three means of inferring relative chronology were (1) the
Excavations and site history at Kohika 49
evidence of stratigraphy and the intercutting of features, (2) the tentative evidence of different fills of features, and (3) the pattern of features in plan. Of these only the intersection of features was reliable, but the other evidence did not contradict it. A number of feature types were found. Bins
There were five bins more than 1 m long in the excavated area. At least three of these had small stakeholes around them that probably supported light roofs. An example from Square A3 is shown in Plate 4.3, and a cross-section of the same structure at a later stage of excavation in Plate 4.4. The bins do not appear to be part of other larger structures, as known from other sites. In age, none of the bins cut any earlier feature. Pits
There were seven pits, all distinguished from bins by being clearly larger. They included both round-ended and rectangular plans and there is nothing remarkable about them. Alignments of the pits suggest some contemporaneity among them, at different times
Figure 4.3 A plan of the excavated features in Area A
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Kohika
(Fig. 4.3). Further, whereas most pits were found to intersect with other pits, as shown in Plate 4.5 (only one did not), pits did not cut any other kind of feature. Thus we may conclude that both bins and pits were generally earlier than other kinds of structure. We cannot tell the time relations of pits and bins because of their mutually exclusive distribution, but this probably indicates that the two were sometimes contemporary. Ovens and firepits
There were more than 20 of these and some of the stratigraphically younger ones still contained cooking stones; earlier ones had been raked out. Ovens and firescoops cut into the fills of pits and they also overlay one another. Where any relevant evidence exists, ovens were younger than both pits and bins, but there was no indication of the time interval between them. Burials
Five late burials were found in the top of the mound in Area A. These were the shallowest features and were generally picked up within Layer B. They were not interrupted by any other feature, which supports a young age. Indeed, it seems certain that the burials were late and intrusive and occurred after Kohika had been abandoned as a settlement. The burials were flexed and primary and the bones had been in articulation at the time of interment. While observations and notes were made in the field by G. Barnett, a physical anthropologist, any remains that had been moved were reburied at the end of the excavation exactly where they had been found. This was the preference of both Maori elders consulted and the director. Other above-ground structures?
One might expect people to have built houses on top of Kohika so as to be as high as possible above the water, but there is no current evidence for it. However, it was sensible to use the top of the mound for storage, to keep the bottoms of pits as far as possible above the water table. In Figure 4.3 there is a line of three slots in Square A4, in the northern one of which were the remains of a split plank. Excavations in swamp sites in the Waikato and in other parts of Kohika have shown that standing planks in bedding slots was one form of house construction in prehistoric New Zealand. A second single slot with the surviving butt of a plank was found 1.40 m to the east of the first one, in Square A3. However, a supposed hut or house that included the two would be implausibly narrow and the line of just three slots is too short. Obviously, some minor aboveground structure stood there, but what it was is by no means clear. In Area A there is no unambiguous floor plan as outlined by the remains of walls. There is no physical floor and there is no distribution of artefacts or debris to imply one. However, all these kinds of evidence for housing were found in Area D at Kohika, while the wooden parts of houses themselves were recovered from the adjacent swamp. As we know what houses look like elsewhere at Kohika, there is no reason to propose any for Area A. Various alignments of postholes shown in Figure 4.3 might suggest structures, however. For example, running roughly east–west across Squares A1 and A2 is an alignment of postholes that was possibly a shelter for a similar alignment of fireplaces just to the south. Area A sequence
To summarise, the sequence of major activity in Area A was storage followed by cooking (however, it should be remembered that Kohika was quite large enough to accommodate
Excavations and site history at Kohika 51
the spatial variation of activities). Then came abandonment. Afterwards, people returned to bury their dead in what was to them, perhaps, an ancestral site. There is no evidence for any considerable duration of settlement in Area A but, clearly, the superimposition of structures shows some elapsed time. Nor is there evidence for any interval during occupation, although that might be elusive anyway. However, the general pattern conforms to what is understood about other parts of the site.
Excavations in Area B
One basic feature shared by Areas B, C and D is that they all made contact with the same natural swamp stratigraphy, although they interacted with it in different ways. Experience has shown that comparisons between areas can assist the interpretation of each, so this approach is taken in the following discussion. Area B was selected for excavation because of the interesting material thrown out by the drain digger. Squares B1 and B2 were located inside the defended site perimeter (Fig. 4.1) but B2 was abandoned at a depth of about 30 cm. Square B3 was dug east of the agricultural drain to investigate the area that lay clearly outside the site, beyond the palisade. Square B4 was carefully located to straddle the perimeter of the site along the line of the palisade.
Site structure and history at Square B1
Square B1 encountered a new kind of deposit. While it was still inside the site, there was no in situ dune sand. Instead, it was in an area where the mound was artificially expanded but had not yet reached the palisade that separated dry land from lake. Figures 4.4 and 4.5 show, respectively, the north and south sections of Square B1, and Figure 4.6 is a plan of features at the base of the excavated square. Plate 4.6 shows excavation in progress and Plate 4.7 shows some detail at the base of the cultural deposit. The first essential point to note about the bottom of Square B1 is the natural sequence of the bed of airfall Kaharoa Tephra overlain by lacustrine silt, then followed by peat, that underlies the cultural deposit (Fig. 4.5). It follows that the mound had spread sideways over these natural sediments of shallow lake and swamp during occupation. Cultural material was found only from the upper part of the peat, indicating that there had been a considerable time of peat growth after the Kaharoa event and before occupation of the site. Nevertheless, both the sterile lower peat and the upper part of the pale olive silt below were stained by the cultural material above. Moreover, unlike the situation in Squares B3 and B4 (see below), there was no flood alluvium in B1 because at the time of the flood the perimeter of the site already lay beyond the excavated square. The flood could not reach it here, inside the site. The source of the sediment in the cultural layers of Square B1 was sand from the dune itself together with other occupational debris. Much of the activity that related to the lateral expansion of the site in Area B took place a little further inland towards Area A, which indicates that the two were broadly contemporaneous. Although Area B was contiguous with Area A, none of the structures characteristic of Area A was found in B. Also absent were artificial floors (of largely sterile dune sand or reworked tephra quarried from elsewhere), such as occur in Area D. No living surfaces were found in the 20 square metres excavated in Area B, although there are indications of a house nearby that was not found (see below).
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Figure 4.4 Square B1, north section
Figure 4.5 Square B1, south section
The cultural deposit in Square B1 accumulated around three substantial standing posts, all more than 20 cm in diameter. Two of these can be seen in Plate 4.7 while the third was still to be excavated at that stage. The plan of the excavation (Fig. 4.6) shows the three posts in the northern part of the square set in wider holes originally dug for them to stand in. Also shown in the southern part of the square are three similar large holes that do not hold posts, and two of them can be seen in Plate 4.7. It is probable that these holes formerly held posts that were drawn, because otherwise the timber would still survive below the water table. Thus there is evidence for some
Excavations and site history at Kohika 53
substantial construction in Square B1 and also for change. The remaining posts are large and capable of supporting a considerable load, and there could be others beyond the excavated area, but there was no building at ground level for there is no trace of a floor. Currently the posts lie inside the line of lighter kanuka posts that form the palisade, probably too far away to be part of a raised defensive stage or entrance. The several valuable artefacts found in the vicinity could suggest a raised storehouse on the posts. The composition of the cultural layers was unremarkable. The section drawings (Figs 4.4 and 4.5) show that the original topsoil of Square B1 was covered by some depth of overburden from the modern ditch. A small greenstone chisel from the ditch was found in this spoil in Square B1 and a fine greenstone pendant was found at the same level in Square B2; clearly, they both came from the agricultural ditch. The absence of intact airfall Tarawera Ash below the topsoil conforms to the situation over the whole mound above the swamp. An upper layer of brown soil, flecked with orange, had virtually no cultural component and is interpreted as a soil profile that formed after the abandonment of Kohika but was within reach of more recent disturbance from the surface. The occupation soil in Square B1 was a deposit of mixed sediment and cultural material derived mainly from the sand dune nearby. Every sixth bucket of
Figure 4.6 Square B1, plan of features at the base of the excavation
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Kohika
material was wet-sieved through a 5 mm screen and was found to contain scattered charcoal, occasional cooking stones, flakes of obsidian, freshwater mussel epidermis, bone, wood chips and some flecks of ochre. The matrix of the deposit was sandy, grading to more silty and moist, and then peaty, with increasing depth. There were scatters of pumice sand and sporadic pumice chunks. The posthole fill low in the deposit (Fig. 4.5) was derived from occupation sediment above but was turning to peat. The fine lens of pumiceous sand shown at the interface of the sterile lower peat and the diatomaceous silt below arrived by natural agency.
Site structure and history of Square B3
Square B3 was outside the site and the lake bed was covered by alluvium from a flood that happened while people were living at Kohika. Above it there was further peat growth in the interval after the village was abandoned. It lay close to the drainage ditch (Plate 4.8), which made it difficult to excavate, because drain water flowed through the bed of airfall Kaharoa Tephra, acting as an aquifer. An external sump/test pit was dug to protect fragile deposits in the square. When both Squares B3 and B4 nearby were getting down to the water table, the main sludge pump was moved across from Area D to keep the water level under control in both excavations while they were finished and recorded. Figure 4.7 records the stratigraphy of B3 and Plate 4.9 shows a late stage of excavation and the bagging of waterlogged remains. Below the topsoil in the upper deposit, a post-flood meander channel can be seen in Plate 4.8 cutting into the top of the tephra alluvium below. Filling this meander channel was an Upper Peat (see below) in which lay the bed of airfall Tarawera Tephra. The growth of peat between the alluvium and the Tarawera indicates an interval of time. In the base of this peat some fragments of
Figure 4.7 Square B3, east section
B3 East Section N
1.00
2.00
Tarawera Ash topsoil upper peat
silt lenses pumiceous alluvium with silt lenses
grey pumice sand
white pumice
silt lens grey pumice lower peat 1
sedge peat
silty peat lower peat 2
S
Excavations and site history at Kohika 55
unworked wood and a flake of obsidian could relate to the flood event itself, rather than to post-flood activity. A dramatic flood
Life at Kohika was interrupted by the sudden arrival of a deep deposit of alluvium. The stratigraphic sections at this part of Kohika correspond to a variant of Pullar’s (1985) soil type Onc (Omehue Coarse Sandy Loam), a poorly drained gley soil with a thin cover of Tarawera Ash over pumiceous Kaharoa alluvium, on a sub-surface of sand and gravels and with occasional thin layers of diatomaceous earth. The distribution of this type is shown in Figure 2.3 (above), and at Kohika there were lower peats and silts as well. Clearly, the alluvium arrived as a local but sudden event and it appears to have been similar to modern floods. For example, the area of Pullar’s Ran soil type shows the distribution of alluvium deposited in the flood of 1964 (Fig. 2.3). Typically, the passage of a cyclonic weather system across the Bay of Plenty is accompanied by high rainfall in the catchment of the rivers that cross the plains. Strong on-shore northeasterly winds back up the floodwaters, particularly when the tides are high. In 1964 the Tarawera River overflowed its banks not far upstream from Kohika during just such an event. Alluvial sediments consisting mainly of Kaharoa-derived materials that were already in the swamp were carried by the floodwater and redeposited mainly in the meander channels that crossed the swamp at that time. The prehistoric flood deposit at Kohika was laid down in a short time, probably during a single period of bad weather. There were bands of reworked tephra in which the sediments were size-graded. At the very bottom of the alluvium were pieces of pumice up to 4 cm in diameter and waterworn greywacke stones up to 6–7 cm. Clearly, there was some variation in the energy of floodwaters during the event as silty lenses formed among the bands of pumice sand. The alluvium also contained odd bits of debris, such as water-rolled charcoal and pieces of stick, that had been gathered up in the floodwaters. But no cultural material or peat growth or palaeosol has been found in this deposit, even though some hundreds of metres of drain and excavated section in the locality have been carefully examined (Lawlor 1979). The arrival of half a metre or more of fill around the lakeshore meant it was no longer normally possible to reach parts of the site by canoe. While this would have been of only minor significance in the context of wider swamp history, it was more serious to the people of Kohika. From this time on, in every excavated area, the amount of cultural evidence is minimal and much of that can be attributed to later disturbance of the upper deposit. Below the alluvium two natural layers of peat divided into an upper layer of sedge peat with rushes, and a lower layer of more silty peat. Cultural material was found down to the interface between them. It included scattered wood chips, coils of rata vine, fragments of bracken and miscellaneous sticks. There were pieces of gourd shell, cooking stones and a few patches of dumped ash and fishbone. A wooden hair comb at the interface of the two peats was a valuable find. The lakeshore in Square B3 at the time of occupation was evidently shallow water and reeds with various flotsam and jetsam. However, there was an important exception in three long adze-dressed wooden posts that were found lying across the northern part of the square, with no ends in view. They give the appearance of having been laid together at the wet margins of the site with the intention of retrieving and using them later. While these posts were found close to the three empty postholes in the peat at the bottom of Square B1 from which three posts were evidently removed, the ones in B3 were of smaller diameter. Lying above the posts in the Square B3 peat was a long dressed totara plank that protruded from the northern baulk. It seems that one extra dimension to the use of the swampy
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Kohika
margins of Kohika was the occasional storage of wooden items, and the more frequent storage of vine in water to keep it supple.
Site structure and history in Square B4
With both interior and exterior strata established, a transect of posthole bores between them found the actual edge of the site and the location for Square B4. The information it provides is striking. Plates 4.10–14 show stages of the excavation and Figure 4.8, a drawing of the west section of the square, provides relevant stratigraphic information. To control drainage while digging below the water table, a deep external sump that doubled as a test pit was dug outside the west section at the northern end. Into this was placed a metal drum with perforated holes to allow water to flow but to reduce erosion of fragile sediments. Water was then pumped from this drum. A narrow drain that went down with excavation led from a small seepage sump inside the excavation through the baulk to the sump outside. A point of stratigraphic interest is that this sump was the only place in Area B where the original pre-Taupo sand-dune surface was encountered as it sloped down under the swamp sediments that formed above it, long before the site was occupied. Square B4 was a 2.5 x 2 m unit that crossed transversely from the flat area of the swamp to the rising incline of the mound, which explains why the topsoil became more moist and peaty in the lower end of the square. Below the topsoil the edge of the mound was perfectly defined by the presence of Tarawera Tephra outside the site and its absence inside. Since it fell in AD 1886, the tephra has been mixed into the soil everywhere on the dry part of the site and now lies around it like a tide-mark. In B4, the ash varied in thickness and had gone down in pockets under the weight of cattle hooves. Below the Tarawera Tephra, lay a peat that is separated into two bands in Figure 4.8, although it stopped some 30–40 cm short of the end of the ash as the square became drier. This Upper Peat, as we have called it, was found generally in the swamp
Figure 4.8 Square B4, west section
Excavations and site history at Kohika 57
around the mound in both Areas B and C and indicates former freshwater stands. Sealed under it in the southwestern corner of Square B4 was a wooden board in poor condition as a result of periodic drying of the upper deposits (Plate 4.10). It was reinforced in a wooden frame prior to being lifted (Plate 4.11). Below the peat, as can be seen in Figure 4.8, was a post-flood deposit and the ground surface that existed at the time of the flood can be traced inland. This soil was a greybrown, or grey-black, gritty mixture of sand with scattered seeds and lenses and lumps of pumice. Every sixth bucket of this soil was wet-sieved through a 5 mm screen. It was found to contain virtually no cultural material (apart from scattered charcoal) and, as the deposit sloped down across the square, the soil became increasingly sterile. The same inference arises as before: there is little evidence for continuing occupation of substance at Kohika following the flood. Prior to the arrival of the floodwash, an occupation soil was forming inside the kanuka palisade post shown in Figure 4.8. This was the same deposit as we have seen already in Square B1 and consists of occupation debris that spread laterally from the exposed sand-dune nearby. The pre-flood sediment was stained with charcoal and its matrix graded from sandy silt to peat with increasing depth and moisture. Sieved components include wood fragments that were often partly burnt, scattered shellfish remains including freshwater mussel, a few dog coprolites, discarded cooking stones and flakes of obsidian. The flood deposit itself is nowhere revealed more starkly than in Square B4. Plate 4.12 shows the sharp division between the dark cultural interior and the clean white pumice exterior as one sights along the agricultural drain that closely follows the former palisade. Plate 4.13 shows the detail of half a dozen kanuka posts in the palisade, all surrounded by a homogeneous layer of grey alluvial silt, and also shows the rippled effect that the water had at the shoreline. Plate 4.14 and Figure 4.8 show how the floodwater washed tephra sand between the palisade posts into the site. The zone where sand and silt interdigitate is complex and delicate. While some silt was evidently borne by the flood, some here was washed away from the shore. The distinguished soil scientist A. Pullar saw this section on one of his visits to Kohika and observed that the deposition of the pumice and formation of the lapped shoreline could have taken place within a day during the flooding of a braided river channel (pers. comm. 1976). Immediately below the pumice alluvium was a bed of rushes that grew at the base of the palisade at the time of the flood. Stratigraphically below this again was the same Lower Peat as defined in both Squares B1 and B3 (and also Areas C and D). As elsewhere, cultural material was found only in its upper part because the lower part had grown before people lived at Kohika. One further feature of the Lower Peat in Square B4 was that the layer became more sterile as one followed the deposit from the outside to the inside of the site. As in Square B1, the dry land that built up inside the palisade in this part of Area B overlay lake-bed sediments that had formed during an earlier time when the edge of the site was further inshore.
Excavations in Area C
Area C was excavated in 1975 only. Squares C1 and C12 were placed near the Historical Society dig to investigate the deposit that had produced such a wealth of waterlogged wooden items (Fig. 4.1). The further purpose of Squares C7 and C10 was to extend the sample to the high and dry area of the site.
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Kohika
Site structure and history at Squares C1 and C12
Figures 4.9 and 4.10 are drawings of the south and west sections of Square C1 and Plate 4.15 is a general view of the same squares during excavation. The main stratigraphic units will now be familiar after the discussion of Area B. They include the topsoil and Upper Peats 1 and 2 containing Tarawera Ash. Below this came the deposit of alluvial tephra, and the number and order of interleaved bands of pumice sand and silt were very similar to those in Squares B3 and B4. Under the floodwash, Lower Peat 2 was a dark brown peaty silt followed by the Lower Peat 1, which was a brown sedge peat with rushes. A natural interface separated the two peaty layers in Area C. The lowest layer shown in Figures 4.9 and 4.10 is lacustrine silt that overlay the bed of airfall Kaharoa Tephra. Cultural deposition
Sparse cultural material occurred through the 6–7 cm depth of Lower Peat 1, at the interface, and intruded into the top 2–3 cm of Lower Peat 2. It contained adzed wood chips, scraps of worked wood up to 40 cm in length, and odd broken sticks. Much of the wood showed signs of burning. In Square C12 there were also six obsidian flakes, a few fire-cracked stones, a light scatter of charcoal and some fragments of gourd Figure 4.9 Square C1, south section
Figure 4.10 Square C1, west section
Excavations and site history at Kohika 59
shell. The items found were the waste from woodworking and other activities on higher ground nearby. This interpretation is supported by the generally pristine surface of the underlying silt, which had an extremely soft consistency. People did not actually live in this part of the site because it was shallow lake at the time, which implies that the Historical Society’s adjacent excavation could have been located on an outlying part of the dune. No finished wooden artefacts floated into Area C from the HS Area or from the University Area D, a little further away. Reeds and raupo growing at the lakeshore probably prevented that. Site history after abandonment
Plate 4.15 shows that a late meander channel formed in the swamp around this northeastern part of the mound and crossed both squares on their long axis. The channel removed some of the upper alluvium but peat continued to grow. The sediments here were diatomaceous and indicate freshwater stands. Lying below Upper Peats 1 and 2 at the bottom of the meander channel, and on the upper surface of the floodwash, were some fragments of plaited flax and a broken wooden weeder. However, these could have been separated in time from the cultural material below the floodwash by the flood event itself.
Site history at Squares C7 and C10
Squares C7 and C10 were located on the mound in the northeastern part of the site inside the palisade. The soils here derive from dune sand with tephra mixed by gardening and occupational debris. Both Squares C7 and C10 represent substantial cooking activity although their features differ in detail. Figure 4.11 is a drawing of the south section of Square C7. Under the turf the deposit had a dark brown peaty layer mixed with Tarawera Tephra, and below this again were numerous fireplaces and lenses of diverse materials, including pumice sand (quarried from elsewhere), dune sand and charcoal-rich soils. Two long parallel features with dark fill had cut into a log lying in the dune sand. Our interpretation is that these were fire-pits extended horizontally with re-use and that the log was intruded on by burning. It appears that the log was present in the site before occupation and does not represent woodworking. At Kohika Figure 4.11 Square C7, south section
60 Kohika Figure 4.12 Square C10, north section
some substantial tree trunks have survived at or below the water table on the dune, indicating that forest trees once grew here on the Taupo-age shoreline. Large buried stumps have also been found on dunes further inland, suggesting that podocarp forest once flourished there (Pullar 1985). Figure 4.12 is a drawing of the north section of Square C10. At the top of the deposit were the recent remains of two cabbage tree stumps, which overlay a stratigraphic tangle of hangi structures that had been made, remade and sometimes plugged with sand. The most recent of these still had cooking stones in place. In the lower deposit was a squarish feature 1.5 m across made of imported yellow sand, with a raised edge and associated postholes (Plate 16). One might guess that it was part of a cooking shelter, but it was too disturbed to tell. In general, these two squares represent continuous activity and especially food preparation, as distinct from other high parts of the site that have indicated different functions. However, an excavated area of only 12.5 square metres of the dry part of Area C is an insufficient sample to reveal wider patterns of settlement.
Excavations in Area D
Area D was located in an embayment on the northern side of the old dune where pasture met raupo swamp (Figs 4.1 and 4.13). In 1975 Squares D1 and D2 established vertical stratigraphy in this low-lying part of the site and revealed several superimposed living horizons. In 1976 Squares D1 and D2 were completed, while D3–11 and D16 were opened to expose the horizontal dimensions. Then in 1977 and 1978 excavation units D12–15 formed a discontinuous trench that was dug to establish stratigraphic continuity between Area D and Area A on the top of the mound. A further square, DD, was dug over the southeastern corner of D2 and the northern part of D5, but on a different alignment, to investigate the lowest level. Finally, Square D17 was used to sample the palynological history of the swamp, as described in Chapter 3. In all, approximately 120 square metres were excavated in Area D.
Excavations and site history at Kohika 61
Excavation methods
Area D was marginal to the water table and, after prolonged rain, water began to flow out of the lowest holes (Plate 4.17). Baulks were used to divide the excavation area into pumping units. They were 0.5 m wide and protected by planking. We began in 1975 with a single pump but from 1976 had a large-capacity pump that could control water in four excavation units at once or, when there were high volumes of water, in two units. Baulks also provided long straight sections for recording and facilitated the removal of spoil. As excavation proceeded, baulks were progressively removed where possible. The wet deposit was fragile and excavators worked on boards to protect it. The flow of water was found to be of benefit insofar as it continuously washed the deposit as it was excavated, which made for excellent visibility. However, where the flow was strong or the baulks fragile, it caused erosion. One remedy was to step baulks, which was done occasionally. Also, test pits within excavation units doubled as sumps for drainage. In some places, such as Square D1, drains were led out of the excavation to exterior sumps that were kept deeper than the level of excavation. Perforated cans and drums, were used to collect water in sumps while retaining the deposit. Samples of soil were wet-sieved regularly during excavation as a check on the quality of data collection, and bulk samples of all layers were taken for later analysis in the laboratory (Lawlor 1979). Wooden items were washed and treated with a polyethyleneglycol solution as they came out of the ground and then triple-bagged in plastic. Rolls of plastic tubing were kept for this purpose on site. At the end of the 1976 season a railway truck was needed to bring all the material back to Auckland. To complicate matters, at this time no suitable conservation laboratory was available to receive it, so interim storage was used until a new laboratory was fitted out.
Stratigraphy and interpretation
The vertical stratigraphy will be considered first, then the horizontal disposition of the layers. Figure 4.14 is a drawing of all four sections of Squares D1 and D2. The upper layers were found to cover the whole excavation unit. The topsoil was a black sandy silt loam, mainly in grass. Below this was a layer of brown peaty silt, and samples collected by A. Pullar and analysed at the New Zealand Soil Bureau contained diatoms (McGlone and Pullar 1976). This was a new discovery for soils of the Rangitaiki Plains (Pullar 1985), but it caused no surprise in this location on the shores of Lake Kohika. Also within this layer of peaty silt was a continuous bed of airfall Tarawera Tephra of AD 1886.
Figure 4.13 Area D, the layout of excavation units
62 Kohika Figure 4.14 Squares D1 and D2, all sections
Excavations and site history at Kohika 63
Below the upper 20 cm of deposit, the tops of standing wooden posts began to be uncovered where they had rotted off at the water table. Plate 4.18 shows they formed a line that crossed the excavation obliquely from the southeast of Square D1 to the northeast of D2. This line marks an important boundary for all the layers below, distinguishing between an inside area associated with structures and an outside area associated with the swampy margins of the site which, nevertheless, contained rich cultural materials. Thus layers of different material were found to be contemporary with one another at, or near, this boundary. The section drawings in Figure 4.14 show where the various layers began and ended. Inside the site perimeter was a layer of black sandy silt loam that has two divisions. The upper one represents a buried topsoil (McGlone and Pullar 1976) and was substantially free of cultural material. Outside the perimeter fence was a layer of clean white pumice sand derived from alluvial Kaharoa Tephra. Examination of the sections of the modern agricultural drains that surround Kohika, together with an extensive pattern of cores, indicates that this layer corresponded to the alluvial tephra already found in Areas B and C. The distribution of the deposit varied around the site insofar as it related to the idiosyncratic nature of the flood. The alluvium was deepest in the former meander channels and in some areas did not occur at all. The differences also followed the amount of shelter found progressively around the eastern to northern sides of the mound from the flood that came from the Tarawera River. In Area B it was 0.7 m deep, in Area C 0.5 m deep and it was shallowest in Area D, typically about 0.15 m. This event provided a definitive stratigraphic link between the three areas and marked the simultaneous end of occupation. Below the alluvium lay the lower division of the black sandy silt loam that covered the whole of Squares D1 and D2. Whereas the upper division of this loam inside the line of posts was a buried topsoil, the lower division, which also extended outside the posts, was an occupation surface containing cultural material such as wood, charcoal and cooking stones. A sharp boundary between the upper and lower black loams was observed during excavation and confirmed in the field by A. Pullar (McGlone and Pullar 1976). This occupation surface formed above the highest of three artificial floors in Area D (Plate 4.19), named the White House horizon during the excavation. It had an actual house floor and adjacent areas of cooking and dumping, and consisted of 5–10 cm depth of the clean Kaharoa tephra alluvium that was readily available in the swamp nearby. While the laid floor itself was confined to the area inside the line of standing posts, a fine horizon of the same gritty material could be traced outside the posts over the whole of the excavation of Squares D1 and D2, and beyond. The spatial pattern will be discussed further below. Under the White House on the same alignment was the Yellow House horizon, which consisted of a laid floor of yellow-grey dune sand that could have been obtained from quarrying in a higher part of the site. The Yellow House floor varied in thickness up to 20 cm. In some places it lay almost directly below the White House, separated by an interface only a few centimetres deep. Elsewhere in the sections can be seen a black sandy occupation layer that built up during the life of the Yellow House horizon. However, there is no indication of any interval of time between the Yellow and White horizons when this part of the site remained unoccupied. It was first one and then the other. Below the Yellow House floor lay another artificial horizon that followed much the same alignment across Squares D1 and D2. However, this surface was made up of two different materials that met edge-on at a further line of posts running towards the inside of the site at right angles to the posts marking the outer edge of the White and
64 Kohika
Yellow floors above. To the west of this new post alignment was the Bright Yellow floor. It can be seen in the south section of Square D2 (Fig. 4.14) and, again, it reached the line of posts diagonally crossing the excavation. At the same level to the east of the new posts was a contemporaneous floor consisting of white silt and smooth water-rolled pebbles varying in diameter from 5–10 cm (Plate 4.20). The white silt is the same lacustrine silt sediment widely available in the swamp around Kohika. In the floor it appeared to have been laid in basketfuls and packed with stones. The stones are greywacke and derive ultimately from the catchment of the Rangitaiki River that formerly flowed nearby. They were available locally as gravels associated with the pre-Taupo shoreline of which the stranded sand-dune of Kohika is a remnant. These three levels of artificial floor were built out from the former edge of the mound, thereby extending the dry land. They lay above sedge peat and silt that had formed previously in the swamp. Cultural debris lay in peat outside the perimeter fence beyond the floors. Below the artificial floors the stratigraphy corresponds broadly to that described already for Areas B and C. Figure 4.14 shows a layer of peat containing cultural material down to a band of dense in situ vegetable material at its base. Next came a layer of sterile peaty silt, and a sample of this from Square D2 was found to contain diatoms (McGlone and Pullar 1976). Excavation below the brown peaty silt is shown in Plate 4.21. First came the same layer of pale olive lacustrine silt as elsewhere and beneath this, again, the bed of airfall Kaharoa Tephra locally some 10 cm deep. The ash acted as an aquifer and exposing it produced a considerable inflow of water. Nevertheless, excavation some 50 cm deeper into the sedge peat that pre-dated the Kaharoa provided no evidence for a human presence.
A question of faulting
It was clear during the excavation of Square D2 that faulting had occurred in the artificial floors, and geological research since the Edgecumbe earthquake of 1987 has raised a significant issue. Figure 4.14 shows that the Yellow House and the underlying white silt and stone floor both faulted at the same place and time. This left a gap in the Yellow House floor that was evidently patched (see below). However, the White House floor did not drop, and it would surely have done so had it existed at the time, because it was made of fragile sandy tephra with no support other than the layers below. This consideration provides an age for the event. At the time of excavation the faulting was thought to be an event peculiar to Kohika as diatomaceous sediments are known to be unstable. Also, the site of Ngaroto had revealed some fault-like features (Shawcross 1968), but that case was very different because there was a large number of floors, many just 2–3 cm thick, laid over several metres of cultural deposit that was above the water table and therefore able to dry out from time to time and to move. The situation was very different from Area D of Kohika, where there were only three, much thicker floors resting directly on swamp deposits that never dried out during prehistory. Recent geological research has provided a more likely explanation. A series of faults lies on both sides of the Whakatane Graben (Nairn and Beanland 1987), as illustrated in Figure 2.1. The existence of many of these was unsuspected because the surface evidence was concealed beneath recent alluvium on the flood plains. The faults at Matata, located just a few hundred metres from Kohika, have been described by Ota et al. (1998). A radiocarbon date for the most recent event has given an age of less
Excavations and site history at Kohika 65
than 250 years (Ota et al. 1998). This was probably the cause of the faulting at Kohika. The chronology is about right – in fact, the dating of the occupation at Kohika can provide a more precise date for the geological event at Matata than is currently available. It seems that living at Kohika during late prehistory had its moments of drama. People there experienced an earthquake that foreshadowed the one of 1987. Moreover, occupation of the site was ended by flood just as the major flood of 1892 wiped out the first attempts of Europeans to settle on the Rangitaiki Plains (Gibbons 1990).
The spatial evidence from Area D
Wooden artefacts from the peat in Area D indicate houses and pataka. The purpose of the laid floors was to provide clean living surfaces and to raise the ground above water level, as at other swamp pa. White House horizon
Figure 4.15 shows a house floor on the White House horizon measuring 5.40 x 3.65 m orientated with its long axis approximately east–west. One end of the house was aligned to the posts crossing Squares D1 and D2 that evidently formed the perimeter fence of the site. The wider horizon extended beyond the house with a clear distinction between the clean floor of the house and the stained area outside it. There were many cooking structures. The most recent contained cooking stones but others had been raked out and there was dispersed midden and other debris. The pumice floor had been damaged by use and Figure 4.15 shows what remains. Much of the house itself was in Squares D2 and D5 (Plate 4.22), cooking took place in D4 (Plate 4.23) and a large number of discrete rubbish-dumping events were identified in the adjoining Square D3. Further, although the extent of the floor was distinct, a wider horizon could be traced by the spread of its sediment surface beyond the perimeter posts. As described above, the horizon was covered by a shallow occupation surface of black sandy silt loam. Then, inside the posts only, the same loam matrix continued above it but without cultural material and was identified as a buried topsoil. Outside the site at the same level was the white alluvium. While in places this washed between the perimeter posts, it is significant that it did not penetrate over the house floor itself (Fig. 4.15). This means that a standing house kept the flood deposit out, and corroborates the interpretations already given for Areas A, B and C that the site was occupied until the flood and then evidence for occupation virtually ends. Diatomaceous peaty silt formed above the floodwash and buried topsoil and, within it, lay the Tarawera Tephra, whose intact distribution marks the water level in 1976 (Figure 4.15). Yellow House horizon
The Yellow House floor was made of reworked local dune sand and was more extensive than the White House floor. Because it was lower in relation to the water table, more than a dozen wooden posts survived along the two side walls of a large house some 7.25 x 5.35 m. Its long axis was east–west and the western end was aligned to the same perimeter posts as the White House, built directly on top. The distribution of yellow-grey sand is shown in Figure 4.16 and Plate 4.24. Again, there is a distinction between the clean interior of the house and the stained and more damaged contemporary surface outside. As in the case of the White House horizon, cooking took place at the southern side of the house, where firescoops were found, some with cooking stones in situ and scattered food waste. Occupation had damaged and removed parts of the
66 Kohika
Figure 4.15 Area D, the White House horizon
yellow sand floor to reveal a black sandy layer below. In some places the yellow-grey floor was repaired by patches of clean sand as revealed by lenses of black below them (Plate 4.25). During the excavation, records were kept of the characteristics of the posthole fills, but it was difficult to distinguish postholes that belonged to this period of occupation from those that intruded later from above. However, there is no such doubt about the remains of the actual posts found along the sides of the house. Much of the area outside the house was probably uncovered, but some stakes in Square D3 probably relate to a simple shelter, and recovered timbers support this (see below). To the north of the house in Square D6, an area of laid but stained yellow sand extended inside the palisade. This part of the shore would have been a suitable landing-place and several canoe parts were found in both Area D and the HS Area nearby. Apart from the typical wear and tear of the Yellow House floor, there is some particular and interesting damage in the northern extension of Square D5 and the southern extension of Square D6 (Figure 4.16). The east section of Square D2 (Fig. 4.14) shows this to be precisely where some yellow-grey floor faulted and dropped. The plan drawing shows the sand to be missing and the gap filled with a miscellaneous assortment of waste timber that relevelled the floor, apparently as a deliberate patch, although no
Excavations and site history at Kohika 67
Figure 4.16 Area D, the Yellow House horizon (stakeholes less than 10 cm deep are not shown)
additional yellow sand was laid on top. Only a small part of the house floor was affected, together with a section of the eastern wall. One can only guess at the amount of damage caused to the house that was standing at the time. This event probably dates the most recent earthquake at the Matata Fault, as described above. The interface between White and Yellow horizons
The interface between the two laid house floors consisted of a lens of dark sand perhaps 2–3 cm deep, marked by an extensive scatter of small, freshly adzed wood chips and a number of obsidian flakes. Beyond the houses, a layer of stained sand up to 10 cm deep had formed during the Yellow House occupation. The lens of wood chips was undisturbed and there was no sign of any interval of time. Evidently the Yellow House did not collapse or rot slowly. It did not burn down either because, although there was a scatter of very small pieces of charcoal at the interface, there was not the ash or
68 Kohika
debris one would expect on the basis of evidence from other sites. It is possible that the Yellow House was dismantled, and the evidence from the house parts found in the swamp nearby shows that the houses at Kohika were eminently suited to simple construction and dismantling. The suggestion that an earthquake happened while the Yellow House stood may be the explanation. At all events, one house was removed and another, smaller one built in its place in precisely the same spot, and with no archaeological sign of a delay. The scatter of wood chips and flakes at the interface may indeed be the result of building the new house, and these were then covered and protected from subsequent disturbance by the laying of the White House floor immediately after the new house itself was built. That is the logical order of events because, if the floor had been laid before the house was built, one could expect damage to the floor to result, but this did not happen. Bright Yellow floor
A small part of a third level of artificial floors was found in Squares D1 and D2 in 1975 and 1976 and later investigated in Square DD, which lay on a different orientation. Details are shown in Figure 4.17. Another issue that directed attention to this part of the site was the large number of coprolites found in the southeastern corner of Square D2, although it was later established that these were dog faeces that lay in peat below the artificial floors, at which time they were outside the site perimeter. Figure 4.17 Area D, the Bright Yellow horizon
Excavations and site history at Kohika 69
As with the floors above, this horizon ended at the north–south alignment of perimeter posts, but an additional line of posts crossed Squares D2 and DD inside the site at right angles to it. To the west was a layer of Bright Yellow dune sand underlying the yellow-grey sand of the Yellow House horizon. This new sand layer could have been quarried from the top of Kohika itself. East of the line of posts was the artificially laid layer of white silt with water-rolled greywacke pebbles (both available in the swamp nearby), as described above. The two floors of sand and silt were formerly part of the same surface. Originally they met at the new east–west line of posts but the Bright Yellow sand had been removed in places by later disturbance (Fig. 4.17). Woven along the line of posts were long wooden battens, typically 3 cm thick, flexed between the standing posts and also held in place by wooden pegs. The battens separated the two sides of the floor. Details can be seen in Plates 4.20 and 4.26. It is probable that one or other of the two adjoining floors was roofed. The author’s opinion during excavation was that it was the Bright Yellow rather than the silt and stone floor, but, without a larger expanse of floor plan to go on, this is conjecture. In Square D3, at the western side of Area D at a contemporary level, there were patches of woodworking debris and shell midden. In stratigraphic terms the three superimposed structures in Area D were built without appreciable interval. There was no palaeosol, peat or significant cultural debris. While each of the floors and its associated structures may have remained in use for some time, the conclusion is the same as that derived independently from the evidence of Areas A, B and C: the duration of Area D was about a few decades. Stratigraphic correlations show that all excavated areas of the site were contemporaneous. Evidence from the peat
The stratigraphy of Squares D1 and D2 outside the area of laid floors is typical of Area D (Fig. 4.14) and is already familiar. It consisted of a band of sedge peat containing cultural material as far down as a natural layer of flattened reeds that were growing at the time of first occupation. Below this was sterile brown peaty silt. Directly underneath the lowest laid floor was a widespread but discontinuous lens of bracken fern that had been deliberately laid as a foundation on the peat, as seen in Plate 4.27. This had been done with some care, for the stems were aligned and no roots were to be seen. Bands of midden and other debris can be seen in Figure 4.14 spilling away from the edges of the sand floors into the peat. This was collected and recorded by square-metre unit. There is evidence for on-going deposition of material by fairly random dumping in the peat outside the perimeter, and the soft matrix would have been subject to constant interference by people and dogs, and canoes were drawn up at this part of the lakeshore. As for the cultural material, there were cooking stones, occasional large pieces of pumice, waste worked and unworked wood of all sizes and many wood chips. There were waterlogged artefacts, various large adzed timbers and poles, a few worked tree trunks and segments of tree-fern trunks apparently dumped for consolidation. There were coils of unused lashing vine, pieces of gourd, patches of charcoal and ash with fish bones and scales, seams of dumped marine and freshwater mussel shell. There were scattered mammal and bird bones, and dog faeces were abundant. Amongst the rubbish were some woven fibre artefacts including lengths of rope and sections of net. Squares D7, D16 and D17 were located clearly beyond the artificial floors, yet they contained similar material in the corresponding peat layer. D16 produced a spear, a wooden beater and a weeding tool, and D17 a paddle with a broken blade, and a broken bailer with a carved handle. Plate 4.28 shows the bow of a composite canoe,
70 Kohika
Figure 4.18 Area D, Squares D12–15, trench
Plate 4.29 the top of a gourd, Plate 4.30 part of an adzed log and a long piece of plaited rope, and Plate 4.31 a whale vertebra, a spear and a coil of vine.
Squares D12–15: a substantive trench
Towards the end of the excavations at Kohika, the stratigraphic relations between Areas A and D were investigated. Seven posthole bores helped to locate four test excavations, D12–15, whose locations are shown in Figure 4.1 and section drawings in Figure 4.18. At the lower northern end of the section, Square D12 can be seen partly to underlap Square D9, which was excavated in a previous year although no deeper than the Yellow House floor. The southern end of the Yellow House floor was found in the northern end of Square D12 and the stratigraphy is essentially the same as for Area D. A black occupation soil in upper Square D12 had a sandy matrix and contained oven stones, charcoal, wood chips, flakes of obsidian and scattered midden shell and bone. In the lower part of the excavation, the layer of peat contained cultural material similar to the peat outside the site perimeter elsewhere in Area D, although the material in Square D12 belongs to a time when the site perimeter was closer to the former mound. As in Square DD nearby, at the base of the peat was a lens of reeds that had grown in situ and patches of bracken fern had been laid. Below the cultural deposit was the same sterile brown silt and white lacustrine silt that overlay the airfall
Excavations and site history at Kohika 71
Kaharoa Tephra elsewhere. A log was found lying sideways across the excavation, but it was not possible to tell whether it had grown there. It could have been brought in or even floated to this part of the site. Square D13 presented a similar situation to Square D12, except at the bottom. Three substantial artificial floors were laid as phases in the on-going use of the same raised area (Plate 4.32). While these were not continuous with the floors already found to the north in Area D, they occurred at a stratigraphically equivalent level and were composed of the same three distinctive materials. Highest was a white reworked tephra similar to the White House floor, next came a yellow-grey dune sand comparable to the Yellow House floor, and lowest was a clean floor of white silt similar to the one at the base of Area D. Thus the three different materials were found in the same order as they had been in Area D. This situation is unlikely to have occurred by chance, and it is probable that the floors in Square D13 were contemporary with the ones some metres away to the north. In the absence of evidence for surface buildings, this area can be interpreted as open space in front of the houses in Area D. Under the floors was the typical occupation debris in the peat that overlies the brown silt. However, at the base of the excavation there was a difference from the rest of Area D: the lacustrine silt gave way to a pale, silty sand. Evidently, we had reached the top of the buried part of the former dune. Square D14 was still higher on the mound along the D12–15 section (Fig. 4.18). There was still an upper black sandy layer containing charcoal, cooking stones, midden, wood chips and so on, but there were a few formal artefacts and a large number of obsidian flakes, as in Square D13. Artificial build-up in Square D14 was in the form of a thick floor of yellow sand quarried from the dune nearby. Near the base of the excavation, only a small deposit of peat remained at this higher elevation, resting on the white silty sand of the former dune surface. The sterile brown silt of Area D as well as the white lacustrine silt had lensed out at this higher elevation along the D12– 15 trench. Lying lengthwise in the bottom of Square D14 was a substantial tree trunk with no surviving evidence of having been worked (Plate 4.33). This could not have floated into the site and is interpreted as a tree that grew on the former sand-dune prior to occupation, and like that described already for Square C7. While these trunks lay on the same general orientation, it would be too much to suggest that they were both blown down during a single storm, especially as the log in Square D12, which may or may not have grown in situ, was found on a different orientation. Finally, at the top of the D12–15 section, Square D15 exhibited similar stratigraphy to that found already in Area A. There was the same deposit of mixed sandy subsoil with dispersed pumice in upper and lower divisions, as represented by Layers B1 and B2 in Area A. However, the stratigraphy differed in detail from that typical of Area A, both at the top and the bottom of the section. Below the topsoil in Square D15 was a version of the brown silty soil found along the length of the D12–15 trench at this level and, below that, an additional dark charcoal-rich sand that seemed to be the local result of particular burning activity and not the result of any systematic difference in soil process. The composition of the natural basement material was different, too. In this northern part of the mound in Square D15 it was a pale silty sand, whereas in Area A it had been a brown sand. Square D15 was some 20 m away from the Area A excavation, so evidently there was some minor variation in the natural stratigraphy of the mound.
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Chasing the line of the western palisades
A palisade was found in Areas B and D and exposed in the side of the drain along the eastern side of the site. It was possibly also in the area investigated by the Historical Society (see below). Only a few pa are known to lack a continuous defended perimeter but, assuming that a palisade encircled Kohika, it proved to be elusive along the western sides of the site. One of the reasons may be that the changes in elevation there were gradual and the precise edge of the site was not conspicuous. A trench was dug in the southwestern part of the site (Fig. 4.1) but produced no posts. We next tried a line of posthole bores in the vicinity, looking for distinctive natural layers that marked the border of the site elsewhere, such as the Tarawera Ash and the white reworked tephra floodwash, but in this low-lying and fairly flat part of the site these two distinctive deposits did not end on the same line. Some 20 m further around the western side there was a more distinct edge. Here the Tarawera Ash stopped as expected and it was possible to ascertain where the charcoal-stained cultural deposit ended, but no white alluvium was found outside. The flood deposit was intermittent on this side of the site and occurred only in pre-existing meander channels in the peat. Finally, at the northwestern edge of the site a line of small test holes was dug along a transect (Fig. 4.1) but without the desired result. The basic difficulty was that there was quite a broad area where the palisades might run. It would have taken an area excavation to find palisades in the swamp, and the issue did not warrant such an effort. Nor could we exclude the real possibility that the evidence had already been removed when willow trees were bulldozed from the western side of the site.
Whakatane and District Historical Society excavations
When the site was discovered in November 1974, society members inspected the newly exposed drain sides and dug extensively in the area shown in Figure 4.19, which is based on their summary field notes and a sketch. Five units 10 metres square were marked out along the southern side of a new drain running east–west at the northern side of the site, as shown in Figure 4.1. (Squares 2 to 4 were further sub-divided into irregular sections numbered 1–10, as in Figure 4.19.) Another unit, Square 0, lay on the eastern side of a drain running north to join the first. Investigations also extended a few metres beyond the northern drain towards the stopbank with vehicle track on top (Fig. 4.19). Parts of the HS Area were among the richest at Kohika. Artefacts were found in the drain or were located by probing with a gum spear and then dug out. Evidently, there was no substantial removal of spoil during excavation. No precise stratigraphic information is available, therefore, but this can be extrapolated from the drain section and from adjoining parts of the University Areas C and D. It is clear that the waterlogged artefacts were preserved in peaty deposits lying between the Tarawera and Kaharoa tephras. Further, this peat was not sealed by pumice floodwash, which follows from its sheltered northerly location. Generally, the area seems to have been stratigraphically variable but similar to, and contemporary with, University Area D. University Squares C1 and C12 lay to the south of HS Squares 1 and 2. The former lay off the mound in an area of soft peat, and there was no firm substrate or artificial sand floor to support occupation there. Also, no wooden artefacts were found in the peat in Squares C1 and C12, as we would expect if they could have floated from the HS Squares 1 and 2 nearby. Reeds and raupo growing around the site could explain the lack of lateral movement, and this consideration reinforces the conclusion that items found in HS Squares 1 and 2 were
Excavations and site history at Kohika 73 Figure 4.19 Historical Society investigations (with some of their notes)
74 Kohika
substantially in situ. Another difference between University Squares C1 and C12 and HS Squares 1 and 2 is that the former had a substantial deposit of pumice flood alluvium, which was not generally the case for the HS Area. Much of the HS Area was evidently still on the dune or dry enough to live on, like Area D. While the field notes are few, they do record a ‘hard tramp’ layer and the nature of the material found provides evidence for living on the spot, and also for canoes being drawn up on the lakeshore. The society’s notes, some of which are reproduced in Figure 4.19, show that in Square 0 charred wood, charcoal and cooking stones were found at the bottom of the drain and this level was the ‘hard tramp’ layer, which indicates that the underlying deposits consisted of dune sand or artificially laid sand such as encountered in Area D. In Square 1 sticks and spears protruded from the drain side; there was broken gourd shell, some ‘human bone’ tied with flax rope, and a fragment of folded matting (the positions of items shown in Figure 4.19 are approximate). Remarkably, in Squares 1 and 2 were many parts of what is currently the earliestknown carved house in New Zealand, together with many diverse household items that are described in other chapters. This was an in situ household stunningly preserved until 1974. Near this house were considerable quantities of obsidian, including chunks up to 20 cm thick (not all of which were recovered). To the west of the house in Square 2, and extending through Squares 3 and 4, was an area of densely scattered wood chips, evidently the result of adzing. The obsidian and the wood chip scatters were separate but contemporary distributions. Canoe-making is one likely source for the wood chips, and several parts of canoes (including an unfinished bow) and paddles were found. A pounamu adze was found in the drain in Square 4. There were various pumice chunks in Squares 2 and 3. A few had been made into artefacts, but pumice occurs widely in the dune and derives from sea-rafted pumice associated with the Taupo eruption. There was a lesser concentration of wooden items in Square 4 and the so-called ‘tramp layer’ continued through it. Posts described as from a possible ‘palisade’ occurred in the drain in Square 5, and this is plausible given that a section of palisade passed through Area D heading in this general direction at about the same contour. Field notes suggest that flood alluvium reappeared in the drain section around Square 5, with peat and then the ‘hard tramp’ layer below it, which generally matches the Area D stratigraphy. Finally, some evidence from the poupou (house wall planks) found in Square 2 may tell us something about the abandonment of Kohika. These were incomplete, with most of the bottoms rotted off and all the tops burnt off. It seems that, while they were still standing upright in the ground, a fire, or series of scrub fires, passed through the area and burnt off the tops. Most of the house had already collapsed before the fire, because only the pieces still standing were burnt while the rest survived in the swamp. To leave behind carved house parts might seem rather drastic. We already know that occupation was suddenly interrupted by a major flood, and can only speculate about why people did not come back to recover the carvings later. In fact, many other artefacts of value were also left behind, including more than one canoe that could have been used to carry them away. That people did not return could imply something about the political circumstances of late prehistory. However, five late intrusive burials in Area A do tell us that people did eventually return to Kohika from time to time, and the mixing of Tarawera Ash into the dune after 1886 indicates that it was gardened afterwards.
Excavations and site history at Kohika 75
References Gibbons, W.H., 1990. The Rangitaiki, 1890–1990: settlement and drainage on the Rangitaiki. Whakatane: Whakatane and District Historical Society. Lawlor, I., 1979. Palaeoenvironment analysis: an appraisal of the prehistoric environment of the Kohika swamp pa (N68/140), Bay of Plenty. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. McGlone, M.S. and W.A. Pullar, 1976. More about the Kohika site, Bay of Plenty: soil stratigraphy and pollen analysis (a preliminary report). Historical Review, 14:110–3. Nairn, I.A. and S. Beanland, 1989. Geological setting of the 1987 Edgecumbe earthquake, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 32:1–13. Ota, Y., S. Beanland, K.R. Berryman and I.A. Nairn, 1988. The Matata Fault: active faulting at the north-western margin of the Whakatane Graben, eastern Bay of Plenty. New Zealand Geological Survey Record, 35:6–13. Pullar, W.A., 1985. Soils and land use of the Rangitaiki Plains, North Island, New Zealand. Lower Hutt: New Zealand Soil Bureau. Shawcross, F.W., 1968. The Ngaroto site. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter, 11:2–29.
Plate 4.1 Kohika in January 1976. Work is in progress in Areas A, B and D. The spoil heaps are of different colour, which results from their varied composition. Plate 4.2 Excavations in Square A1 Extension.
Plate 4.3 Part of a small bin surrounded by surface stakeholes in Square A3.
Plate 4.4 A cross-section of a bin structure in Square A3 dug into the former sand-dune.
Plate 4.5 An oval-ended pit in Square A1 Ext. interrupted by a later rectangular pit lying at right angles to it. A charcoal sample for C14 dating was taken from underneath the large pumice boulder found in the pit fill.
Plate 4.6 Square B1 during excavation. Plate 4.7 Square B1 near the base of the excavation showing in situ posts.
Plate 4.8 The drain section in Area B shows a flood deposit of reworked tephra alluvium outside the site, where a later meander channel, visible in Square B3, has cut into its surface. Plate 4.9 Wooden items from the peat below the flood deposit in Square B3 are triple-bagged in plastic.
Plate 4.10 A degraded pukatea board in the upper peat of Square B4. Plate 4.11 The pukatea board in Square B4 consolidated prior to removal.
Plate 4.12 The defended edge of the site was sharply defined in Square B4. Palisade posts were exposed in the side of the agricultural drain visible in the background and Square B3 lies on the other side of it. Plate 4.13 The edge of the site reveals the effect of the flood in Square B4. Fine silt lies around the palisade posts, reworked Kaharoa alluvium lies outside the site, and the two are separated by the wave-lapped shore.
Plate 4.14 Square B4, west section, showing a palisade post, pre-flood deposits that built up during occupation, the flood alluvium of sand and silt, and post-flood sediments that are culturally sterile. Plate 4.15 Squares C1 and C12 reveal a deposit of alluvium. Above this, a late meander channel in the Upper Peat can be seen in the baulk, while below the alluvium is the culture-bearing Lower Peat. This photograph shows the pump being primed in 1975 at the start of a day’s work.
Plate 4.16 Square C10 contained a complex succession of fire-pits and hangi with occupational debris and fills composed of material quarried elsewhere. Plate 4.17 Excavating a swamp in wet weather can have its difficulties. Area D.
Plate 4.18 The site perimeter in Area D. Inside the line of posts were artificial house floors; outside many associated waterlogged artefacts were found preserved in peat. Plate 4.19 Square D2, with superimposed house floors visible in the south section.
Plate 4.20 Square D2. A line of standing posts, with horizontal light wooden battens flexed and pegged between them, marks the edge of an artificial floor of silt, packed with water-rolled greywacke pebbles. Plate 4.21 Square D1, south section. Also showing a test excavation of the lacustrine silt, the Kaharoa Tephra and sedge peat below.
Plate 4.22 Square D5, the White House floor. Plate 4.23 Square D4, firescoops in the White House horizon.
Plate 4.24 Area D, exposing the extent of the Yellow House horizon, January 1976. Plate 4.25 Area D, some details of the excavation of the Yellow House floor.
Plate 4.26 Area D, Square DD during excavation of the Yellow House horizon. Intruding into the square is the corner of Square D2, dug previously, while the baulks are composed of backfilled spoil. Plate 4.27 Square DD, laid bracken-fern stems below an artificial house floor.
Plate 4.28 Square D2, canoe bow in peat. Plate 4.29 Square D2, gourd shell.
Plate 4.30 Square D2, adzed log and length of rope. Plate 4.31 Square D7, whale vertebra, wooden spear and coil of vine.
Plate 4.32 Square D13, north section. Plate 4.33 Square D14, log at base of excavation.
5
Site chronology G.J. Irwin and M.D. Jones
This chapter concludes that Kohika was probably occupied for quite a short period of one or two human generations in the late 17th century, that all of the excavated areas were contemporary, and that settlement was substantially continuous. These conclusions arise from a number of strands of geomorphological and archaeological data drawn together by Irwin, together with a Bayesian analysis of the radiocarbon results by Jones. The evidence of geomorphology and archaeology
The natural stratigraphy of the swamp shows that the occupation of Kohika occurred between the Kaharoa Tephra of cal. AD 1350 and the Tarawera Tephra of AD 1886. We note that: • A greater depth of peat lay below the archaeological site than above it, which places the occupation in the latter part of the period. • The peat above the archaeological deposit was sterile, which demonstrates that an interval of time elapsed between abandonment and the Tarawera Tephra. • The generally narrow band of cultural material in the swamp sediments indicates a restricted period of occupation. Two natural events have implications for the chronology: • Evidence for faulting in Area D during the Yellow House horizon was probably associated with an earthquake centred on the nearby Matata Fault (Ota et al. 1988). • The alluvial deposition of reworked Kaharoa Tephra around the shores of Kohika during a flood marked the simultaneous end to occupation in the excavated Areas B, C and D. With regard to the relative ages of the different excavated areas, we note that: • Areas B, C and D were all at the swampy margin of the site and there is a strong stratigraphic and sedimentary correlation between them. • The field notes of the Historical Society excavations and evidence extrapolated from the university excavations argues for a stratigraphic association between Area D and the HS Area, as well. • Area A (and parts of C) lie on top of the Kohika dune and have a lesser stratigraphic correlation with Areas B, D (and the rest of C) at the margins. However, the source of sediments in the expanding margins of the site during the occupation of Area B was the dune itself, which argues for contemporaneity. • The four separate areas excavated by the University and that excavated by the Historical Society were found to be functionally different, but culturally complementary. The mutually exclusive distribution of different aspects of settlement supports contemporaneity. 76
Site chronology 77
With regard to the chronological implications of cultural constituents of the site, we note that: • The artefact style is generally that of Classic Maori (only a vague indicator of chronology). • R. Neich’s analysis of woodcarvings (Chapter 7) indicates a lack of stylistic continuity between the carvings of Kohika and the carving styles of local iwi, including Ngati Awa, as described in European times, suggesting an interval of time between them. • In the huge archaeological database, we have so far found no remains of any European artefact, animal or plant to contest its prehistoric status. With regard to structural evidence for site duration, we note that: • In Area A, kumara storage pits were built at different times and interrupted one another. After the area was no longer used for storage (but with no perceptible delay), the many firescoops show it was used for cooking. Only after the site was abandoned as a settlement was it used for burial. • Area D was occupied long enough for the White House to be rebuilt directly on top of the Yellow House on the same alignment and sharing a common wall. Both were of pole and thatch construction (see Chapter 7). The evidence is consistent with the Yellow House being dismantled (possibly following earthquake damage), and its successor built immediately afterwards. • Until further evidence is forthcoming from elsewhere in the site, the indications are that the duration was quite short. The chronological hypothesis
All of the above information, in combination, supports the hypothesis that Kohika was occupied for an uninterrupted period of only one to two human generations in late prehistory and also that it was probably abandoned by around AD 1700, or not very long afterwards.
Radiocarbon evidence
There have been fifteen radiocarbon dates from Kohika. The results provide a consistent series and the site can be regarded as securely and quite tightly dated. Seven of the C14 samples were collected from Square D17 and were used to date the pollen and sedimentary core, as described in Chapter 3. All of these dates are earlier than the time of occupation of the lake village itself. Eleven further samples that did relate to the village occupation were submitted to the Institute of Nuclear Sciences by G. Irwin in 1984. Six of these samples were dated. All were found to be rather young and of similar age. On the basis of these results, the (then) Radiocarbon Archaeological Committee deemed it unnecessary to date the remaining five samples. However, two further samples were dated in 2001 by the Waikato University Radiocarbon Laboratory, bringing the total for the site occupation to eight and confirming the age of the site. The samples for radiocarbon dating were taken from a range of structural contexts from Areas A, B, C and D. Details of the samples and their conventional radiocarbon ages (CRA) are presented below. NZ6599, Square A1
This sample consisted of charcoal from short-lived species collected from beneath a pumice boulder in the fill of a pit in Square A1 Extension, as shown in Figure 4.3.
78 Kohika
This pit was deliberately filled at the time of construction of a later intersecting pit. Thus the age of the sample relates to the pit sequence of Area A. NZ6580, Square C7
This consisted of tuatua shell (Paphies subtriangulata) collected from shell midden some 75 cm beneath the surface, as shown in Figure 4.11. This was a zone of cooking and midden scatter on the mound. NZ6583, Square B4
The sample was a standing palisade post of small-diameter kanuka, with bark. It is shown in the drawing of the west section of Square B4 (Fig. 4.8). The palisade stood while deposits built up inside it and then was enveloped by the alluvial flood deposit. NZ6611, Square B3
This was a similar small-diameter worked kanuka post found lying in the peat below the flood alluvium at the base of Square B3 (Fig. 4.7). Thus it was a sample from outside the palisade in Area B and expected to give a similar result to NZ6583. NZ6618, Square DD
This sample was a small-diameter post from a line of standing posts that separated a yellow sand floor from one composed of white silt packed with greywacke river stones. These were two contemporary parts of the same Bright Yellow horizon, which represented an early stage in the sequence of laid floors and houses in Area D (Figs 4.14 and 4.17). NZ6619, Square DD
This consisted of laid bracken fern stems (Plate 4.27) from below the floor of clay silt and stones of the same Bright Yellow horizon and is stratigraphically equivalent to NZ6618, both dates relating to the floors and houses of Area D. WK10292, Square D1
This was a small-diameter post from the palisade in Square D1. This palisade was found to have abutted the northern ends of two successive houses that stood in Area D at the Yellow House and White House levels, as shown in Figures 4.15 and 4.16. The age of the sample could be expected to be equivalent to NZ6618 and 6619. WK10293, Square D1
This sample consisted of charcoal of kanuka, tutu, coprosma, hebe and fernroot and was collected from the peat in the swamp outside the palisade in the same excavated square. The sample does not have the same structural integrity as the other three samples from Area D but should be equivalent in age, or very slightly earlier. It represents the burning of secondary growth at the edge of the mound in Area D.
Bayesian calibration of the radiocarbon data
A Bayesian analysis of the available radiocarbon results was performed to assess how well they support the chronological observations outlined above. Here we describe the observed archaeological record as a single general phase of activity of unknown duration. We seek to determine when this phase of activity took place and for how long.
Site chronology 79
Analysis
The Bayesian calibration applied in this analysis follows the phase model described by Nicholls and Jones (1998, 2001). Here all dates are treated as coming from one of three phases that occur in a single, abutting series temporally bounded by the Kaharoa and Tarawera Tephras. This represents the basic structure of the post-Kaharoa geomorphological sequence described in Chapters 2 and 3. Phase 1 is an upper layer of sedge peat that overlies the cultural layer and is bounded by the Tarawera Tephra. No chronometric determinations are associated with this phase. Phase 2 comprises the cultural layer from which eight CRA determinations have been obtained. Within this phase we cannot a priori apply any constraints on the relative age of the dates. Phase 3 corresponds to the layer of peat lying between the cultural deposit and the Kaharoa Tephra. Two suitable determinations are available for this phase, and on the basis of stratigraphic superposition these are constrained temporally so that NZ4801 is of greater age than NZ4800. Thus the chronology of this phase sequence is defined by the unknown temporal parameters Phase 1 end (0), Phase 2 end (1), Phase 2 start (2) and Phase 3 start (3). The distribution of the parameters 1 and 2 provide estimates for the chronology of the Kohika archaeological record. The purpose of the current analysis is to provide age estimates for these temporal parameters based on the measured CRA data and phase associations given in Table 5.1 below. In addition, we wish to estimate the total duration over which cultural activity has taken place (R ––– 1 – 2). Table 5.1 Chronometric data used in the current analysis
Date NZ6599 NZ6580 NZ6583 NZ6611 NZ6618 NZ6619 WK10292 WK10293 NZ4800 NZ4801
CRA 159 596 212 157 221 190 204 270 352 534
Error 42 32 32 32 32 39 54 38 56 56
13C -25.7 -1.35 -25.89 -24.73 -24.97 -24.7 -26.1 -26.2
Phase M 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3
Reservoir N 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2
Terrestrial Marine Terrestrial Terrestrial Terrestrial Terrestrial Terrestrial Terrestrial Terrestrial Terrestrial
For further discussion of the model applied in the current analysis it is useful to define the following notation. Let m,n be a calibrated date for the n’th specimen measured in the m’th phase, with units calendar years AD, and assumed to equal the context date associated with the (m,n)’th specimen. Let m denote the (unknown and undated) boundary date at the lower boundary of phase m. Let P and A, P A be given termini, setting lower and upper bounds on the dated sequence. Possible parameter sets (,) take some value in a parameter space , which is simply the set of all states (,) satisfying the stratigraphic constraints. In the current analysis we have: ––– {(,);P 3 3,2 3,1. 2 2,.1 0A} Where P=600 and A=66 on the basis of tephrochronology. Following the standard Bayesian inferential framework, the posterior distribution of and conditional on the observed dates y (with density h (, | y)) is defined in terms of an unnormalised prior density f (, ), and likelihood L (y | ), as
80 Kohika
h (, | y) = L (y | ) f (, ). Here we use the ‘Neutral’ prior f (, ) defined by Nicholls and Jones (2001) and the standard definition of the radiocarbon likelihood for L (y | ) (e.g. Buck et al. 1991). In the current analysis the INTERCAL98 calibration data (Stuiver et al. 1998) were used. Additionally, a terrestrial reservoir offset of 25 ± 5 (McCormac et al. 1998) and a marine reservoir offset of -27 ± 15 (Higham and Hogg 1995) have been applied. In this case correlated reservoir offsets have been used (Jones and Nicholls 2001). Summaries of the likelihood distributions (calibrated distributions) for chronometric data given in Table 5.1 are presented in Figure 5.1 below. Results
Marginal posteriors for the parameters were computed using an implementation of the rejection sampler described by Nicholls and Jones (1998, 2001) through DateLab 1.2 (Jones and Nicholls 2002). The posterior distributions for 1, 2 and R are summarised in Table 5.2 and Figures 5.2–4 below. Under the assumptions described above and the chronometric data given in Table 5.1, these results indicate that the cultural phase sequence corresponds to activity spanning 5–165 years starting some time in the interval AD 1610–1690. Table 5.2 Summary posterior distributions for Phase 2 start, Phase 2 end and Phase 2 duration
Parameter Phase 2 start (2) Phase 2 end (1) Phase 2 duration (R)
Figure 5.1 Summary of the calibrated distributions for the chronometric data given in Table 5.1
95% HPD 1610–1690 1680–1810 5–165
68% HPD 1660–1680 1680–1700 5–50
0 50 100 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 550 600
Determination
NZ4801
NZ4800
WK10292
WK10292
NZ6619
NZ6618
NZ6611
NZ6583
NZ6580
650 NZ6599
Years BP
150
Site chronology 81 Figure 5.2 Posterior distribution for Phase 2 start (2)
0.35
0.3
Likelihood
0.25
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
0.0
68% HPD 95% HPD 1500
1550
1600
1650
1700
1750
1800
1850
1900
Years AD
Figure 5.3 Phase 2 end (1)
0.35
0.3
Likelihood
0.25
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
0.0
68% HPD 95% HPD 1500
1550
1600
1650
1700
1750
1800
1850
1900
Years AD
Figure 5.4 Phase 2 duration (R)
0.0876 0.0803 0.073 0.0657
Likelihood
0.0584 0.051 1 0.0438 0.0365 0.0292 0.0219 0.0146 0.0073 0.0
68%HPD 0
50
100
95%HPD 150
200
Span (years)
250
300
350
400
82 Kohika
Conclusions
The Bayesian analysis presented here suggests that the cultural deposits in the Kohika archaeological record correspond to a period of occupation in the late 17th century. This analysis is to some extent confounded by multiple perturbations in the calibration curve at this period (e.g. the bimodality in Figure 5.3). These raise the possibility of a longer occupation. However, the analysis does show that the occupation was certainly less than 160 years and probably less than 70–80 years. On this basis, we would conclude that Kohika was occupied during the latter half of the 17th century. The archaeological and geomorphological data enable us to narrow down the range of chronological options presented by the Bayesian analysis of the C14 results, and to support the chronological hypothesis stated above.
References Buck, C.E., J.B. Kenworthy, C.D. Litton and A.F.M. Smith, 1991. Combining archaeological and radiocarbon information: a Bayesian approach to calibration. Antiquity, 65:808–21. Higham, T.F.G. and A.G. Hogg, 1995. Radiocarbon dating of prehistoric shell from New Zealand and calculation of the dr value using fish otoliths. Radiocarbon, 37:409–16. Jones, M.D. and G.K. Nicholls, 2001. Reservoir offset models for radiocarbon calibration. Radiocarbon, 43:119–24. Jones, M.D. and G.K. Nicholls, 2002. DateLab manual. University of Auckland. McCormac, F.G., A.C. Hogg, T.F.G. Higham, M.G.L. Baillie, J.G. Palmer, L. Xiong, J.R. Pilcher, D. Brown and S.T. Hoper, 1998. Variations of radiocarbon in tree-rings: southern hemisphere offset preliminary results. Radiocarbon, 40:1153. Nicholls, G.K. and M.D. Jones, 1998. Radiocarbon dating with temporal order constraints. Technical Report. Mathematics Department, Auckland University, New Zealand. No.407. http://www.math.auckland.ac.nz/~nicholls. Nicholls, G.K. and M.D. Jones, 2001. Radiocarbon dating with temporal order constraints. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series C, 50:503–21. Ota, Y.S., S. Beanland, K.R. Berryman and I. Nairn, 1988. The Matata Fault: active faulting at the north-western margin of the Whakatane Graben, eastern Bay of Plenty. New Zealand Geological Survey Record, 35:6–13. Stuiver, M., P.J. Reimer, E. Bard, J.W. Beck, G.S. Burr, K.A. Hughen, B. Kromer, F.G. McCormac, J. Plicht and M. Spurk, 1998. INTCAL98 radiocarbon age calibration, 24,000–0 cal. BP. Radiocarbon, 40:1041–83.
6
The wooden artefacts from Kohika R.T. Wallace and G.J. Irwin
The waterlogged deposits of this small lake village produced a rare and comprehensive inventory of wooden artefacts that were in close association with one another. The artefacts bear on many aspects of life, including collecting and preparing diverse foods from a varied environment, the importance of canoe transport, the tools used for domestic and craft activities, for defence and for outside contacts and trade. The artefacts also throw light on social aspects of life, including ornamentation and art, personal status, religion, music and play. Some of the artefacts are finely made and reflect social value but others were casually made for day-to-day use. This chapter includes all wooden artefacts except houses and pataka, which are described separately in Chapter 7. Fibre and woven fabric are covered in Chapter 8, which completes the waterlogged assemblage.
Field treatment and laboratory conservation
Members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society, who carried out the initial digging, stored most of the wooden artefacts they found in water. However, some palisade posts were dried out and only those of sound wood survived largely intact. After May 1975, the University of Auckland took responsibility for conservation and study. In the field each artefact was washed and painted with a 50 per cent solution of polyethylene glycol (PEG) 400 to aid dimensional stability. Each was labelled and bagged in three layers of clear flexible polythene tube, the innermost layer closely around the artefacts and the outermost one airfilled to cushion it during transport. On arrival at the university the artefacts were washed, disinfected, labelled and stored in temporary purpose-built tanks containing water and biocide prior to conservation treatment. They were stored in this way until 1979, when the Anthropology Department moved into the Human Sciences Building. With the needs of waterlogged wood conservation in mind, K. Peters designed the Conservation Laboratory in the new building and assembled the equipment needed to carry out the process. In the following years he undertook specialist training and was awarded a Churchill Fellowship to travel to waterlogged wood conservation laboratories in Scandinavia and the Netherlands. The excavation of Kohika and the development of this laboratory facility were among the reasons for the creation of a doctoral fellowship funded by the Department of Internal Affairs to conduct research on the conservation of wooden artefacts in New Zealand (Wallace 1985). When Peters left the department in 1983, R. Wallace, the holder of that fellowship, replaced him. D. Johns, then a student in the Anthropology Department, completed an MA on waterlogged wood conservation and undertook postgraduate training in conservation in Italy and Canada. On her return 83
84 Kohika
she took over the running of the Conservation Laboratory, which is now an internationally recognised facility and the only one in the country able to carry out this type of work. The initial conservation work on the collection was carried out by Peters. After his departure in 1983, Wallace completed the work, with some assistance from Johns towards the end of the process. Peters’ work included drying out some very sound artefacts without any conservation treatment. He also employed a solvent/wax impregnation method on some small, valuable artefacts with very acceptable results. By 1984, however, the majority of the artefacts were still in tanks containing 12 per cent PEG 400. This was intended to prepare them for freeze-drying, which was carried out in 1986. The results were satisfactory, except for a few originally highly degraded items that were left with an excessive PEG 400 content. These items were subsequently reconserved by Johns using a method now preferred for conserving artefacts of this type, which involved removal of the PEG 400 and reimpregnation with the higher molecular weight PEG 3350 followed by non-vacuum freeze-drying in a large blast freezer.
Wood identification, artefact reassembly and identification
The field catalogue consisted of a duplicate manifold book with a numbered list of all items recovered from the site. In most cases this gave a two- or three-word description of the object and recorded provenance to square and layer. A later laboratory book recorded the items accompanied by rough sketches and measurements. When conservation was completed, a new catalogue was made with all relevant information and items grouped by artefact type. The wood species composition of each item was identified using transmitted and incident light microscopy, and this information was extremely useful in carrying out later analysis. The collection was laid out with all items of the same wood species placed together, and this allowed broken parts of the same artefact to be easily rejoined. In addition, the wood type used sometimes suggested the function of an artefact. One example is fern-root beaters. Previous research by Wallace (1989:225) had shown that heart kauri branch wood was used almost exclusively for making these beaters in the areas of New Zealand where the species grew. Kauri no longer grows in the Kohika area (but it occurs in the prehistoric pollen record), and there were two well-preserved beaters made from kauri in the collection. When the wood identification was completed, two further kauri beaters in a degraded state were recognised. In contrast, an artefact previously and incorrectly recorded as a roughly made beater turned out to be made from mahoe (Melicytus ramiflorus) but, as this wood is too soft and light to be suitable for the purpose, the artefact was reclassified. The possible function of each artefact was suggested by comparing its form and wood composition with those either recorded in the ethnographic literature or extant in museum collections. The attributed functions are recorded in this chapter, together with the descriptions of each artefact, but must always remain somewhat speculative. The starting-point on this topic was a preliminary research paper by an MA student, J. Boileau (1978). Subsequently, P. Harrison, a master carver, D. Bonica, an expert in traditional Maori material culture, and R. Neich and D. Simmons, current and former Ethnologists at Auckland Museum, contributed valuable suggestions. Any errors in suggesting a function must remain the responsibility of the authors. The body of this chapter consists of descriptions of the wooden artefacts recovered from Kohika. All items were drawn, photographed and measured as part of the analysis. Drawing was part of the process of description and required very thorough
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 85
observation. The working drawings were redrawn by J. Lawrence, illustrator at the Anthropology Department, University of Auckland. The photographs are by H. MacDonald, former photographer at the department. Many artefacts were merely fragments and are not described in the text. Details of all pieces recovered are contained in an artefact catalogue, the Appendix, as are dimensions not provided in the formal description sections below. The items listed in the Appendix are identified by KOH (Kohika) numbers, and additional AU or WM numbers indicate whether the items were collected by the University of Auckland or by the Whakatane and District Historical Society.
Bird Spears
Maori bird spears were slim rods of wood 6–12 m long fitted with a barbed point and used to impale birds in trees by a thrusting rather than throwing action (Best 1977:153– 63). Superficially they were difficult to distinguish from naturally formed sticks, but closer inspection showed that the shafts had been made from wood of medium-sized trees that had been painstakingly split out and thinned down to less than 20 mm thick. Due to their great original length, only short broken sections of spears were recovered at Kohika. Fourteen of these were found (Plate 6.1) as well as one spear point (Fig. 6.1). The attributes of each artefact are listed in Table 6.1. Table 6.1
Artefact KOH125 KOH126 KOH127 KOH128 KOH129 KOH130 KOH131 KOH132 KOH133 KOH134 KOH135 KOH136 KOH137 KOH138 KOH139
Characteristics of the bird spear fragments
Length mm 680 895 1390 510 1175 375 620 595 137 820 285 730 265 700 167
Max. width mm 17 18 17 14 18 16 18 16 17 14 19 18.5 9 16.5 7
Min. width mm 12.5 0 14 0 18 16 18 10 17 14 15 18 0 10 3
End A
End B
Wood type Comments
Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Broken Complete
Broken Blunt butt Broken Sharp point Blunt butt Broken Broken Broken Blunt butt Blunt butt Broken Lap joint? Point Blunt butt Tip broken
Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Kanuka Maire Rimu Rimu Rimu Ponga
Spear section Spear tip? Spear section Spear tip? Spear butt? Spear section Spiral binding Spear section Spear butt? Spear butt? Spear section Lap joint? Spear tip? Spear butt? Barbed point
Comments
The fourteen broken sections of bird spear range in length from 1390 mm to 137 mm. Three have pointed ends and appear to have been from the front where the barbed spear tip was lashed. Three have squared or rounded-off ends and may have been butt ends of the spears. One (KOH136) has a chamfered end that would have allowed a lap joint to be formed in the middle section of the spear. The other seven are sections of shaft with both ends broken. KOH131 has a shadow left by a strip of binding wrapped in a spiral along its length. All had been carefully formed from the trunk wood of three species of tree that produce very hard wood. The blanks must first have
86 Kohika
Plate 6.1 Thirteen sections of bird spear and one spear point.
Figure 6.1 Bird spear point made from treefern trunk
been split from a felled tree trunk then thinned down to less than 20 mm thick, accurately following the run of the wood grain to prevent the shaft splitting in two. Ten sections are made from kanuka, one from maire and three from exceptionally resinous rimu heartwood. The fourteen fragments could theoretically have come from a minimum of four spears, two of kanuka and one each of maire and rimu, but it is much more likely that there were more. Oral traditions reported in the ethnographic literature (Best 1977, Colenso 1868, 1891, Downes 1928, Ranapiri 1895) record all three of these species as having been used for bird spears but they also suggest that tawa was often used, although that does not seem to have occurred at Kohika. In the case of kanuka: The spear maker who used manuka as a material fashioned his instrument from the species known to our scientists as Leptospermum ericoides, ‘white manuka’ of ordinary nomenclature, the other species not being suitable for the purpose. The first named, known as M-ar-a, kopuka and kahikatoa will, under favourable conditions, develop a straight-barrelled, straight-grained and comely trunk that lends itself to free riving . . . These spears were more rigid than those fashioned from tawa so were easier to manipulate . . . [and] less liable to break. (Best 1977:157) Maire is also recorded: ‘when fashioned from maire, a tall and straight young tree was selected, and this was thinned down
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 87
to the desired thickness’ (Downes 1928:10). Best comments that ‘if this was so then the woodsmen certainly had a trying task’ (Best 1977:159). While he was referring to the notorious hardness and toughness of this wood his doubts were misplaced, as the occurrence at Kohika of a maire bird spear proves. Rimu is recorded from Northland: ‘The best being made of “Kapara”, the gum-preserved core found in some decayed kahikatea and rimu trees after the sapwood had rotted away’ (Matthews 1910:604). Colenso (1891:50), in contrast, doubted the existence of rimu bird spears, declaring only man spears were made from this wood. The lap joint suggested for KOH137 has been recorded for kanuka bird spears (Matthews 1910:604) but Best vigorously denied the possibility of such a thing: ‘A spear-shaft composed of two pieces would not, I feel assured, commend itself to the Maori of yore as they were used with branch rests they would not work so easily’ (Best 1977:157). His scepticism was clearly misplaced in this case. KOH139 is a barbed bird-spear point 167 mm long. It is made from the hard, highly lignified material from inside a tree-fern trunk. It has four barbs and is slightly C-shaped in cross-section (Fig. 6.1). It is about half the size of one made from the same substance recorded by Matthews (1910:604). Best also records this substance being used, giving Cyathea dealbata as the species, and says that on the East Coast it was regarded as producing inferior points (1977:159).
Digging tools
The Kohika site yielded parts of thirteen ko or digging sticks, one teka or ko footrest (Fig. 6.2), a ketu (weeder) blade, a hotu (one-piece spade) and four handles (Fig. 6.3), and nine blades for composite digging tools (Fig. 6.4). Also described here is a piece of an elaborate carving probably from the top of a ceremonial ko (Fig. 6.5). The artefacts are described individually below and then the nature of the class as a whole is summarised. KOH198 is a large ko made from a moderately straight manuka stem. The bottom end has been sharpened to a laterally flattened point and the top carved into a leaf shape. KOH199 is a large ko made from a whole, moderately straight kanuka stem. Its cross-section is sub-rectangular where it narrows to a needle-shaped point. The top has been broken off. KOH200 is a large ko made from a gently curved length of trunk-wood maire. It is has a very long bevel running down one face to the chisel-shaped tip. Its top has also been broken off. KOH201 is a light ko made from a rather crooked stem of manuka. It has been sharpened to a bevelled point and its top shaped into a simple knob. KOH202 is a medium-sized ko made from a very straight stem of manuka. It is bevelled to a chisel point and has its top broken off. KOH203 is the top of a light ko made from a crooked stem of manuka. The top has been carved into a new-moon shape, traditional for many ko. KOH204 is the top of a ko made from a crooked stem of kanuka with the tip carved into the same leaf shape as found on KOH198. This artefact has been badly burnt. KOH205 is a double-ended ko made from a crooked stick of manuka. It is sharpened to needle points at both ends. KOH206 is a manuka ko tip bevelled to a chisel point. KOH207 is a kanuka ko tip also bevelled to a chisel point.
88 Kohika Figure 6.2 Twelve digging sticks and one ko footrest
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 89 Figure 6.3 A weeder blade, a one-piece spade, and four handles of composite digging tools
90 Kohika Figure 6.4 Seven complete detachable digging-tool blades, one rough-out and one fragment
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 91
KOH208 is a manuka ko tip with a needle-shaped point. KOH209 is a manuka ko tip sharpened to a point and with bevels on both sides of the shaft. KOH8 is a fragment of a carving in the form of a three-fingered hand (Fig. 6.5). It is strongly reminiscent of the tops of elaborate ceremonial ko illustrated in Best (1976:69, 76, 78) and in the Oldman catalogue (Oldman 1946, Plate 53, Item 152). KOH8 is almost certainly a fragment of one of these artefacts. KOH211 is a plain teka (ko footrest) made from a naturally L-shaped stem of mahoe. The horizontal part is worn from use and has a knob on its end. The vertical part has a bevelled flat surface designed to fit flush with the ko shaft. KOH212 is the blade of a ketu that has been snapped from its handle. It is made from manuka and the tip has substantial use wear. KOH213 is a digging tool with a very broad blade. It could be described as a very long-handled ketu, a spatulate ko or a one-piece spade. It is rather similar in shape to a canoe paddle, except that its blade is about a quarter the size needed for one. Also, unlike paddles it is made from manuka, a much stronger timber than the tawa used for the Kohika paddles. The top has an ornamental end with a knob formed from a natural knot in the wood. KOH214 appears to be a handle for a composite digging tool designed to be fitted to one of the detachable blades found at Kohika (see below). It is made from a rather crooked stem of Metrosideros spp. (rata or pohutukawa) and has an end bevelled to fit a blade and a knob at the top. KOH215 appears to be a shaft for a composite digging tool made from a crooked branch of mahoe. Like KOH214 it has an end bevelled to fit a blade and a simple knob on top. KOH216 is probably from a composite digging tool shaft. It has one end bevelled while the other narrows to a point, the tip of which has broken off. It is made of manuka. KOH339 is also a probable composite digging tool shaft made of manuka. The end where the blade would have been attached has been bevelled. KOH217 is a complex and well-finished blade from a composite digging tool made of manuka. KOH218 is a complete blade from a composite digging tool made from rata or pohutukawa. KOH219 is almost identical to KOH218 in all respects. KOH220 is the same as KOH219. KOH221 is similar to KOH219 but is made from mapara, which is resinous rimu heartwood. KOH222 is similar to KOH221 in all respects. KOH223 is similar to KOH221 in all respects. KOH224 is a composite blade in the process of manufacture. Its edge had been
Figure 6.5 Part of a carving on a ceremonial ko
92 Kohika
formed but the top not completed when the wood split and work was abandoned. It is made from maire. KOH355 appears to be the edge of a detachable digging tool blade made from rata or pohutukawa. Summary
The digging implements from Kohika are strikingly diverse in form. There is one ceremonial ko, three heavy ko, one medium and seven light ko, one double-ended ko, one teka, two (somewhat different) ketu, a one-piece spade/spatulate ko/ketu, four rather different composite digging tool shafts, and eight composite spade blades in a range of sizes. Some are clearly carefully made to reproduce a specific tool form and decorated with knobs and terminal motifs. Others are quite casually constructed. Some spade blades might, on occasion, have been used as hand tools without attached handles. Strong tough woods were used with thirteen of manuka, four of kanuka, four of Metrosideros spp., two of maire, three of mapara (rimu), two of mahoe and one totara (the ceremonial ko top). In general, the digging tools at Kohika indicate that a wide range of activities, including gardening and gathering fern-root, was carried out on the site and most probably on other stranded sand-dunes in the Rangitaiki Swamp.
Shaft knobs
The end sections of seven broken shafts each with a terminal knob were found in the site (Fig. 6.6). Handles made from such terminals are often found on digging tools such as composite spade handles (Wallace 1989:227). KOH225 is from a shaft of trunk-wood matai 27 mm in diameter that first narrows as it nears the top then sharply widens to form a plain knob. KOH226 is also made from matai trunk-wood and is very similar to the above but with a shorter knob. KOH227 is a carefully made knob of phallic form. The lower part of the shaft is nearly perfectly round in cross-section while the knob itself is sub-rectangular. It is made from trunk-wood rata or pohutukawa. KOH228 is a very carefully made shaft of kanuka with a flared end. KOH229 is a natural stem of kanuka with a knobbed end. KOH230 is a natural stem of kanuka in the process of being made into a shaft similar to KOH229. However, it broke at this point due to the presence of a knot and was discarded. KOH347 is a figure-of-eight-shaped knob at the end of a puriri shaft.
Patu aruhe (fern-root beaters)
Fifteen items were identified as beaters, many of them presumably for fern root (Purdue 2002) although flax is another possibility. Dried fern root was soaked in water and roasted on coals, then pounded to separate the tough outer covering and coarse fibres from the starchy edible component (Best 1977:70–86). Thirteen beaters were whole or nearly complete while three were merely knobs. The latter were tentatively identified as being from fern-root beaters on the basis that they were identical to ones on the ends of the handles of complete beaters and, like many of them, made from maire (Nestegis spp. cunninghamii?). After the knobs were placed with the complete beaters it was realised that one of them was, in fact, part of the handle of one of the nearly
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 93 Figure 6.6 Seven broken shafts with terminal knobs, possibly handles from composite tools
94 Kohika
complete beaters. These have been rejoined and are now treated as one item (which reduces the number of single knobs to two while the whole beaters remain at thirteen). The beaters are illustrated in Figure 6.7. KOH183 is a complete beater of rather irregular outline with a hollow worn on one striking surface, and is made of trunk-wood maire. KOH184 is a complete beater of more regular form than KOH183. It has two severely worn surfaces on opposite sides of its rectangular cross-sectioned blade and is made from a half-section of a branch of maire. KOH185a and KOH185b were found in separate places in the excavation and were evidently broken before deposition. They were put back together in the laboratory to form a nearly complete beater. It is made of trunk-wood maire and is rectangular in cross-section with all four striking surfaces well worn. KOH186 is a complete beater with a well-worn striking surface around its circumference. It is oval in cross-section and is made from trunk-wood maire. KOH187 is a beater with most of its blade missing. It is in a very poor state of preservation, having been dried out prior to conservation treatment. It is round in cross-section and is made from trunk-wood maire. KOH188 is a complete beater worn on three of its four potential striking surfaces. It is oval in cross-section and is made from a quarter-section of a branch of maire. KOH189 is a fragment of a beater comprising a half-section of the handle and most of the blade. It is round in cross-section and is made from trunk-wood maire. KOH190 is the knob and part of the handle of a beater. This handle is oval in cross-section and made from trunk-wood maire. KOH191 is the knob and part of the handle of a beater. As with KOH190, this handle is oval in cross-section and is made from trunk-wood maire. KOH192 is a complete beater that is round in cross-section, being rather roughly made from a whole stem of kanuka (Kunzea ericoides). KOH193 is a complete small beater that shows little evidence of wear. It is round in cross-section and is made from a branch of rata (Metrosideros spp. probably robusta). KOH194 is a complete, beautifully made beater that shows little sign of wear. Round in cross-section, it is made from the resinous heart of kauri branch wood. This timber is very heavy, mostly due to the extremely high resin content. Where kauri is readily available, fern-root beaters appear to be made exclusively from this wood (Wallace 1989:225). The Kohika site is currently outside the natural range of the kauri and it was initially thought that this artefact, or at least the wood from which it is made, was imported from further north, perhaps from the Coromandel peninsula. However, the discovery of kauri pollen in the swamp sediments at Kohika shows that some stands of kauri were growing closer to hand in the Bay of Plenty. KOH195 is a complete but very weathered beater. Its knob is burnt and it has heavy use wear all around the circumference of its striking surface. It is made from the same type of kauri as KOH194. KOH196 is even more weathered than KOH195, with only the blade of the beater surviving. It is sub-rectangular in cross-section and is made from the same type of kauri as the above two. KOH197 is a fragment of beater blade even more weathered than KOH196. It is circular in cross-section and made from the same type of kauri. These last two items are so weathered that they were hard to recognise as beaters. Their identification is based on their basic form and the fact that they were made from this special wood type used by the pre-European Maori specifically for beaters and mallets, and possibly traded some distance from its sources to the north for this reason.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 95 Figure 6.7 Fifteen beaters and beater fragments
96 Kohika
Summary
Nine of the fifteen beaters are made from maire, one each from kanuka and rata and four from kauri. The first three species are broadleaf woods (angiosperms) that produce the very hard, heavy, tough woods needed for these artefacts. Maire is the species most commonly used where kauri is not available, but is accompanied by other hard tough woods such as rata (Wallace 1989). The dense resinous wood in kauri branches was so desirable for beaters that it was used exclusively where available. Kohika shows both traditions of wood use in action; the maire is more common than kauri, adding weight to the suggestion that kauri was harder to obtain. The beaters show a range of forms and quality of manufacture. Some are very carefully made and finished while others are quite rough. Some are rectangular in crosssection but most are round or irregular. Only some have knobs at the end of their handles. The impression gained is that, though beaters could be carefully made, they were such a ubiquitous and utilitarian item that many were quite casually constructed and discarded when broken.
Bowls
Kohika has yielded five items identified as bowls or bowl fragments. Four of these are illustrated in Figure 6.8. KOH175 is the only complete bowl found. It is long and narrow with a pouring spout at one end. It is made from totara compression wood. This special type of wood, found on the underside of branches or in trees exposed to strong winds, is softer but heavier and much more resinous than normal trunk-wood. It is reasonable to assume that this bowl was used for some special food preparation involving pouring a liquid, perhaps oil or berry juice. KOH176 is about half of a medium-sized bowl, oval in outline and semi-circular in cross-section. It is made from normal trunk-wood totara. It has no handle, spout or ornamentation and may have been a simple, if well-made, domestic item. KOH180 is a rim section from a long, narrow bowl. It is clear that the original was a thin-walled bowl generally similar in form to KOH175. It is made from heart totara. KOH181 is a fragment from the angle between the side and the base of a thinwalled bowl similar to KOH180 and KOH175. It is made from heart totara. KOH182 is a small fragment from the end of a quite thick-walled bowl. The bowl was canoe-shaped with a pointed end. It is made of matai. It is not illustrated.
Canoe paddles
Fragments of a large steering paddle (Fig. 6.9) and ten canoe paddles (Fig. 6.10) were found, only two of these being reasonably complete. They were assembled from 23 separate fragments, some of which were scattered pieces that were only recognised and reassembled later. When wood species were identified during analysis, it was found that all Kohika paddles were made from tawa. All fragments of this species were then re-examined to see whether they could be fitted to the existing artefacts. This process was very successful, and many fragments not previously recognised as being parts of these artefacts were rejoined. Each is described in turn below, followed by a general discussion of the artefact type at Kohika. KOH161 (a–e) consists of five fragments that are parts of a large steering paddle. The first three were found near one another in the site and recognised as being part of
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 97 Figure 6.8 Four bowls and bowl fragments
the same piece. Two further pieces were located during laboratory analysis and the result is an unfinished paddle, at the stage of manufacture when a slab of wood split from a tree trunk had been adzed into general shape. The final product would have been 2.73 m long and resulted in a very straight steering paddle or oar. KOH162 (a–d) was found as four pieces in the site. It was reassembled in the laboratory to form a nearly complete canoe paddle. The handle is circular in cross-section near the top but becomes sub-rectangular nearer the blade. The wood has been cut from a quite small-diameter tawa trunk. It has the distinctive form shared by all paddles from Kohika, as discussed below. This paddle was the only one from Kohika with decorative carving in the thickened area where the handle joins the blade. This ornamentation and the lack of wear on its tip suggest it may have been a ceremonial paddle rather than regularly used. KOH163 is a paddle handle that had snapped where it joined its blade. It is almost perfectly circular in cross-section along its length. The top of the handle is thickened and has a simple double spiral pattern incised on it. Unlike the previous example, the slightly thickened area where the handle joined the blade had been left plain. KOH164 is a paddle handle similar to KOH163. Snapped off at the junction with its blade, it too is circular in cross-section at the top but becomes rectangular further down towards the distinct thickened area that had joined it to the blade. KOH165 is also a paddle handle that had snapped off just short of where it joined its blade. KOH166 is a paddle blade and part of the handle. The blade had split in half and the two pieces were found separately in the site. Like the others it has a distinct thickening at the point where the handle joins the blade KOH167 is most of the blade of a paddle that had snapped off below the junction
98 Kohika Figure 6.9 A steering paddle roughout
with the handle. The lower end is heavily rounded off by wear. KOH168 is a small paddle blade fragment. KOH169 is the very worn tip of a paddle and KOH170 (not illustrated) is a smaller fragment from the middle of its blade. While the two cannot be directly joined, their colour and surface texture are identical on both sides, allowing a secure association of the two pieces. KOH171 is a fragment split from the side of a paddle blade. KOH172 is the side and tip of a paddle blade reassembled from four pieces. Comments
Apart from the long steering paddle, there is only one almost complete example in this collection, but the fragments provide sufficient information to define the form of the Kohika paddles. This clearly establishes that a local tradition of paddle-making existed that is quite distinct from the one typically seen in museum storerooms in this country, in terms of both the shape of the paddle and the wood used. All the Kohika paddles were made from tawa (Beilschmiedia tawa). However, a study of 41 other Maori paddles from four museums (Wallace 1989: 224) has shown that the majority were made from kanuka with just a few from manuka, rata, puriri and kowhai, all of which are very hard, heavy, strong woods. A few examples from the southern South Island were made from totara. The only paddle made from tawa was an unprovenanced item from Otago Museum (Accession No. D23. 703). In his account of the Maori canoe, Elsdon Best (1925:158) records a preference for very hard strong woods for paddles, although he quotes an informant, Tuta Nihoniho, as saying that on the East Coast preferred timbers were matai, manuka, maire, heart pukatea and occasionally tawa. The tradition of using tawa for paddles is therefore not much mentioned previously. The form of the Kohika paddles also seems to be distinctive. To confirm this impression, all the approximately 300 paddles in the Auckland Museum collection were examined. Without exception all were of the form well illustrated by Best (1925, Figs 111 and 113), which have a slight kink where the handle joins the blade. This means that the blade follows slightly behind the handle when it is stroked through the water rather than being in the same line. This property makes it easier to prevent the handle from rotating in the paddler’s hand even when loosely gripped. However, this bend would also create a physical weakness between the handle and blade if the grain of the wood was straight and partially ran out at the kink. This does not seem to have been a problem with tough, wavy-grained woods such as kanuka, as little difficulty would be found in selecting a piece where the grain followed the curves of the paddle shape.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 99 Figure 6.10 Canoe paddle and paddle fragments
And, in fact, the junctions of handle and blade are not heavily thickened in any of the Auckland Museum examples, nor do they have ornamental carving at this point. The physical characteristics of tawa may account for some of the distinctiveness in the Kohika paddle form. Tawa, while moderately hard, is usually straight grained and
100
Kohika
free splitting. Any kink at the junction of blade and handle would be fatal when the paddle faced heavy use. So tawa paddles had to be very straight with the grain running cleanly from one end to the other. This also explains why the junction of the blade with the handle, always a weak point, was strengthened by a thickened section. These features are shown very clearly in the Kohika paddles illustrated in Figure 6.10. This thickened part also provided a field to be ornamented by decorative carving in the case of KOH162. One further feature of KOH162 is that the pointed end of the blade would control the water dripping from it between strokes and make it less noisy, useful when stealth was required. The only paddle of the Kohika form seen by R. Wallace in a New Zealand museum collection is the Otago example mentioned above. Moreover, the only collections where paddles of the Kohika form are typical are those made during Captain Cook’s voyages or in the early 19th century. Examples of these are illustrated in the catalogue of Cambridge University’s Oldman Collection (Oldman 1946, Plate 63, Item 52) of material gathered during Cook’s first voyage (Shawcross 1970) and in the extensive study of painted paddles by Neich (1993, Figs 24–34). These are strikingly like the Kohika examples, especially KOH162, though no painted patterns are preserved on that one. Furthermore, all the scenes sketched by Cook’s illustrator Sydney Parkinson in which paddles appear seem to show the Kohika style in universal use. In a recent publication on the art of Cook’s voyages (Joppien and Smith 1984) some 28 of the paddles figured can be ascribed to one or other style. Twenty-seven are of the straight Kohika style, with only one clearly of the kinked form. Only four of these paddles are portrayed in detail and these are clearly elaborate, ceremonial forms of the Kohika type. The abundance of the Kohika-style paddles in 18th-century illustrations and their rarity in modern New Zealand museum collections may be explained in two ways. The Kohika style may have been dominant in pre-European New Zealand where it was collected and illustrated by early voyagers. It may then have been replaced by a new style at the beginning of the historic era. If the latter were so, then it is odd that an illustration from Abel Tasman’s earlier voyage (Best 1925:7) shows the typical modern kinked Maori paddle form. Alternatively, the Kohika style may have been regional, perhaps occurring only in the Bay of Plenty/East Cape area, where Cook’s party may have collected most of their paddles. Neich has suggested that most of these came from the Poverty Bay area (1993:59–64). If so, then the artists on Cook’s expeditions or those contributing to the publications associated with them may have used the collected paddles as models rather than drawing from life when drafting illustrations. In general, it appears that the Kohika paddle style may have been a local East Coast and Bay of Plenty tradition that has not survived into the modern era.
Canoe hull pieces
Kohika was an island in a large swamp. Canoe transport would have been essential and six pieces of canoe hull were found there. Two of these are complete (or nearly so) bow or stern parts while the other four are merely fragments of hull. Five of the six items are illustrated in Figure 6.11. KOH140 (a–d) is pieces of a large canoe bow or stern made as a separate item to attach to the open end of a canoe hull. It was broken into five pieces, one of which was not recovered, by the mechanical digger that uncovered it in the agricultural drain. It is made from a large-diameter hollowed totara trunk and designed to attach to a hull by lashings that passed through four large chiselled holes along the edge of a simple vertical butt joint. Unlike KOH141 described below, no provision has been
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 101 Figure 6.11 Canoe hull pieces
102
Kohika
made to recess the lashings into grooves in the hull to prevent damage when the canoe was beached. Partly for this reason, but more because of the rough adzed surface of the piece, it appears to be unfinished. The gunwale on one side is intact and has three lashing holes distributed evenly along it, presumably for the attachment of a bow or stern piece or strake plank above it. The outer surface of the hull is flattened where these holes emerge to allow the batten that would have covered the joint to form a close contact. KOH141 is a smaller detachable canoe bow of rather more sophisticated design. The joint it would form with the main section of the hull is irregular, having been cut to fit the irregular shape of an existing hull. Six attachment holes, three each side, are present along the joint, all of which have grooves running out to the junction with the hull in which lashings could be recessed to avoid abrasion. Each gunwale has four holes to take lashings for extra pieces set above. This bow piece is also made from a hollowed totara trunk. KOH142 is a fragment of canoe hull 120 mm thick. It includes a portion of the angled midline keel. KOH143 appears to be a fragment of gunwale from near the bow or stern of a canoe. The oblique way in which the grain runs through the piece suggests it was from where the gunwale curves in towards the point of the bow. The edge has two lashing holes for a strake or other attachments. It is made of trunk-wood kauri. This canoe may have been imported from further north, perhaps from the Coromandel peninsula, where kauri is abundant. KOH144 is similar to KOH143, a piece of canoe hull gunwale from near the bow or stern. It has three lashing holes along its upper edge and is made of trunk totara. KOH335 is also similar to KOH143, with one lashing hole on its upper edge. It is made from totara. It is not illustrated in Figure 6.11.
Canoe fittings
In this category are one possible canoe bulkhead, three definite canoe thwarts (seats) and twelve other artefacts of which several are also likely to have been seats but others less certainly so. The bulkhead, the three seats and eight of the other fittings are illustrated in Figure 6.12. KOH145 (a and b) are pieces of an artefact identified as a possible canoe bulkhead. It is a 12 mm thick plank made from rata or pohutukawa. It has a D-shaped outline and six irregularly distributed lashing holes around its edge. It may have formed a partition in the canoe to aid bailing by preventing water from moving freely along the inside of the hull. KOH146 is half of a carefully made canoe seat. It is made from a dressed totara plank and is identical in shape to a canoe seat in Auckland Museum. KOH151 is a canoe seat made from an unpeeled stem of tawa with deep notches chiselled in each end to allow it to be lashed across the gunwales of the canoe. KOH152 is a very similar seat made from a peeled manuka stem. The remaining twelve artefacts are tentatively identified as canoe seats. They are rather casually made from natural sticks by notching their ends. Four are whole but the remaining eight are broken-off ends made from the stems of six different species of broadleaf shrub and tree. They were not necessarily permanent fittings and may have been produced casually when a canoe was being outfitted for a specific purpose – for example, a fishing trip. In addition to the above items, KOH345 was very tentatively identified as a fragment of spiral fretwork from a carved bow or stern carving.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 103 Figure 6.12 Three canoe seats, one bulkhead and eight other fittings
The wide variety in the quality of workmanship of these fittings suggests that a range of different river and sea canoes was present at the site.
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Kohika
Bailers
Figure 6.13 Canoe bailers
Four items were found that may have been parts of canoe bailers, and three are illustrated in Figure 6.13. KOH174 is a bailer with one side of its scoop missing. It suffered minor scorching in a fire after being broken. The terminal knob on the handle has been carved in the form of a stylised human face (Plate 7.14, below). Just below the knob a hole has been chiselled sideways through the handle for a cord to tie onto some part of the canoe to prevent it being washed overboard when it was urgently needed. It is made of totara with an unusual tightly waved grain, possibly selected to yield an item less liable to split, but ultimately it did not escape this fate. KOH179 appears to be the side of a bailer scoop and is rather similar to KOH177. The side wall is 10 mm thick and the end wall up to 35 mm. It has a simple chiselled perforation in the side wall near its broken edge that seems to have been part of an attempted repair. This artefact is made from heart totara. KOH177 may have been part of the side rim of a bailer. The fragment is too small to be sure of its origin and it is not illustrated. It matches the structure of the side of KOH174, however, and may have been a detached fragment of this or a similar artefact. It too is made of heart totara. KOH178 is a burnt and broken fragment of the side and end of a bowl-like container. The side wall is about 10 mm thick but the end wall is up to 55 mm thick. Made from matai, this artefact may have been part of either a bowl or a bailer.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 105
Heru (hair combs)
Heru were ornamental hair combs worn by men of rank to adorn their koukou or topknot and, as a consequence, objects of considerable tapu. They can be separated into three distinct types: those made from a single piece of bone, those made from a single piece of wood, and composite combs which consist of separate wooden teeth bound together by fine thread (Fisher 1962:47). The six Kohika combs are all of the second type, the one-piece wooden comb, and are illustrated in Figure 6.14. Early European visitors to New Zealand give many accounts of one-piece wooden combs. Monkhouse, Cook’s surgeon on the first voyage (1768–71), wrote: ‘But how great was our surprise to see combs in their hair! They were about two inches broad, the tooth very long: some were made of wood, others of bone – these combs appeared to be more fitted for ornament than use.’ (Beaglehole 1974:573). Combs were frequently collected and described in Cook’s time and seem to have been in common use (Joppien and Smith 1984). By the middle of the 19th century, however, explorers, missionaries and travellers mentioned combs as things of the past, and their manufacture and use had been largely discontinued (Gardner 1985:48). Only two collections of prehistoric combs are available for direct comparison with the Kohika examples. The first is from Kauri Point in the western Bay of Plenty, where a total of 334 large fragments and over 1000 detached teeth representing some 187 individual combs were excavated from an area of wet ground adjacent to a pa (Shawcross 1964, 1976). Most had been deliberately broken before being placed in a structure in the swamp, apparently as part of the ritual disposal of tapu objects associated with the head or hair of high-status individuals. The second large collection is from caves and rock shelters on the west coast of the Waitakere Ranges in Auckland (Lawrence 1989). KOH106 is the smallest comb in the collection. All the teeth have been broken off between 10 and 50 mm from their junction with the frame and only two found with the artefact. The total length of the comb cannot be determined but is somewhat more than 122 mm. One of the side-bars has also been lost and the break smoothed off. Its thirteen teeth are the thickest and have the second-narrowest space between them of any of the combs in the collection. KOH104 is the second-smallest comb and is fairly complete. During its life a sidebar and up to two teeth had broken off and the split edge was then rounded and smoothed to allow continued use. Seven of the remaining thirteen teeth are present for their full length, as is one side-bar. The curvature of the top of the frame suggests it was originally 45–50 mm wide. Unlike the other combs the frame is the same length as the teeth rather than being shorter. KOH103 is the most complete comb in the collection and only half of the twelve teeth and the ends of the two side-bars are missing. It is near median size for this collection but has the fewest teeth and the widest gaps between each of them. KOH105 is badly damaged, with all of its teeth detached and the ends of both sidebars missing. Six detached teeth were found with this comb but these have missing tips. The top of the frame is badly worn rather than broken and all but the base of the ornamental boss has been lost. As only the butts of the teeth survive, their width and the groove width are difficult to measure. KOH101 is a comb with a complete frame but its teeth are broken 40–70 mm from their bases. Both side-bars are present for part of their length. Five fragments of teeth, all minus tips, were found. It was the second-largest comb in the collection. KOH102 is the largest comb, with the longest and the widest frame, but it is also the most fragmentary, with most of one side missing, and the length of the teeth is
106
Kohika
Figure 6.14 Six heru or hair combs
unknown. This damage appears recent and is probably associated with its discovery by mechanical digger. Only ten teeth remain and these are represented by short stumps, but the frame width indicates that a minimum of eighteen teeth were originally present.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 107
The condition of the remaining parts of the frame suggests the comb had less wear than any of the others when discarded. Comb measurements are shown in Table 6.2. Some of the values are minimums and are recorded with a + sign after. Frame width, frame length, frame depth, tooth length and total length are the maximum dimensions. Side-bar width was measured where it was attached to the frame and, in the three combs where both bars are present, the values are the average of two measurements. Tooth depth and width are averages of at least 30 separate measurements taken mainly on detached tooth fragments. Table 6.2
Comb dimensions (mm)
KOH number Frame width Frame thickness Frame length Side-bar width Tooth length Tooth number Tooth thickness Tooth width Groove width Total length
106 40 3.6 51.0 3.8 71+ 13 3.05 1.70 0.52 122+
104 40+ 4.3 76.5 6.1 75.0 13+ 3.7 1.65 0.38 151
103 42.2 5.6 119.5 4.6 105.5 12 4.8 1.59 0.52 225
105 51.3 6.1 99.0 5.5 132+ 18 5.25 1.54 0.40 231+
101 51.2 5.60 115.8 7.4 159+ 15 6.3 1.45 0.43 275+
102 52+ 5.6 157+ 7.3 120+ 18+ 4.6 1.6 0.40 277+
Average 46+ 5.1 103+ 5.8 110+ 15+ 4.6 1.6 0.44 213.5+
Summary
An examination of the literature on heru (Fisher 1962, Gardner 1985, Lawrence 1989, Shawcross 1964, 1976) shows the Kohika examples to be well within the known range of forms. As an assemblage they have a degree of coherence of form and style that suggests a single local manufacturing tradition or even a single maker. The attributes of this comb style are: • all are round-topped and comparable with Type A as defined by Shawcross (1964:388) • belong to the end of the prehistoric sequence • have no ornamentation apart from the knob • have the knob placed near the top of the frame rather than further down the side (as with most Kauri Point combs); as the frame may represent a human head the knob is the nose • have a variable frame length that ranges from the average Kauri Point length to 20 per cent greater than the longest comb in that very large collection • have a relatively standard frame width and thickness that are very similar to the Kauri Point ones • have teeth that are very much finer (1.5–1.7 mm wide), longer (up to 1.5 times) and more closely set (4.9 per centimetre) than the very finest in the Kauri Point collection • have side-bars, like many of the Waitakere examples but unlike any of the Kauri Point combs; these are necessary to protect the fine teeth from damage during use and are almost identical in form to those of modern plastic • the side-bars have four degrees of taper • all are made from mapara, the resinous heart of rimu, as are all the Kauri Point combs (Wallace 1989:229) and eleven of twelve Auckland Museum combs identified by this author (Lawrence 1989) • none of the combs appears to have been deliberately damaged, in marked contrast to the Kauri Point situation where all the combs appeared to have been ritually broken before being discarded in a specific place.
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The Kohika comb style, though similar to that of the upper levels of the Kauri Point site (Shawcross 1976, Fig. 4), is closer to the one seen in several of the Waitakere examples (Lawrence 1989). The Kauri Point combs change over time from being ‘square topped’ to ‘round topped’ and show an increase in size. The Kohika combs are all large and round topped. No two are identical in any of the collections but Kohika shows the most consistent style, with variation being mainly in frame and tooth length. Manufacturing method
A detailed examination of the combs gives some idea of the methods used to make them. The most difficult part of the process would seem to be cutting the teeth, and the wood selected had perfectly straight grain to allow parallel teeth to be cut. Close examination of detached teeth of the original combs showed they had been made by cutting grooves from both sides that met at the centre. In order to understand how this might have been achieved, some replication experiments were attempted by R.Wallace. Groove cutting tools tried were a rat (Rattus exulans) incisor and modified flakes of obsidian and chert. Several things were learned quite quickly. Chert flakes were the most successful because rat incisors and obsidian were too brittle to have been ideal for the purpose. The tool that was developed could be called a scriber. A fine-edged flake was struck and a bite taken out at one end of the cutting edge to form a sharp corner or point. The sharp edge was then deliberately blunted. This was essential as a sharp edge can more readily cut wood across the grain, a process that must be avoided when cutting teeth that follow the grain exactly. The first step in cutting was to start the groove by gently drawing a line along the grain of the wood with the point of the scribing tool. Some skill was necessary to make this exactly parallel with and the correct distance from the previous groove. The scriber was then drawn up and down the deepening groove with increasing pressure. A small amount of oil run into the groove speeded the process greatly. The grooves were not cut but rather dented or compressed into the surface with very little material being removed. This compressed wood material partially rebounds when wet, creating a groove significantly narrower than the tool used to make it. When the groove penetrated halfway through the blank, another matching one was made from the opposite side until it nearly met the first. A new tooth could be split off and the scriber run up and down in the gap to remove any excess wood. The technique created remarkably fine grooves and with some practice it was possible to make teeth as fine as those of the Kohika combs. The hardest part in making combs was getting the grooves exactly regular and parallel, and the great skill of the prehistoric craftsmen is reflected in the extremely neat finish of the Kohika combs. It was also found that a variety of fine-grained rock and some shells could be employed to make scribers and that the main requirements for their successful use were strong fingers coupled with great care and manual dexterity.
Javelins/darts
Six artefacts (Fig. 6.15) from Kohika are identified as darts or javelins as described by Best (1924:94). Such missiles were produced in bulk and stored on fighting stages and in pits in fortified pa to be rained down on attackers or propelled with the aid of a whip into a pa from the outside. In the latter case they were placed butt first in the ground and the end of a whip looped around just below the pointed end in such a way that, when the dart was whipped out, the whip-cord was released. These artefacts
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 109
could also have been made as toys designed to foster martial skills in children. The Kohika darts illustrated in Figure 6.15 are all manuka sticks with a ‘bulrush shaped’ section behind the point or, in one case, a barbed end. This thickening would allow the cord of the whip to be looped behind it and would add weight to the front of the dart to make it fly better (Best 1924). Auckland Museum holds a bundle of almost identical artefacts found together in Lake Rotoaira and these show the same diverse range of tip forms. KOH119 is the only complete dart in the collection. KOH120 is the barbed point of a dart, the only such point found in this site. It is almost identical to two found at the Kauri Point swamp site by Shawcross (1976: 292–93). KOH121 has the ‘bulrush’ thickened part carved in a simple ornamental form. KOH122 is another dart fragment, including the thickened part. KOH123 is similar to KOH122 but the thickening is in two sections separated by a narrow gap. KOH124 has a simple thickening near the point.
Potaka (spinning tops)
There are seven spinning tops in the Kohika collection (Fig. 6.16). An eighth one, not described here, was irresponsibly removed from the site by a visitor during the excavation (S. Webster, pers. comm. 2003). Tops were common items in Maori material culture and their manufacture and use continued into living memory (P. Harrison and M. Penfold, pers. comm.). They are small cones of wood that were set in motion by a length of fibre wrapped around the top and whipped away by the stick to which it was attached. More whipping kept it spinning. Different types of top were made and used in a variety of children’s games and, occasionally, in more serious situations (Best 1976:153–63). The Kohika examples are of two forms, a short broad one and a tall slim one. The latter are said to be jumping tops that could be made to leap into the air (P. Harrison, pers. comm.). All the Kohika examples appear to be rather casually made toys and all are made from manuka except KOH112, which is made from a heavy, resinous type
Figure 6.15 Six darts or javelins
110
Kohika
of totara. It is the most carefully produced top with a depression in its upper surface. It is identified by Dr Paki Harrison as a humming top, the sound being produced by the hollow in the top and by the slightly squared sides. KOH113 has been identified as a jumping top, being tall and slim with a groove around its circumference to accommodate the wound string. KOH114 is a plain broad top. KOH115 is similar in shape to KOH114 but somewhat smaller. KOH116 is similar but smaller again. KOH117 is a tall slim jumping top. KOH118 is the smallest top.
Adze and chisel handles
Figure 6.16 Seven potaka or spinning tops
Three artefacts in the Kohika collection fall into this category. One is an adze haft still in the process of manufacture, another is a finely made handle for a very small stone chisel head, and the last a socket for a composite haft of a small chisel, conceivably for tattooing. KOH109 is an unfinished adze handle. It is made from a small branch of rimu cut to include its junction with a larger one (Fig. 6.17). KOH110 is a finely made chisel handle made from heart kanuka (Fig. 6.18). The chisel head it was designed to hold must have been small, as its butt sat in a tapered socket 25 mm long widening to a maximum of 11 mm. Just such a blade of greenstone is described in Chapter 9. KOH111 appears to be a miniature version of an adze socket (Fig. 6.18), designed as the wooden butt extension for an adze (Wallace 1982). One end has a socket that appears to be for the butt of a small chisel. The other end has another socket to take the head of a handle. Such a composite handle and socket has previously been recorded only for full-sized woodworking adzes. Its size, however, suggests only a very small woodworking chisel or even a tattooing chisel that was hafted. Tattooing chisel handles of this form have been reported by Robley (1987:48) and if this socket was for a composite tattooing handle then it is a unique prehistoric artefact. It is made from puriri.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 111 Figure 6.17 An adze handle rough-out
Figure 6.18 A chisel handle and a chisel socket
Flute
KOH107 is part of one side of a flute or putorino (Fig. 6.19). Such instruments were made in two half sections that were then bound together. It is smaller than most of those in museum collections (M. McLean, pers. comm.) and is made from mapara. It is unornamented but very finely finished.
Net gauges
KOH241 is a very carefully finished tab of totara slightly tapered at the end with a finely drilled hole near one corner (Fig. 6.20). This artefact is identical to one of a set of net gauges from Tikopia held in Auckland Museum (D. Bonica, pers. comm.). These gauges were used to standardise the mesh of nets during manufacture and repair. If
112 Figure 6.19 A section of a putorino (flute)
Kohika
KOH241 is accurately identified, then its circumference would generate a mesh with an aperture of 15 mm. The hole in one corner would allow a string to hold together a set of different-sized gauges. KOH243 is a flat piece of rimu (Fig. 6.20) very similar in thickness, general appearance and finish to KOH241. It too could have been a net gauge.
Thread reels
Figure 6.20 Two net gauges
Two items, KOH239 and KOH240, are small strips of heart totara with broad notches along each side (Fig. 6.21). They were identified as reels for fine thread (P. Harrison, pers. comm.). The notches are to prevent the thread from sliding and becoming tangled, and such tools are made for Maori weavers to this day.
Fibre working tools
Figure 6.21 Two thread reels
Eighteen Kohika artefacts are tentatively identified as fibre working tools (Fig. 6.22). They are short pieces of wood, eight of which have spatulate points and ten needle points. It is suggested here that they were used for a variety of purposes related to weaving, net making, rope working and so on. All are illustrated in Figure 6.22 but only three of the better-made and more distinctive are described here. KOH261 is a very beautifully made kaui, or weaving tool. It is a leaf-shaped piece of heart totara wood with a 13 mm long point at one end. Unlike the others in this category, it is beautifully finished and may have been a high-status object used for the finest weaving. KOH251 is a cone-shaped piece of totara identical in form and probable function to a marlinspike – a tool for loosening knots and strands in ropes and cordage. KOH254 is a carefully made artefact shaped from a stick of manuka that tapers to a slight knob at the top and has a steep bevel at the other end, leading to a projecting tongue.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 113 Figure 6.22 Fibre-, net- and rope-working tools
Wakahuia lid?
KOH108 is a flat plain slab of totara with rounded, tapered edges. It could have been a lid for a simple wakahuia, or treasure box. This item is not illustrated.
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Ladder
KOH231 is a ladder with four notched steps (Fig. 6.23). It is made from a small trunk of mahoe 1205 mm long and has a hole piercing the bottom end to allow it to be lashed to something. We believe it was for a pataka in Area D.
Bevelled strips
KOH242 is a set of eight strips of totara 14–20 mm wide by 3–4 mm thick, broken into sections 25–150 mm long. The edges of one face have been bevelled. The original function of these items is not known but they must have been a component of a larger artefact associated with the White House level (Square D7). They are not illustrated.
Wedges
Six items have been identified with varying degrees of confidence as wood-splitting wedges (Fig. 6.24). They have the expected acute triangle profile and most show evidence of hammering on their butts or breakage at the other end. KOH232 is a wedge carefully made from maire trunk-wood. It has a groove cut around its top, presumably to take a binding to reduce splitting, and its tip has broken. The others are less clearly wedges but most have some degree of battering on their tops.
Pegs
Seven items are identified as pegs in this collection (Fig. 6.25). They are rather casually made from a variety of species and quite robust. Figure 6.23 Ladder
Posts
A sample of sixteen has been identified as being manufactured stakes or posts but, in general, they are too fragmentary to be ascribed to the main defensive palisade. All had been split out of small to medium-sized trees. Only one (KOH263) is a complete section of stem and had been made into a post or stake 1360 mm long. The other items are merely split pieces of wood of similar cross-section, frequently having the outer surface of the tree trunk (minus bark) as one face. The wood identifications of these artefacts include tawa, pukatea, matai, rimu and totara. They are not illustrated here.
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 115 Figure 6.24 Wood-splitting wedges
116 Figure 6.25 Pegs
Kohika
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 117 Figure 6.26 Items of unidentified function
118
Kohika
Sharpened sticks/stakes
Ten stems cut off at one end and adzed into sharpened ends at the other were brought back to the laboratory while numerous other examples were discarded in the field. They may have been parts of various above-ground structures, including low fences separating activity areas within the site. Nine are manuka and one is mahoe.
Miscellaneous items
Five very carefully made items with no obvious function are illustrated in Figure 6.26. Some may have been fittings associated with houses or canoes.
Lashing vines
Plate 6.2 Two coils of rata vine.
Many coils of lashing vine were found at Kohika and a sample of nineteen was collected from eleven different locations. All are 3–7 mm in vine thickness and probably of white rata (Metrosideros albiflora). The coils are of two types: smaller ones 1–3 m long wound into a coil some 175 mm across, and larger ones with 5–22 m of vine measuring about 220 mm across. A total of 140 m of vine is present in these coils. Two coils are shown in Plate 6.2. Most pre-European Maori structures were lashed together. Superior houses could have employed manufactured twine but for most work, such as palisades, vines would have been used. These could have been collected in the bush, coiled on the spot and transported to the site by canoe. They are very flexible when green but become stiff when dry and, if stored dry, would have required several days’ soaking before use. The Kohika coils were all found in peaty deposits, suggesting they had been stored in water at the swampy margins of the site to keep them in a usable state.
Adzed fragments
Twelve items, KOH271 to KOH282, show extensive adze marks on some of their surfaces and preserve evidence of careful use of a stone adze.
Wood chips
KOH308–334 and KOH351– 354 are chips of wood produced as waste during adze working. These were collected to investigate woodworking technology, and a preliminary discussion can be found in Boileau (1978). Wood chips were abundant in the site and a sample of more than 200
The wooden artefacts from Kohika 119
was retained for analysis. This indicates three forms of adzing: steep-angle chopping used to sever trunks or stems, rapid reduction of surfaces by levering off large chunks, and shallow-angle adzing to dress surfaces to a smooth finish. The steep-angle chopping was done at an angle of up to 30 degrees and indicates very vigorous adze work. Several of the flake scars are deep enough to suggest that the adze blade was driven up to 50 mm into the wood in a single heavy blow. The second and commonest type of wood chip resulted from rapid reduction of a wood surface. These are large splinters and strips of wood with one or both ends broken off across the grain. All of these are of totara and most can be placed into one of three sub-categories. First are those with one end chopped off at a steep angle and the other end smashed off at right angles. Second, those smashed off at both ends. Third, those smashed off at one end and the other thinning out to a point or edge where the grain ran out. The ratio between these types is close to 1:4:1 in the sample. Each wood chip has a single split surface on its lower face and remnants of several scars on its upper face where several flakes had previously been split off. These wood chips were clearly produced by driving an adze into an exposed end grain and levering up a strip of wood until it broke across the grain. The adze was then driven under the newly broken end to lever off another strip, a process that continued until the splinter ran out or the end of the log was reached. In this case the adze was being used as a cross between a cutting tool, a wedge and a lever. Totara is a very free-splitting wood and it should normally be possible to split it into blanks of the correct size with little need for such a rough reduction process as indicated by these wood splinters. However, it is interesting that one activity where splitting is not normally possible is hollowing out logs during the manufacture of canoes or very large bowls. The necessity of preserving a watertight hull in one piece meant that wood had to be levered and smashed out rather than wedged and split off. It follows that many of the wood chips could derive from canoe building. Wood chips resulting from shallow-angle dressing of timber are less common in the sample. These are mostly about 1 mm thick and have one side with several shallowangle adze scars and the other with a single scar or merely a single split surface where the adze had cleaved a piece rather than cut it. The low frequency of such dressing chips is surprising considering the abundance of adze-marked timbers, but the sample returned to the laboratory is not considered to be representative. Evidence of yet another type of adzing is seen on sharpened stakes and stems where the sapwood had been cut off. The adze marks on the artefacts suggest the removal of long narrow shavings by multiple short adze blows, one after another. Such chips were not included in the sample and may also have not survived burial in quantity.
An overview of the Kohika wooden assemblage
The artefacts described in this chapter are the result of activities associated with built structures, food acquisition and preparation, transport, defence and the working of other materials, including fibre and manufacturing waste. Housing is discussed in Chapter 7. Food acquisition and preparation are reflected in the fifteen fragments of bird spears, the 28 pieces of digging and horticultural implements, the six knobbed ends of shafts (probable digging tool shaft fragments), the fifteen beaters and the six bowls. These artefacts reflect active exploitation of forest birds, vigorous horticultural activity and a strong emphasis on fern root as a food source. Artefact manufacture involving woodworking is represented by an adze handle,
120
Kohika
one chisel handle and one socket for a composite hafted chisel. Together with the wood chips and wedges, these artefacts show that many of the items found were actually made on the site. The fibre-working tools include two reels for fine thread, nineteen weaving and rope-working implements and the two net gauges. The nineteen paddles, six canoe parts, three or four bailers and thirteen possible canoe seats and fittings reflect the importance of transport technology. The abundance of such artefacts is expected in a swamp site located within a network of rivers, streams and lakes where canoes would have been the primary means of transport. One must also bear in mind the evidence for contact further along the coast. One of the canoe fragments is made from kauri and could imply that the site was part of a network of waterborne communications wider than the local area. There is a notable absence of some of the wooden weapons of Classic Maori culture. The only possible ones are the six javelins or darts, but these may have been toys. The palisade posts and coils of lashing vine that were used to bind them certainly reflect defence, and we may note the contemporary existence of many fortified sites in the hills around the swamp. One of the great benefits of wetland archaeology is that items of status, ornamentation, religion, art and play are relatively well represented. Apart from the elaborately carved house parts discussed later, there are six ornamental hair combs, seven spinning tops and part of a flute. Such artefacts imply the presence of people who practised the more sophisticated Maori arts. The overall picture is of a lightly defended horticultural, fishing and fowling lake village occupied by a community practising a wide variety of economic, industrial, social and cultural activities and with some time for leisure. The people participated in exchange networks, as reflected in exotic materials. In short, this wooden artefact collection might be seen as typical of a late period, but clearly before European arrival.
References Beaglehole, J.C., 1974. The Journals of Captain James Cook. Volume I: The Voyage of the Endeavour 1768–1772. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Best, E., 1924. The Maori. Vol. I. Wellington: The Polynesian Society. Best, E., 1925. The Maori Canoe. Dominion Museum Bulletin No.7. Wellington: Government Printer. Best, E., 1976. Maori Agriculture. Dominion Museum Bulletin No.9. Wellington: Government Printer. Best, E., 1977. Forest Lore of the Maori. Dominion Museum Bulletin No.14. Wellington: Government Printer Boileau, J., 1978. Wood from Kohika: a study of timber exploitation and woodworking technology. Unpublished MA research essay, University of Auckland. Colenso, W., 1868. On the geographic and economic botany of the North Island of New Zealand. Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute, 1:233–83. Colenso, W., 1891. Vestiges: Reminiscences: Memorabilia of works, deeds and sayings of the ancient Maori. Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute, 24:445–67. Downes, T.W., 1928. Bird snaring on the Wanganui River. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 37:1–30. Fisher, V.F., 1962. The heru or Maori comb. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter, 5:47–50. Gardner, J., 1985. What value and use are the records of explorers, missionaries, traders and early settlers to the study of combs in an archaeological context? Unpublished MA research essay, University of Auckland. Joppien, R. and B. Smith, 1984. The Art of Captain Cook’s Voyages. Volume I: The Voyage of
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the Endeavour 1768–1771. Volume II: The Voyage of the Resolution and the Adventure 1772–1775. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. Lawrence, J., 1989. The Archaeology of the Waitakere Ranges. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Matthews, R.H., 1910. Reminiscences of Maori life fifty years ago. Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute, 43:598–605. Neich, R., 1993. Painted Histories. Auckland: Auckland University Press. Oldman, W.O., 1946. Skilled handwork of the Maori: being the Oldman Collection of Maori artefacts illustrated and described. Wellington: The Polynesian Society Memoir No.14. Purdue, C., 2002. What is a fern-root beater? the correlation of museum artefacts and ethnohistorical descriptions. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Otago. Ranapiri, T., 1895. Ancient methods of bird snaring amongst the Maoris. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 4:132–52. Robley, H.G., 1987. Moko, or, Maori tattooing. Papakura: Southern Reprints. Shawcross, F.W., 1964. An archaeological assemblage of Maori combs. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 73:382–98. Shawcross, F.W., 1970. The Cambridge University Collection of Maori artefacts, made on Captain Cook’s first voyage. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 73:305–48. Shawcross, F.W., 1976. Kauri Point Swamp: the ethnographic interpretation of a prehistoric site. In G. de G. Sieveking, I.H. Longworth and K.E. Wilson (eds), Problems in Economic and Social Archaeology. London: Duckworth, pp.201–20. Wallace, R.T., 1982. Woods used in the manufacture of Maori adze helves and composite helve sockets. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 4:170–84. Wallace, R.T., 1985. Studies in the conservation of waterlogged wood in New Zealand. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Waikato. Wallace, R.T., 1989. A preliminary study of wood types used in pre-European Maori wooden artefacts. In D.G. Sutton (ed.), Saying so doesn’t make it so. Wellington: New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No.17.
7
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika R.T. Wallace, G.J. Irwin and R. Neich
Kohika pa adds to the knowledge of traditional Maori architecture, and this chapter reconstructs the buildings that stood there. The evidence consists of surviving timbers and excavated floor plans, which are interpreted in the context of archaeological and ethnographic information from elsewhere. In an earlier report Wallace and Irwin (1999) described a generic Kohika house but this chapter describes the individual buildings. The chapter briefly reviews the literature on traditional Maori buildings and describes the parts found at Kohika. A number of carvings, mainly from buildings, are described also. There are general discussions of both the buildings and the carving styles. The combined evidence gives us a view of an assemblage of houses and pataka of varied form, size and decoration.
The buildings
The Whakatane and District Historical Society team collected many dressed timbers from a carved house, but they did no formal excavation and found no floor plan. The result is that the house tells us much about the details of construction of a superior house but not much about its dimensions. The remains of a pataka (raised storehouse) were found in the same area. In Area D, the university team excavated a sequence of artificial floors and found two houses, with their floor plans revealed by postholes and post butts. However, although these houses were substantial, they were of a less formal, pole and thatch construction. Area D also supplied timbers from a possible third house and pataka for which we have no floor plans. Figure 7.1 is a reconstruction of the house in the HS Area. It had at least four carved poupou that were set in the ground, a carved figure on a board (poutahuhu) that possibly faced into the interior of the house, plus a carved human figure on a post (poutokomanawa) that supported the ridgepole (tahuhu). All of the carvings were the work of one artist. Figure 7.2 is the house that stood on the excavated Yellow House horizon, shown without its facing boards at the gables and wall ends (maihi and amo). Minor decorations and carvings were associated with this house. A smaller house of the same construction, not illustrated here, stood directly above this house on the White House horizon and probably reused some of the parts. There are indications that yet a third building in Area D may have stood underneath both these two on the Bright Yellow level. The details of the three excavated floors were shown in Figures 4.15–17. Figure 7.3 is a pataka that has been reconstructed from several distinctive components (including the ladder described in Chapter 6). It stood close to the houses in Area D but the precise location is unknown because the supporting posts did not survive in situ. 122
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 123
Figure 7.1 A reconstruction of the carved house from the Historical Society (HS) Area
The estimated dimensions of the buildings are shown in Table 7.1, except for the carved house in Figure 7.1. The body proportions of the human figures in the surviving parts of the poupou indicate that it had a wall height of 1.0–1.2 m, but other dimensions could vary while wall height stayed the same. However, we would not expect the carved house to have been smaller than the houses in Area D. The dimensions of the White and Yellow houses were based on floor plans and of the Bright Yellow House and pataka on the size of surviving timbers. Table 7.1
Estimated dimensions of excavated houses and pataka
Building Yellow House White House Bright Yellow House Pataka Area D
Width 5.35 m 3.65 m 3.00 m minimum 2.60 m
Length 7.24 m 5.40 m 4.50 m (1.5 x width) 3.90 m (1.5 x width)
Height at ridgepole 2.85 m 2.30 m 2.00 m 1.80 m
Floor area 38.8 m2 19.7 m2 13.3 m2 10.1 m2
A brief review of Maori architecture
Archaeology rarely discovers the actual remains of above-ground buildings. The exceptions have been isolated finds, such as the spectacular carvings found near Waitara in Taranaki (Duff 1961). Systematic excavations of wet sites have been few; the ones most comparable with Kohika being two swamp sites at Lake Mangakaware near Te
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Figure 7.2 A reconstruction of the pole and thatch house from the Yellow House floor, Area D
Awamutu (Bellwood 1978). Underground evidence of the floor plans of buildings survives in dry sites as features such as patterns of postholes, hearths and scatters of artefacts and other debris (Davidson 1984:151–63). All of these sources of information provide a context for the review of the Kohika houses and pataka. Whare
Prickett (1982:111–12) has shown that the Maori house (whare) was a conservative cultural form that persisted through much of New Zealand prehistory and well into the European era. Many historic and ethnographic descriptions of traditional Maori buildings are available but, unfortunately, none written by someone who had actually built one. As a consequence, construction details are usually quite superficially treated. Most accounts date to the 19th century, when Maori architecture was progressively adopting European construction techniques and materials. The last descriptions of houses built by traditional methods were made in the 1920s (Firth 1926). Knowledge of construction methods was lost and by 1949 Sir Peter Buck (Te Rangi Hiroa) wrote: ‘No detailed description of the framework of the common Maori house is available to me and my memory cannot supply details which were never noted despite frequent contact with them.’ (Buck 1949:117). An explanation for this is provided in this chapter. Modern Maori architecture is focused on the whare whakairo or communal meeting house, a form that has continued to evolve and develop up to the present day (Neich 1993:89–121). Traditional Maori houses were constructed using a system fundamentally different from modern building methods and, in some aspects, to ones described as traditional
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 125 Figure 7.3 A reconstruction of the pataka from Area D
in parts of tropical Polynesia. Scholars have classified Maori houses in various ways, the most basic distinction, according to Prickett (1982:116), being between what Best (1924:559) called ‘carefully fitted houses constructed of wrought timbers, with or without embellishment’ and those made from pole and thatch. The former can be divided into meeting houses, or large communally owned structures often embellished with carved, painted and woven decoration, and smaller, privately occupied sleeping houses. In the following account the main sources used are Prickett (1974, 1979, 1982) for traditional houses, Williams (1896) for contact-period houses, Phillips (1952), Makereti (1986) and Firth (1926) for 19th-century and early 20th-century houses, and Anon. (1988) for the modern carved house. Additional information is from Bellwood (1978), Best (1924), Buck (1949) and Prickett (1982). The Kohika house illustrated in Figure 7.1 can be taken as a model of a house constructed from dressed timbers. Construction began by setting up a line of centre posts spanned by a ridgepole (tahuhu) that projected at the front. As this formed the primary structural support, the house can be seen as being built from the top down. The walls were then formed by setting vertical boards in the ground, poupou at the sides and epa at the ends. Each poupou had a slot in the top to take the tongue (teremu) of a rafter (heke) forming a mortise and tenon joint. How rafters joined at the ridgepole
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is not clearly described. If they met end on, poupou would occur in matched pairs on either side of the house, as in the case of modern meeting houses. If rafters crossed at the ridgeline and were lashed together, each poupou would be systematically offset from its matching one on the opposite side of the house. The latter appears to have been normal during prehistory, as can be seen by posthole patterns excavated by archaeologists (Davidson, 1984, Figs 97, 101, 102 and 103). This form has been used in Figure 7.1. A cable (tauwhenua) ran up each poupou, along the top of the rafters and down to the opposite poupou. This held the joints of the structure together under compression (Best 1924:565, Makereti 1986:299). This cable is said to have attached to a buttress (pou matua) set up outside each poupou. Such accounts are sketchy and not entirely logical, leaving unclear the question of how the ends of the tauwhenua were anchored. While photos of 19th-century houses sometimes show a line of light posts outside the walls (Neich 1993, Figs 69, 106 and 131), it is clear their function was to support the thatching so it projected well clear of the walls of the house, a necessity in such large houses in the absence of projecting rafters. These disappeared as soon as corrugatediron roofing and steel gutters were adopted. Lines of postholes outside and parallel to house walls were not found at Kohika and are rare in other sites. The primary load-bearing structure of the house was thus a ridgepole spanning two or more posts supporting a series of arches whose joints were held together under compression by a cable. This primary structure was then reinforced by lighter vertical and horizontal elements. A horizontal batten (kaho-paetara) ran the length of the side walls, on the outside near their tops. Lashed to this element were vertical battens (tumatahuki) placed between poupou. The tops of the end wall posts were connected to a pair of special rafters (heke ripi). Purlins or stringers (kaho) ran across the rafters, either lashed to the rafters or held in place by having the tauwhenua looped around them (Best 1924:565, Makereki 1986:299). There was a single door (tatau, kuaha or whatitoka) and window (pihunga, mataaho or matapihi) in the front wall, often closed by solid slabs of wood that sat in grooves in sills and lintels and slid sideways into cavities in the wall insulation. Accounts of how lintel and sill plates were fitted (Williams 1896, Firth 1926) are either vague or relate to large late 19th-century houses (Makereti 1986:307–8). The above account relates to superior houses made from dressed timbers. Most whare, however, would have been constructed of a framework of undressed poles with all joints lashed together where elements crossed, as in the Kohika house shown in Figure 7.2. Such houses were not necessarily smaller than ones made from dressed timber and the difference would have been visible mainly from the inside, because the load-bearing structure formed the internal surface and the insulation was placed against the outside. One of the best insulation materials was the bulrush raupo (Typha augustifolia). It was used in the house reconstructions in Figures 7.1 and 7.2, as the pollen record demonstrates an abundance of the species around the site. Raupo was set vertically on the walls and the roof and lashed in place to light horizontal elements (Neich 2001, Figs 7.1, 11.5). These elements were made from thin sticks or even the cane-like supplejack (Rhipogonum scandens). Inside superior houses, wall insulation between poupou was covered by an ornamental latticework (tukutuku panels) supported by the tumatahuki. The roof insulation was usually further topped off by a more durable thatch such as toitoi leaves (Cordateria conspicusa) held in place by poles or cables. Houses could be finished off with facing boards placed above the door (pare), window (korupe), the gables (maihi) and ends of the side walls (amo). A plank set on edge (paepae) could be placed along the front of the porch (Fig. 7.1).
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 127
Pataka
There is a well-attested concept of raised platforms in Polynesia, either open or enclosed, for the storage or display of food, gifts, other belongings or even corpses (Geelen 1974). These are generally referred to as fata or pafata from the Proto-Polynesian *fata (Walsh and Biggs 1966). In New Zealand, open storage platforms called whata and enclosed storehouses built on raised platforms supported by posts, usually called pataka, were notable features of 19th-century Maori culture. Most New Zealand and many international museums have examples of elaborately carved and ornamented pataka in their collections. Different types were built to store food, clothing or tapu items, sometimes including human remains. They varied greatly in size and construction, with some being of dressed timbers, others of pole and thatch or even, in the case of smaller ones, assembled from sections of old canoes (Best 1974, Earle 1966, Geelen 1974, Phillips 1952). Pataka were frequently ornamented with carvings, paint and feathers, and the larger and more elaborate ones were similar in appearance to small houses. Pataka are shown in many depictions of 19th-century Maori settlements (e.g. Best 1974, Earle 1966). During the century, communal meeting houses grew in size and elaboration and assumed their current role as the main vehicle of group prestige (Neich 1993) and, conversely, pataka declined in importance. However, pataka were described as the most notable buildings in early 19th-century villages (Cruise 1974). This view is supported by a recent study of the numerous carvings recovered from swamps in north Taranaki (Day 2001), which are loosely dated to the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The author concludes: ‘Probably one of the most obvious facts is that the prestigious architectural structures in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries for the northern part of Te Tai Hauauru ki Taranaki were pataka.’ (Day 2001:117) Evidence exists of other pataka from potentially pre-European and certainly early contact-period contexts. This includes part of a doorway recovered during excavations at Oruarangi, a site not inhabited after the 1820s (Green and Green 1963:33, Teviotdale and Skinner 1947:343). The set of pataka carvings recovered at Miranda in the late 19th century, is rumoured to have been buried in pre-European times (Lysnar 1915:57). There are the well-known Te Kaha pataka carvings in Auckland Museum whose history is reported to date from as early as 1780 (Geelen 1974:32). A pataka paepae recovered from waterlogged soils at Chartwell in Hamilton (Edson, pers. comm.) may also be early. Geelen (1974:32–3) lists further potential examples of contact-period or older pataka. Unfortunately, the above records all lack good chronological provenance. They and the early European eye-witness accounts relate mainly to the 19th century, and leave unclear the extent to which raised storehouses were features of pre-European Maori culture. This led Groube (1965:56) to suggest that highly carved pataka, along with much else in 19th-century Maori culture, arose as a result of European influences. Such influences may have included steel carving tools and the need to relocate property (other than root crops requiring the controlled temperatures of underground storage) out of reach of newly introduced rats and pigs. Unfortunately, evidence of raised storage platforms and storehouses is usually ephemeral in the prehistoric Maori archaeological record, as it may consist of little more than a few postholes. Waterlogged deposits containing parts of the superstructure of storehouses from chronologically secure contexts offer the best hope of demonstrating the antiquity of pataka. At Kohika we have found evidence for probable pataka in three of the excavated areas and can date these to the late 17th century. The evidence consists of structural
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timbers that match those of ethnographically recorded storehouses, and can be distinguished from those of houses by details of form and by smaller dimensions. There are significant differences between pataka and whare made from carefully dressed timbers. Figure 7.1 illustrates the essential features of a dressed-timber whare while Figure 7.3 does the same for a plank-built pataka. Pataka walls were formed from planks lashed to a raised platform whereas whare planks or posts were set in the earth. Pataka walls had a single thickness of planks sewn edge to edge with a batten covering the joint while whare walls were formed by a line of well-separated posts with insulation attached to the outside. Unlike whare, pataka often had side walls of horizontal planks and never had windows. Finally, pataka dimensions overlap with those of whare only at the upper end of their range. The last point is relevant as we have good data on whare dimensions at Kohika. The structural timbers from Kohika strongly support the presence of pataka. Many items found in the peat of Areas B, D and the HS Area could as easily have been kept in storehouses as in houses. Also, in Square B1 there were standing posts consistent with a raised pataka, with valuable artefacts present but no house in the immediate vicinity. The argument will be developed that at Kohika there were not just houses, but integrated households, which also included storehouses and other less formal structures such as cooking shelters for which there are both floor plans and suitable timbers.
Description of the parts of buildings at Kohika
In order to facilitate description of the timbers recovered, a standardised nomenclature has been adopted for the way boards were cut from tree trunks and the types of lashing holes cut into them, as illustrated in Figure 7.4. Timbers from the Historical Society Area
The society team recovered a large number of dressed timbers from their Squares 1 and 2. A feature found only in this area was that some had been partly consumed by fire. This had removed only the upper parts of timbers that had originally been set upright in the ground, their lower parts having been protected from fire damage by moisture from the saturated ground. The absence of charring on other timbers strongly implies that the buildings had been abandoned for a period prior to the fires. In this
Figure 7.4 Types of lashing holes on house planks
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 129 Plate 7.1 KOH14. Poupou base, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.2 KOH16. Poupou base, Historical Society Area.
scenario, the structure would have disintegrated and its timbers lain in contact with the saturated ground prior to the fires, leaving only the tops of standing posts dry enough to burn. Afterwards, the surviving bottom halves remained standing until they rotted off at ground level. When recovered, all timbers had one side more weathered than the other, indicating that they had lain exposed for an extended period before being incorporated into waterlogged deposits. Four poupou with carved ornamentation on one surface were recovered (Plates 7.1– 4). They had clearly been parts of a whare whakairo or carved house. All had their tops burnt off and were damaged by decay at ground level. Extrapolation from the proportions of the carved human figures indicates that the poupou were once approximately a metre tall. Stylistic analysis is provided below. The poupou, KOH14, KOH16, KOH17 and KOH18, are very similar in size, 205–280 mm wide and 30–40 mm thick. Part of the base of KOH16 was still partially intact and shows they had chisel ends that allowed them to be driven into the ground. KOH44 (Plate 7.5) is notably thicker at 85 mm than the others and is interpreted as a poutahuhu, a post set in the centre of the front wall of the house supporting the ridgepole and with its carving facing into the interior (Figure 7.1). Such posts often had the same type of carving as poupou. All of these items were made from totara and, on the basis of the carving style (see below), were a matched set. KOH53 (Plate 7.6) is the corner broken from a very elaborately carved pare, or flashing over a door. Analysis of the carving style is given later in this chapter.
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Plate 7.3 KOH17. Poupou base, Historical Society Area. Plate 7.4 KOH18. Poupou base, Historical Society Area.
KOH1, KOH3 and KOH345 (Plates 7.7–9) are fragments broken off elaborately carved slabs. KOH345 is a small (35 mm) fragment of spiral fretwork. These items are too small to allow discussion of the function of the timbers they came from. It is likely that KOH1 and KOH3 are from the whare whakairo, but it is quite possible that KOH345 is from a carving on a canoe. KOH7 (Plate 7.10) is a large (1030 mm tall) stylised human figure executed in the round. The base is flat and it sat on the ground rather than being set into it. It is in a very weathered state but the top is broken in a way that shows it once had a post extending upwards from it. It is interpreted as a poutokomanawa or central house post supporting the ridgepole. An attempt was made to reconstruct it. Using only stone tools, Paki Harrison, Dante Bonica and Wiremu Puke carved a figure as close to the original as they could achieve (Plate 7.10). The surface ornamentation is, necessarily, conjectural. All other house timbers found in this area were without carved ornamentation. Some had also been partly burnt but most had remained untouched. KOH9 is a nearly complete 765 mm-long poupou (Fig. 7.5). The base has rotted off at ground level, but it is not burnt. The intact top has a square notch cut to take the tongue on the lower end of a rafter. It has a face-type eyelet just below this notch, probably for holding the tauwhenua cable in place. KOH12 is a 155 mm-wide wall slab (Fig. 7.5), burnt off square at the top and rotted off at ground level. This could have been either a poupou or an epa. It has two
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 131 Plate 7.5 KOH44. Poutahuhu base, Historical Society Area.
Plate 7.6 KOH53. Pare fragment, Historical Society Area.
edge eyelets opposite each other that would have allowed a horizontal structural element to have been attached without the lashings being visible from inside the house. Such horizontal elements can be located on Figure 7.1. KOH13 (Figure 7.5) is another slab burnt and rotted off in a similar way to KOH12 that has just one edge eyelet. KOH15 is a plank (Fig. 7.5) whose base and burnt-off top form an angle of 80 degrees to its edge, which implies that it was leaning 10 degrees to one side when part of a structure. As such, it could have been an amo (Fig. 7.1) cut to match the inward slope of the side walls. The two lashing holes at the base could have been used to connect it to the wall behind or to a paepae.
132 Plate 7.7 KOH1. Part of carving, Historical Society Area.
Plate 7.8 KOH3. Fragment of carving, Historical Society Area.
Plate 7.9 KOH345. Fragment of spiral from carving, Historical Society Area.
Kohika
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 133 Plate 7.10 KOH7. Poutokomanawa figure, Historical Society Area, and modern replica carved by Paki Harrison, Dante Bonica and Wiremu Puke.
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Figure 7.5 Poupou and other vertical house elements from the HS Area
The timbers described above have been adze-dressed on all four faces and have neatly made lashing holes chiselled through them. They are vertical elements from a very carefully made house, most probably the whare whakairo. In contrast, KOH10 (Fig. 7.5) is a rather roughly made poupou that could have come from a more casually constructed building. It has been split from the outer surface of a pukatea (Laurelia novae-zelandiae) trunk with only the split surfaces dressed. The three lashing holes down the length of the board are casually chiselled and unevenly placed. KOH55 (Fig. 7.6) is identified here as a nearly finished pare (flashing board over a door) or korupe (over a window). It is a slab of totara 575 mm by 135 mm with a zigzag outline on its upper margin. It is similar to a pare from a Maori house at Waipa (Angas 1979:36) and to a smaller item (KOH54, described below) found in Area D. The wood has been adzed relatively smooth but no lashing holes had yet been cut. KOH57 (Fig. 7.6) is a slab of totara 488 mm long by 108 mm with a deep Ushaped hollow down its length. One end has a deep square notch and the other the remains of a square tongue. This artefact fits the description of a door sill (Williams
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 135 Figure 7.6 Door or window parts from the HS Area
1896:148). The way it could have operated in a house is illustrated in Figure 7.1.The square notch would have fitted around a solid jamb or epa at one side. The tongue at the other end would have been inserted between a two-piece jamb that allowed the door slab to slide into the wall cavity. KOH58 is identified as a door jamb. It is a board 1230 mm by 535 mm with two large square holes cut through it and the remains of three edge eyelet-type lashing holes along one edge (Fig. 7.6). It is nearly identical to a door jamb described by Bellwood (1978, Fig. 11). We could not find a source for Bellwood’s ascription, but there is a matched door sill and lintel in Auckland Museum collected from Oruarangi that would fit into a jamb of this form. Nine artefacts from Squares 1 and 2 meet the definition of tumatahuki or vertical house wall battens (Fig. 7.7). They were split from heart totara, the top half adzedressed, and a simple hole chiselled near the very top. The larger six (KOH42–48) are clearly from the same house. They range from 1135 mm to 1005 mm long, a variation to be expected as house walls often rose in height from back to front (Firth 1926). These battens are all in an excellent state of preservation and have no evidence of rot at their bases. Tumatahuki typically support tukutuku panels with their tops lashed to the kaho-paetara. Clearly, when the house was abandoned, the lashings rotted and the battens fell onto the wet ground and escaped fire. Three smaller battens (KOH49–51) were also recovered from Squares 1 and 2. Although identical in form to those described above, they are only 705 mm to 560 mm long. A further batten (KOH52) of a different type was found in the same area. Unlike
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Figure 7.7 Tumatahuki battens from the HS Area
Kohika
the others, it has a hole in both ends and may have had a different function, such as to hold the front wall insulation in place (Fig.7.7). KOH59 is a slat 1545 mm long and 40 mm wide (not illustrated). It is slightly tapered and snapped off at one end. There are many possible functions for such an item in the house construction, including covering the junction between two planks, trimming around doors and windows, and holding insulation onto the front wall. Several timber planks that were probably parts of pataka were found in the Society area. These have lashing holes enabling them to have been sewn edge to edge. KOH11 and KOH21 (Fig. 7.8) are probably from pataka epa on the front wall (see Fig. 7.3), as their tops are cut at 45–55 degrees from the vertical. KOH11 has three simple lashing holes along one edge and two on the other. KOH21 is a burnt-off fragment with two simple lashing points along its remaining intact edge. It is the only burnt fragment in the collection that was not the base of a post set in the ground. KOH22 (Fig. 7.8) is a plank originally 720 mm by 155 mm with simple lashing holes at each corner. KOH71–74 and KOH40 are board fragments with lashing holes that imply they may have been from sewn plank structures. Four items, KOH23–25 (Fig. 7.9), and KOH29 (not illustrated), are slabs split from the surface of pukatea trunks with simple lashing holes at their tops. The only intact one is 1827 mm tall and has a base bevelled to allow it to be driven into the ground. They are rather casually made and dressed on the split face. Whatever structures they were from must have been relatively low in status but high enough to have allowed people to stand up. They could have been walls of cooking shelters.
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 137
In summary, timbers were found that demonstrate the presence in this area of plank-built buildings including a definite whare whakairo, a probable pataka and some other informal structures, perhaps including cooking shelters. Timbers from Area D
Excavation of this area found a sequence of house floors with an adjacent cooking area set against a palisade (Figs 4.15–17). The postholes and intact butts of these houses demonstrate that they were constructed of pole and thatch and used the palisade as their back wall. The dressed timbers recovered from this area appear to have come from a number of structures that stood in the immediate area. Undressed poles are difficult to attribute to specific buildings when found as scattered pieces. Six items have incised or relief ornamentation. KOH2 is a fragment of a board (Plate 7.11) from the Yellow House level that is elaborately carved on both sides. KOH6 (Plate 7.12) is a weathered knotty fragment recovered from the White House level that has incised carving on its surface. KOH4 is a long (459 mm), narrow (32 mm) fragment detached from a plank with an incised pattern on one face (Plate 7.13). KOH5 is a small slab of wood with an incised line drawing on one side that could have been either a doodle or a preparatory sketch for a carving (Fig. 7.10). KOH54 is a complete artefact recovered from the Yellow House level (Fig. 7.10). It is 350 mm by 95 mm with a zigzag upper margin and four lashing holes. It could have been a korupe (window facing board) or a pare of a house or pataka. While such items could relate to structures of status marked out as different from domestic ones by ornamentation, the evidence from Area D allows the clear possibility that they were attached to pole and thatch houses and that there was, therefore, more diversity in house status and decoration than has been envisaged. KOH56 is a carefully made item 398 mm long, U-shaped in cross-section, and with deep U-shaped recesses cut in each end (Fig. 7.10). It could have been a lintel plate for
Figure 7.8 Possible fragments of pataka from the HS Area
Figure 7.9 Dressed slabs split from pukatea tree trunks, HS Area and Area B
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Plate 7.11 KOH2. Fragment of elaborate carving, Area D.
Plate 7.12 KOH6. Fragment of elaborate carving, Area D.
Plate 7.13 KOH4. Fragment of elaborate carving, Area D.
the small door of a pataka, as illustrated in Figure 7.3, where it is shown trimming the epa over the door opening and with the recesses at its ends fitting around the epa at each side. In this case the door would be only 325 mm wide. Three rafters from a small plank-built house or pataka were recovered in Square D2 just outside the palisade line. KOH34 and KOH35 (Fig. 7.11) appear to be a matched set of heke ripi rafters that abutted the end wall. Each has holes along only one side so it could be lashed to the tops of epa, as illustrated in Figures 7.1 and 7.3. KOH34 has five plain lashing holes cut through one edge and three face eyelets on the upper surface. KOH35 has ten edge eyelets, five cut from the upper and lower surfaces respectively. In contrast, KOH36 has only three face eyelets, suggesting it was a normal rafter, not attached to an end wall. The purpose of the face eyelets seems to have been to hold a tauwhenua, or tensioning cable, in place along the length of the rafter. These rafters were carefully made and provide intricate details of their construction and the design of their joints (Fig. 7.12). From their lengths we can estimate the width of the building from which they came. A roof pitch of 110 degrees and walls sloping outward by five degrees give a building approximately 2.50 m wide at the
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 139
Figure 7.10 (top left) Timbers recovered from Area D Figure 7.11 (top right) The three rafters from Area D
Figure 7.12 Detail of rafter tenon joints
Figure 7.13 Parameters used to estimate the width of a building in Area D, based on rafter dimensions
140
Figure 7.14 Two parts of pataka from Area D, plus two indeterminate items (KOH30 and 31)
Kohika
base (Fig. 7.13). This is narrower than the pole and thatch house floors in Area D, which ranged from three to five metres wide. Furthermore, the side wall posts of the latter were narrower than the rafters and could not have formed joints with them. Therefore, we are dealing with parts of another building altogether. As the two items described next are clearly from a pataka, it could well be that these rafters are from that structure too. KOH19 is a pataka epa fragment with five neatly chiselled holes along its edge. KOH20 is a flashing strip, semi-circular in cross-section, that was recovered still attached to KOH19, the remains of lashings being still present (Fig. 7.14). These items are clearly from the wall of a very carefully finished pataka made from dressed planks set edge to edge. KOH32 is a board, triangular in outline, with seven holes piercing it (Fig. 7.14). It could be the end epa of a small pataka cut to accommodate the inward slope of the side wall. KOH30 is a thick slab 700 mm by 200 mm with a triangular cross-section (Fig. 7.14). It has three large simple lashing holes along its thick edge. The thinner edge is mostly broken away, leaving two of the original five or six smaller holes intact. The function of this item is uncertain. Also of uncertain purpose is KOH31, an adzed totara slab 450 mm long with its ends bevelled on alternate sides (Fig. 7.14). KOH37 and KOH38 (not illustrated) are pieces of one plank well over 2 metres long with an L-shaped cross-section. Its function, too, is not clear. KOH39 is a short batten with one end bevelled. KOH60 is a slat bevelled at each end. In addition, 23 other fragments of dressed plank recovered in Area D were, in general, too small to associate with particular structures. They were so numerous and of such a variety of wood species (kauri, totara, matai, rimu, kahikatea and pukatea) that we could suggest that other buildings made from dressed planks existed in this area of the site. Timbers from Area B
Area B lay near the eastern palisade and very few dressed wooden timbers were recovered here. KOH26 (Fig. 7.9) is a possible poupou, 1480 mm long, of dressed pukatea with a chisel end. Only three further plank fragments were found in this area. Posts and palisade timbers
Sixteen items were identified as fragments of stakes, posts or palisades. All were either natural stems or had been split from small to medium-sized trees. The species include manuka, kanuka, tawa, matai, rimu, pukatea and totara. A large number of comparable items were not analysed.
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 141
Discussion of the buildings
It is clear that one whare whakairo and possibly other dressed-plank houses stood at Kohika pa as well as numerous sleeping houses more simply constructed from pole and thatch. Also present were plank-built pataka. On the basis of current evidence, it is established that houses and pataka occurred in households on low-lying ground close to the lakeshore. There were also less formal structures – probably cooking shelters. However, storage pits were found only on top of the mound in Area A. Indeed, pits would have been restricted to high areas of the site to keep their floors above the water table. Therefore it is unlikely that any of the waterlogged timbers from Kohika belonged to roofed storage pits, and we are unable to tell whether any were decorated, for instance, by a simple carving over the door. However, this seems quite possible, given that houses of pole and thatch construction did have modest decorations. A notable feature of the analysis of the houses is the way in which the assemblage of timber relates to the floor plans. Houses and other domestic structures constructed from pole and thatch are visible archaeologically only by their floor plans and a relatively small number of distinctive timber elements and minor decorations. Most of their remains could not be recognised, even if they constituted a majority of the buildings. In contrast, the dressed planks recovered yielded considerable information concerning houses and other structures, even when their floor plans were not found. Archaeological sites normally supply only floor plans, but at Kohika parts of the superstructures of Maori houses were recovered. These provide details of construction not otherwise available to us, in particular how dressed timbers were joined together. A striking feature is how much trouble was taken to ensure the lashings were not visible. This was achieved by mortise and tenon joints and the extensive use of face and edge eyelets in preference to simple holes that passed directly through the planks. With lashings exposed mainly on the outside of the frame, visible or accessible only during house construction or repair, the internal timber surfaces of the houses remained unimpeded and ‘clean’. This aspect is illustrated in Figure 7.15. The use of facing boards on the front elevation of the house seems to continue this principle. This deliberate masking of construction details goes some way to explaining gaps in the ethnographic literature on house construction. Despite having had repeated contact with such houses, Peter Buck may have had no memory of the details simply because they were constructed so as to be almost completely hidden from sight. In contrast, the systems described by Buck (1938:277) from tropical Polynesia have open scaffolding-like frames secured by visible, and often ornamental, lashings. Maori practice was to avoid this. An exception is the tukutuku panelling, whose exposed lashings were artistic patterns. The question arises why the New Zealand Maori developed this approach. The answer may be, in parts, environmental, ecological and technological. The need to adapt to a colder climate by constructing thick, well-insulated walls in the superior Maori house types was met by using squared timbers and planks obtained from available large-diameter trees. Assembling such timbers into structures requires different techniques from those employed in tropical Polynesia on houses constructed of poles. Maori adopted techniques for connecting planks that resemble those used in canoe building. Canoes were made from planks fitted together with watertight joints to form hull surfaces that had no lashings exposed to abrasion when landing. Early Maori already had such techniques in their voyaging repertoire. The result may have been a transfer of technology from canoe to house construction in the context of the very different environment in New Zealand. However, one difference is that, while canoes
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Kohika
Figure 7.15 Detail of the internal and external framing of a superior house
had their lashings recessed from outside, superior houses had theirs concealed from inside. The deliberate masking of construction methods may have contributed to another feature of Maori architecture, the persistence of the meeting house into modern times. In tropical Polynesia, the form of a building is influenced by the visible techniques of construction. The adoption of European building methods inevitably radically altered its appearance. The Maori house conceals its construction methods so that the inward and outward appearance of the meeting house was retained in a highly recognisable way despite the adoption of European materials and construction methods. Thus the cultural continuity of buildings of central importance to the community was assured.
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 143
Woodcarvings from Kohika
Items from Kohika bearing carved embellishments include architectural components of houses: namely poupou, poutahuhu, pare and poutokomanawa, a paddle and a canoe bailer. All of these were made of totara, apart from the paddle, which was tawa. Carved parts of house: poupou
Because the tops were burnt off, the length (or rather the height) of each poupou is arbitrary. KOH14: poupou base with burnt-off top, 345 long by 205 wide by 30 mm thick (Plate 7.1). The surviving carving depicts a portion of a torso with a large plain spiral on the shoulder and a shallow sulcus separating the body from the upper leg, which has a plain surface. A deep curving cut outlines the edge of the figure. In the space beside the body and standing on the curve of the hip is a small supplementary figure with a round elongated face, open mouth with straight tongue, hands to hips. Overlying the body is a small contorted supplementary figure with a hand to its mouth. Apart from the shoulder spiral, no surface decoration is present. KOH16: poupou base with burnt-off top and chisel-ended base, 460 by 240 by 40 mm (Plate 7.2). The surviving carving consists of a lower leg and foot with projecting toes of the main figure on the poupou. Between its legs was a small supplementary figure, possibly without an obvious head, outlined in carving that pierces the poupou plank and displays some shaping even on the rear of the poupou. There is no surface decoration. KOH17: poupou base with burnt-off top, 425 by 280 by 35 mm (Plate 7.3). The surviving carving seems to depict a lower portion of a figure with its hip curving out at a marked angle from the body, perhaps with a lower arm ending in a hand on the body. There is also a small supplementary figure standing on the curve of the hip. There is no surface decoration. KOH18: poupou base with burnt-off top, 365 by 220 by 37 mm (Plate 7.4). The surviving carving depicts the lower portion of a figure, with a shallow sulcus separating the stomach from the hip. A large plain spiral covers the hip and there may have been a supplementary figure overlying the body. In the curve between the body and the hip there is a supplementary male figure with its feet on the hip. Apart from the spiral on the hip, there is no surface decoration. KOH44: poutahuhu base with burnt-off top, 290 by 175 by 85 mm (Plate 7.5). The surviving carving possibly depicts a wide leg and foot of the main figure, with the remains of a small supplementary figure between its legs. This panel is notable for the depth of the timber and the consequent deep cut outlining the leg, making it more likely to have been a poutahuhu rather than a poupou. General comments on the poupou and poutahuhu
Some general compositional features can be discerned from the carving that survives on these fragments. All of the carving has been executed in the same style, almost certainly the work of one individual carver. His work is characterised by the deployment of large plain spirals on shoulders and hips of the main poupou figure, which is the only surface decoration pattern used. He placed small supplementary figures on the body of the main figure, standing on the hip in the curve of the main figure outline and between its legs. He marked the outlines of his main poupou figures with a deep smooth curving cut and left the body of the main figure in fairly flat low relief. However, his large plain spirals and supplementary figures overlying the main figure show that he had good control of his two layers of relief. Within the outline of the main
144
Kohika
figure, he separated its body from its legs with a wide shallow sulcus. There are limited indications that he may have pierced his carving right through the poupou, a practice seen in other pre-European examples. An instructive comparison can be made with the complete small early poupou found near Waioeka, now in Auckland Museum, not so much in carving style, which is different, but in size and constructional form. This Waioeka poupou indicates a side wall height of about 80 cm; much of the carving is pierced right through the panel, and the supplementary figure between the legs has its head carved in low relief on the lower torso of the main figure. This form of figure between the legs is reminiscent of the figure on KOH16 and may also be compared with the figure between the legs of the pataka doorway figure from Thornton swamp, near Kohika, now in the Museum of New Zealand. Carved parts of house: pare
KOH53: pare fragment very elaborately carved, 265 by 65 by 25 mm (Plate 7.6). This pierced openwork portion of a pare is carved on the front only, with a flat back. A wheku-type face projects at an oblique angle from the upper edge of the pare. This face has bulbous eyes not intended to take shell inserts, the brows are slightly curved and are the same width as the mouth. A continuous double ridge runs down over the forehead to the nose and each nostril is well defined. The mouth is wide open with four teeth indicated and the lips are carved as two parallel raumoa ridges crossed at intervals by ritorito ridges. Surface decoration over the rest of the fragment consists of the same double raumoa ridges crossed by angular groups of three or four ritorito. Some of the ridges have nicked notching along the apex. This surface patterning forms a double spiral with pointed ends, creating the motif known as puwerewere. Most of the stylistic affinities of this pare are to be found in stone-tooled carvings from the Hauraki area, most notably the Patetonga pare in Auckland Museum, the Newman pare in Whanganui Museum, and the Miranda pataka doorway in the Museum of New Zealand. In the wider field, these affinities would extend into the full range of the western and northern sinuous styles, which are nearly all stone-tooled and date from pre-European times. Carved parts of house: poutokomanawa figure
KOH7: human figure executed in the round, central house post, 11030 by 280 by 155 mm (Plate 7.10). Although deeply eroded and therefore lacking any evidence of surface decoration, most of the compositional features of this carving can still be determined. It is very definitely a poutokomanawa figure, intended to stand as part of a central post supporting the ridgepole. Many small houses had only one poutokomanawa, usually in the interior. Larger, later 19th-century houses often have two or even more interior poutokomanawa and some elaborate houses also have a comparable figure, tokoihi, at the exterior central front of the porch. Judging by the size and period of this Kohika house, this figure is probably the only poutokomanawa from the house, presumably from the interior. Early contact-period accounts of houses indicate that the pare and the small interior poutokomanawa figure were symbolically the two most important carvings of the house. Closely constricted within the original dimensions of the post, this stocky, shortbodied figure has narrow sloping shoulders, a wheku-type face with large open mouth and slightly protruding tongue. Its left hand reaches up the lower jaw while the right is placed on the middle of the chest. The legs are wide apart, with a supplementary figure between having its head carved in low relief on the lower torso of the main
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 145
figure. It is a fair assumption that this figure represents a major named ancestor of the person or group owning the house. Stylistically, it can be attributed to the hand of the same person who carved the poupou for this house. Carved boards and slabs
KOH1: board fragment, pierced and elaborately carved on both sides, 435 by 120 by 43 mm (Plate 7.7). This is a fragment from a larger composition of uncertain purpose. It could perhaps be part of a pare of a previously unrecorded form, but the carving on both sides probably precludes this. Its being pierced and carved on both sides may suggest a portion of a canoe prow or stern, though of uncertain form. At this stage, its identification must remain undetermined. The surface decoration consists of an early form of raised taratara-a-kai in linear and spiral arrangements. The spirals are double with a ‘looped’ centre. KOH2: board fragment, elaborately carved on both sides, 100 by 85 by 30 mm (Plate 7.11). This could possibly be part of a pare. It has a curved facet worn smooth below that suggests abrasion against a moving surface, as in an entryway. The notching above this curved facet could be the remains of rauponga surface decoration. KOH3: board fragment, elaborately carved on both sides, 172 by 45 by 43 mm (Plate 7.8). This fragment is shaped out with matching pierced carving on both sides but only one side has raised taratara-a-kai surface decoration. The bases of broken connectives remain in the central plane of the fragment. It could be part of a pare. KOH4: long, narrow plank fragment with incised pattern visible, 459 by 32 by 18 mm (Plate 7.13). This is a narrow strip split off a larger plank. On the back it has been adzed flat. On the front it bears raised taratara-a-kai surface decoration. It may be a portion of a poupou but none of the other definite poupou have taratara-a-kai surface decoration. KOH5: slab of wood, with incised line drawing on one side (Figure 7.10). This is a flat slab split off a larger piece. One side is plain with shallow adzing marks. The other side shows very shallow incised curving lines, perhaps forming outlines of carving patterns, but no definite form can be discerned. These lines may have been huahua drawing for later carving, but the surface has been adzed and polished flat, suggesting that these lines might be just idle markings. KOH6: weathered fragment with incised carving visible, 325 by 70 by 65 mm (Plate 7.12). This piece shows only minimal incising with no definite pattern. KOH345: fragment from elaborate carving possibly broken from spiral fretwork (Plate 7.9). This fragment is too small for any specific function to be determined. Paddle
KOH162: parts of nearly complete canoe paddle with decorative carving on loom where handle joins base, 1670 by 306 by 40 mm (Fig. 6.10). Unfortunately, the carving at the loom has been badly eroded but it would seem to have been a complex pattern of raised taratara-a-kai. This suggests affinities with the paddles, often with kowhaiwhai painted on the blades, collected by Captain Cook in 1769 and later explorers in the Poverty Bay area (Neich 1993:59–73). However, while these Poverty Bay paddles were also carved in raised taratara-a-kai, they almost all featured a manaia head with a long curved jaw. The carving on the Kohika paddle seems to have been a different composition, although now beyond determination. It is also carved deeper into the surface of the loom and is separated from the blade by a definite deeper curved edge, whereas the carved head on the early Poverty Bay-style paddles protrudes markedly from the rest of the paddle surface. Many of the Poverty Bay paddles also feature a manaia head at the butt of the handle, absent from the
146 Plate 7.14 KOH174. Carved handle of bailer, Area D.
Kohika
Kohika paddle. The rounded rectangular section of the Kohika paddle handle contrasts with the round section of Poverty Bay paddle handles. Consequently, the Kohika paddle must represent a parallel but different tradition of prestigious paddles bearing elaborate carving at the loom. Bailer
KOH174: bailer with projecting handle, knob with carved human face, damaged (Fig. 6.13, Plate 7.14). With its handle projecting back from the scoop, this bailer is of the less common form, which is usually left plain compared with the elaborately carved and more common war-canoe bailers. There are indications that this plain form was used in smaller uncarved river and swamp canoes. Known examples of this form are from Coromandel, Hauraki, Rotorua and Taupo. Several have a simple face mask carved on the butt of the handle, as on this Kohika piece where the wheku-type face projects downward. The handle shows signs of wear and the face may have been altered by abrasion, especially the flattened nose. The round bulbous forehead is wider than the open mouth; there is a deep straight cut above each eyebrow, and no surface decoration.
Discussion of the Kohika carving styles
The people of Kohika obviously possessed a rich and varied tradition of woodcarving expressed in stone-tool carving. It was applied to a range of objects of the types documented ethnographically from early post-European Maori culture, although some important carved elements that might have been expected are absent, such as small items like flutes. Very few prehistoric or early contact stone-tooled carvings are documented to the Bay of Plenty. Among the most important would be the Waioeka poupou, the Te Kaha pataka and the Mokoia Island storehouse carving (all in Auckland Museum), the small doorway carvings from Thornton (in Whakatane Museum), the semi-subterranean storehouse doorway from Omarumutu (in Canterbury Museum), the storehouse doorway from Thornton (in the Museum of New Zealand), the Mokoia Island poupou in Tamatekapua house at Ohinemutu, and the Puwhakaoho poupou in Houmaitawhiti house at Otaramarae. Apart from the comparison made with the Waioeka poupou above, none of these shows any close stylistic relationship to the Kohika carvings. Probably most noticeable in this respect is the occurrence of an early form of raised taratara-a-kai surface decoration at Kohika, close to the raised taratara-a-kai present on many early carvings usually attributed to the East Coast and possibly an earlier form than that seen on some of the above Bay of Plenty carvings. For other comparisons it was necessary to look further afield, including early stonetooled carvings from the Hauraki area. Similarly, a stone-tooled poupou from Whangara (now in Auckland Museum) gives a wall height of 112 cm, and a stone-tooled poupou collected by Cook’s first expedition from Tolaga Bay (recently rediscovered in the Tuebingen University Museum) gives a wall height of 92 cm. Stylistically, these Ngati Porou poupou add to our understanding and appreciation of the Kohika poupou especially in terms of their size, their plain spirals on shoulders and hips, their pierced carving, and the supplementary figure between the legs with its head on the lower
Houses, pataka and woodcarving at Kohika 147
torso of the main figure. Nevertheless, this lack of comparable pieces limits the insight to be gained from wider comparisons but points up the supreme importance of the carved assemblage from Kohika. Within the Kohika carving assemblage, the work of at least four individual carvers can be distinguished: Carver A
His work includes all the poupou (KOH14, 16, 17, 18), the poutahuhu (KOH44) and the poutokomanawa figure (KOH7) and is characterised by the features described above. Since these were parts of a house built at Kohika, it is a fair assumption that he was a local man. His carving style is very consistent and distinctive but, on the basis of the other early Bay of Plenty and East Coast carvings described above, it cannot be closely linked to any other known early styles, whether from Ngati Awa or wider afield. This may suggest that the generally recognised specific tribal styles of the Bay of Plenty are a more recent development. Carver B
This carver was responsible for the pare fragment (KOH53), which suggests that he had connections with the Hauraki area. This small pare would have been portable from the Hauraki area but could also have been carved on the site. His work is characterised by a fine detailed touch with careful attention to surface decoration. Carver C
His work is limited to the face on the bailer (KOH174), where the differences from the face on the pare by Carver B are very obvious. Carver D
His hand can be recognised on carved fragments KOH1 and KOH3 and perhaps KOH2, characterised by his use of deep relief pierced carving and high raised tarataraa-kai surface decoration with limited pakura spirals. The top of his taratara-a-kai ridges are often completely flat and he does not use the ridge apex notching seen in the work of Carver B. Carver D favoured a round double spiral in taratara-a-kai with looped centre, while Carver B produced an angular pointed spiral in raumoa and ritorito. Thus the carvings from Kohika, with their range of individual styles linking to different areas of the country, suggest that this might have been a diverse community with wide external connections to people from other areas.
References Angas, G.F., 1979. Early paintings of the Maori. Illustrated and described by George French Angas. Wellington: Reed. Anon., 1988. Tane-Nui-A-Rangi. Auckland: University of Auckland. Bellwood, P., 1978. Archaeological research at Lake Mangakaware, Waikato, 1968–70. New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No.9. Best, E., 1924. The Maori. Vol. II. Wellington: The Polynesian Society. Best, E., 1974. Maori storehouses and kindred structures. Wellington: Shearer, Government Printer. Buck, P.H., 1938. Vikings of the sunrise. Philadelphia: Lippicott. Buck, P.H., 1949. The coming of the Maori. Wellington: Maori Purposes Trust Board. Cruise, R.A., 1974. Journal of a ten months’ residence in New Zealand. 2nd Edition. Christchurch: Capper Press.
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Davidson, J.M., 1984. The prehistory of New Zealand. Auckland: Longman Paul. Day, K., 2001. Maori wood carving of the Taranaki region. Auckland: Reed. Duff, R., 1961. Waitara Swamp search. Records of the Canterbury Museum, 7:303–26. Earle, A., 1966. Narrative of a residence in New Zealand. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Firth, R.W., 1926. Wharepuni: a few remaining Maori dwellings of the old style. Man, 26:54–9. Geelen de Kabath, M.A.X., 1974. Raised storage structures in New Zealand prehistory. Unpublished research essay, University of Auckland. Green, R.C. and K. Green, 1963. Classic and early European sites on the Hauraki Plains. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter, 6:27–34. Groube L.M., 1965. Settlement patterns in New Zealand prehistory. Dunedin: Anthropology Department, University of Otago. Lysnar, F.B., 1915. New Zealand, the dear old Maori land. Auckland: Brett. Makereti, 1986. The old-time Maori. Auckland: New Women’s Press. Neich, R., 1993. Painted Histories: early Maori figurative painting. Auckland: Auckland University Press. Neich, R., 2001. Carved Histories: Rotorua Ngati Tarawhai woodcarving. Auckland: Auckland University Press. Phillips, W.J., 1952. Maori houses and food stores. Dominion Museum Bulletin No.8. Wellington: Government Printer. Prickett, N.J., 1974. Houses and house life in prehistoric New Zealand. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Otago. Prickett, N.J., 1979. Prehistoric occupation in the Moikau Valley, Palliser Bay. In B.F. Leach and H.M. Leach (eds), Prehistoric man in Palliser Bay. National Museum Bulletin No.21, pp.29–47. Prickett, N.J., 1982. An archaeologists’ guide to the Maori dwelling. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 4:111–47. Teviotdale, D. and D.H. Skinner, 1947. Oruarangi Pa. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 56:357–63. Wallace, R. and G.J. Irwin, 1999. A Kohika wharepuni: house construction methods of the late pre-contact Maori. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 21:67–86. Walsh, D.S. and B. Biggs, 1966. Proto-Polynesian word list I. Auckland: Linguistic Society of New Zealand. Williams, H.W., 1896. The Maori whare: notes on the construction of a Maori house. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 5:145–54.
8
Kohika fibrework S. McAra
This chapter completes the description of the waterlogged assemblage from Kohika. As with wetland archaeological excavations world-wide, the remains of woven fabrics, rope and netting were extremely fragile and presented problems for excavation and conservation, particularly in the initial excavation by the Historical Society. The accumulating evidence suggests the existence of households near the lake in Area D and the HS Area, and possibly also in Area B, and the distribution of fibre artefacts supports this. In Area D, cordage, netting and a few plaited items (KOH296– 301) were found in association with the Yellow House horizon, not within the house, but outside in the peat that formed in the former shallow lakeshore. This was an active area of disturbance and treadage; canoes landed, midden was dumped and people and dogs were active. Similarly, in the HS Area, cordage and several plaited items (KOH302–307, KOH340, 341) were found in the vicinity, but some fine matting probably came from inside the carved house itself. In Area B, fibre remains (KOH295), probably of rope (see Appendix ), were found outside the palisade. The techniques represented by the fibre remains include one- and two-ply spiralwrapped cordage, three-ply braiding, checked and twilled fabric plaitwork, and netting. The Maori ropemaking technique which is here termed ‘two-ply spiral-wrapped’ appears to be previously unrecorded. All items appear to be made using strips of raw harakeke (New Zealand flax, Phormium tenax). Few Maori archaeological sites have yielded fibre artefacts, and many of the surviving examples are in poor condition. A range of Maori fibre-working techniques was recorded during the early 20th century (e.g. Buck 1926a, 1926b) and more recently, in the context of a cultural renaissance, some ‘how-to’ books have emerged (e.g. Hopa 1971, Pendergrast 1986, Puketapu-Hetet 1989). The archaeological finds, however, provide information about both recorded and hitherto undocumented fibre-working techniques, which had fallen into disuse. There is a small literature about fibre from specific excavations. For example, Lawrence (1989) describes pieces found in caves in the Waitakere Ranges dating to c.AD 1750–1850, while Anderson et al. (1991) describe fibre material retrieved from Fiordland, including numerous pieces of raw harakeke worked into cordage and knots. Lander (1992) draws on her skills as a fibre artist to describe pieces of c.1820 fibrework from Raupa on the Hauraki Plains. In a recent paper, McAra (2001) describes several portions of well-preserved harakeke nets measuring between 20 and 40 metres long from a Banks Peninsula cave. The Kohika plant fibre collection consists of fragments representing several kinds of fibre-working technique. They are primarily short lengths of cordage that divide into the categories of two-plied and braided. A few pieces are too matted and decayed to clearly identify the technique. There are several fragments of twill plaiting, and the remains of a net. With regard to terminology, Connor’s (1983) classification system 149
150 Kohika
for describing fibres is followed here, where possible. The cordage fragments are too short for it to be possible to specify the uses to which they were put. Whakatane and District Historical Society members glued much of the collection to sheets of cardboard, further limiting the amount of investigation possible. R. Wallace identified small fragments of cuticle, one from a representative sample of each technique, as being harakeke, but it was not possible to identify particular cultivars. Significantly, none of the pieces described in this paper is made from muka (dressed fibre). Instead, strips are used, made by splitting the softened leaf. Harakeke can be softened in several different ways (McAra 2001): by scraping its shiny side (e.g. with the flat edge of a mussel shell); drawing it over embers to make the leaf ‘sweat’; or boiling it. The author has also successfully used dried leaves, which are soaked and then partially redried, before working with them while they still retain some moisture, a technique practised with dried coconut fronds in Samoa (Pendergrast, pers. comm. 2002). Softening the leaf prevents shrinkage. The condition of old harakeke artefacts depends on whether they were preserved dry or wet. It may also depend on measures taken by the makers to prolong the lifespan – for example, by smoking the material or rubbing oil or tree gum into the fibres. Conservator D. Johns (pers. comm. 2002) affirms that both wet and dry conditions retard decay, but in a dry cave the waxy cuticle may curl and flake off, leaving the fibre intact, while in a swamp it is the most waterproof part of the harakeke and will last longest. The fishing net in the Canterbury Museum, taken from a dry cave, has several areas where the cuticle has flaked off leaving the muka fibre intact (McAra 2001). In comparison, the Kohika pieces have lost much of the fibre, in places leaving only the cuticle, although in some parts the imprint of the fibre is visible as dark lines on the cuticle.
Cordage Single ‘spiral-wrapped’ bunches of strips and ‘two-ply spiral-wrapped’ cordage fragments
The author could discover no Maori name for the two variant techniques observed in the Kohika cordage fragments, so two descriptive terms are used. The first is the ‘single spiral-wrapped bunches’ (1SWB) of raw harakeke (Plates 8.1a and 8.1b) and the second is the ‘two-ply spiral-wrapped’ (2PSW) bunches of raw harakeke (Plate 8.1c; Figs 8.1a and 8.1b). The distinguishing feature of 1SWB and 2PSW cordage is that the strips in each bunch are contained by a wider ‘wrapping strip’ 7–10 mm wide which spirals around the bunch, leaving gaps through which the inner strips are clearly visible. In both cases, each ‘bunch’ of strips is cylindrical and contains about ten strips, each approximately 2–3 mm wide. Some of the 1SWB examples show kinks along the length, suggesting the imprint of a lost counterpart such as KOH300.3 (Plate 8.1b) and KOH300.13. It is likely that the 1SWB examples are simply the component parts of 2PSW cordage. KOH298.5 looks different from the other 1SWB pieces, as the spiral wrap leaves fewer gaps (Plate 8.1a). Perhaps it was used differently, or perhaps the spiral wrap was wound more tightly. Table 8.1 gives details of 1SWB pieces. The 2PSW pieces consist of two elements, each comprising ‘bunches’ of harakeke strips, twisted anti-clockwise (Z-twist) into two-ply rope (see Table 8.2). The fragments of cordage are too short for joins to be visible where one of these wrapping strands runs out and another is added in – presumably the new strip would have to be knotted to the previous one. Some of them are in poor condition and it is not possible
Kohika fibrework 151 Plate 8.1a KOH298.5. Fragment of single spiralwrapped bunches of harakeke (1SWB) resembling a handle.
Plate 8.1b KOH300.3. Fragment of 1SWB resembling one half of a pair of two-ply spiral-wrapped bunches (2PSW) of harakeke.
Plate 8.1c KOH298.1. Short fragment of two-ply spiral-wrapped bundles of harakeke (2PSW).
to identify the spiral wrapping. It seems more likely that this is due to decay than to a variant technique, because other 2PSW fragments show traces of the wrapping strip. Table 8.1
Single spiral-wrapped bunches of harakeke (1SWB)
Length of KOH number fragment (mm)* 298.5 190
Approximate width of wrapping strip (mm) 5
Approximate number of raw strands per element 7–10
Comments
Spiral wrap leaves fewer gaps than on other pieces. 300.3; 300.13 210, 120 8 8–12 Both pieces appear to be from a 2PSW rope 302a & 302b Fragment appears to be 1SWB tied in a knot; b is a 50mm length of 1SWB. * All measurements in this chapter are approximate.
Plate no. 8.1a
8.1b
–
152 Kohika Figure 8.1a KOH298. Drawing of twoply spiralwrapped bunches of harakeke (2PSW)
Figure 8.1b Diagram of technique for making 2PSW
Table 8.2
Two-ply spiral-wrapped bunches of harakeke (2PSW)
KOH number 298.1 298.2–4
Length (mm) 140 140
Number of twists 6 4
299.1
210
6
299.2–3 299.4–5 300.7 300.9; 300.10–12; 300.14–15
270 250–70 7 290 13 120–220 5–10
341
380
12
Comments Diagram (Figs 8.1a and 8.1b) based on this piece Some are partly unravelled – fibres appear crushed in places Thickness c.15–20 mm; spiral wrap in poor condition; c.5 mm wide where visible These two are knotted or tangled pieces Little remaining of spiral wrap No spiral wrap Thickness c.10–15 mm; spiral wrap c.10 mm wide; spiral wrap absent on some pieces (decay?); quite loose and unravelled pieces Little remaining of spiral wrap; 2nd longest piece
Plate no. 8.1c – –
– – –
–
Three-ply braids (whiri)
A range of styles of braided ropes was used widely by Maori, from small items such as sandals and kete (handles, carrying straps [kawe]) to large items such as the ropes for long nets. Four-ply braids are cylindrical, while three-ply braids are flatter. Thickness and width vary depending on the quantity of strands in each ply as well as the tension used in the braiding. Three-ply cordage is the only kind of braiding represented in this collection. The Kohika braids vary in width and thickness and all are neatly made, holding
Kohika fibrework 153 Plate 8.2 KOH303.8–11. Short braided fragments, showing two straight examples (KOH303.8 and 9) and an X and a Y braid (KOH 303.10 and 11).
together tightly except where the fibre has decayed. Some visibly diminish in width as the fibres decrease down the braid. Most are fat braids, tightly worked with thick strands. Most of the fragments are short, single sections of braid, but a few of them start as two braids, converging into one in a ‘Y’ shape (e.g. KOH303.11), and there is also an ‘X’ shaped braid (e.g. KOH303.10, KOH340), which has two wider braids and two narrower ones (Plate 8.2). None of the surviving fragments shows a commencement or finishing knot. All of the fragments must have come from a longer rope or ropes because they are too short to be useful (Tables 8.3 and 8.4). The ends of each are broken, rather than being frayed or having come unravelled, possibly a result of decay processes rather than use wear. Table 8.3 Three-ply cordage
KOH number 298.6–7
Length (mm) 110 each
Width (mm) 7
Thickness (mm) 3
Number of twists 12–13
300.1
90
14
4
8
300.2 300.4–6
120 50 each
14 5
5 3
11 4–5
Comments Probably both part of one longer braid Probably both part of one longer braid
Plate no. – –
Probably part of longer – braid 300.8 420 20 13 36 Tightly braided and thick; – longest piece in collection 300.4–6 Each piece approx. 70 mm long, thin, and 3–5 twists; probably part of one – longer braid; similar to 298.6, 208.7 303.6–9 70–180 9–13 2–3 6–15 8.2 306.3–5 100–130 10 3–6 5–9 – 340.1–3 80–130 9–15 5–7 8–10 340.2 has a folded-back – fragment of 3 twists 340.5–10 80–210 7–12 4–7 7–12 Lengths of braiding, – varying thickness and condition 340.12 180 – Width of braids varies along length, so separate fragments of different widths are not necessarily from separate original braids.
154 Kohika
Table 8.4
Three-ply braid variants
298.8
Length of fragment (mm) 170
Length of components (X is point where braid parts intersect) A–X X–B X–C X–D 60 110 70 –
303.10
200
60
30
40
160
303.11
260
80
180
70
–
340.4
190
80
110
90
–
340.11
230
120
110
60
90
KOH number
Comments 3-ply braid in Y-fragment shape; in many places fibre is lost and only epidermis remains Pair of thin braids forming X shape, 7–10 mm wide Pair of thick braids meeting to form a thicker single braid (Y shape), 19 mm wide 3-ply braid in Y-fragment shape, 10 mm wide, 5 mm thick X braid – piece C–X is thinnest; X–B thickest
Plate no. –
– 8.2
–
–
Plaitwork (raranga) fragments
These fabric fragments come from the main body of plaiting (raranga). The starting and finishing points of the plaiting are missing, making it difficult to establish the direction of plaiting or to show which strips were the dextrals and which the sinistrals. Further, the plaiting has degraded even within the surviving pieces to the extent that it is not possible to be certain whether irregularities are due to intentional shaping, errors or the loss of fibres through disintegration. The function of the original objects can only be surmised. There are several pieces of plaitwork, with two styles in evidence. The first is fine twill work (Plates 8.3 and 8.4), and the second is 1/1 plaiting using wider strips (Plate 8.5). KOH301a and 301b are the smallest fragments, so it is difficult to identify any plaiting pattern. It appears that, in these two fragments, the strips lie 2/1 in the rows in one direction, and 1/1 along the other. The rest of the plaited twill pieces are 2/2 on both the dextrals and the sinistrals. Variations in plaiting technique are conventionally employed to create patterns or to shape an item (e.g. to tailor the shape of a cloak to the body, or control the finished shape of a basket or kete). There appear to be variations in the Kohika plaiting but they are difficult to detect because of the condition and small size of the fabric fragments. However, there are wear lines on some of the fragments, suggesting folds in the fabric, and others have an edge which may have been created by a break along a wear line during the decay process. Such a folded piece was found by members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society in Square 1. The possible uses of such plaitwork are many (e.g. a kete, cloak or mat) and cannot be ascertained here, but the fineness of the work indicates that they must have been time-consuming to make. The plaited check pieces are wider, and KOH306.1 shows folded-over edges resembling the edge on a rourou (a basket in which food is served). Similarly, one strip is also folded back on the piece shown in Plate 8.5. Such items take only a few minutes for an experienced weaver to make and are often used only once. Plaited items are listed in Tables 8.5 and 8.6.
Kohika fibrework 155 Plate 8.3 KOH304.1. Fine twill close-up, showing condition of fibres.
Plate 8.4 KOH305.1. A larger piece of fine twill, showing the curvature in the plaiting.
Netting (taa kupenga)
One tray of the Kohika collection contains the remains of a small net with braids and grommet or ring (KOH297, and 297A–C; Plates 8.6a and 8.6b, Table 8.7). These items use the same technique of net-making that is described in Buck (1926b), with the direction of netting switching for alternate rows in what Buck calls a ‘boustrophedon manner’ (a row-reversal method that is also used in knitting). Similar netting has also
156 Kohika Plate 8.5 KOH303.4. Broad checked plaiting, showing one folded-back strip (at lower part of image).
Plate 8.6a (bottom left) KOH297. A grommet with netting still attached. Plate 8.6b (bottom right) KOH297. Small fragment of mesh.
Kohika fibrework 157
Table 8.5 Plaited twill with narrow strips
Plate Comments no. Horizontal* rows, 4 strips 2/1 survive; vertical* rows, – 7–8 strips 1/1 survive 301b 2/1? Horizontal rows, 7 strips 2/1 survive; vertical rows, – 4 strips 2/1 survive 303.1–3 2/2 3 fragments around 40 x 120 – 105 x 110 mm – 304.1–8 2/2 fragments around 60 x 120 – 90 x 120 mm 8.3 305.1–3 2/2 3 fragments fine twill 8.4 306.2, 307.1 & 2 2/2 fine twill – *Horizontal and vertical in relation to the writing of the KOH numbers on the card to which the items are attached. Because the pieces are so fragmented, it is not possible to identify sinistrals and dextrals. KOH number 301a
Table 8.6
Type 2/1?
Plaited check with broad strips
KOH number Strip width Type Comments 303.4–5 15–20 1/1 2 fragments of check 306.1 15–20 1/1 Bends on one edge* similar to upper edge of rourou * This edge is the ‘lower’ edge in relation to the card to which the items are attached. Table 8.7
Plate no. 8.5 –
Netting and component parts
KOH number 297
Comments Fragment of mesh with approx. 14 visible mesh diamonds (more bunched up at top) attached to card upside down. Piece is made in boustrophedon manner [297A]* Grommet: a circular loop made out of harakeke (?) strips. The circle is about 30 mm in diameter, and spiral-wrapped with a strip in which a knot is visible [297B]* Braid fragments number B1–B7, and vary from 4 to 11 twists long; all are of same width/thickness, and 3-ply [297C]* Mesh fragments. Most have broken into individual knots, but in top right corner, near braids B6 and B7, a bunch of mesh survives (characteristics: 10 mm gauge, knot size about 10 mm high; mesh direction: boustrophedon. Strip width approx. 7 mm; add-in knots visible in places, next to or incorporated into mesh knots) * The author has assigned the number KOH297 to match the fragment shown in Plate 8.6b.
Plate no. 8.6b
8.6a
– –
been recovered in other archaeological excavations (e.g. McFadgen and Sheppard 1984). The netting was probably shaped into a cone, a shape found in several kinds of net (see Buck 1926b). The grommet is made from strands of harakeke, formed into a tight ring and spiral-wrapped with another strand. This probably held the narrow end of the net in place. Plate 8.6a shows the grommet with a small fragment of netting attached, but this picture was taken before the author had seen the Kohika fibre fragments; the grommet now sits with the netting fragments (here termed 297B and 297C), but with the netting no longer attached to it.
158 Kohika
Table 8.8
Other pieces: fragments whose technique is unclear
KOH number 295 296.1–2 302a, 302b
Table 8.9
BOX Box 1 Box 2 Box 3 Box 4 Box 5 Box 6
Description and comment 1 fibre fragment, technique unclear 2 fibre fragments, technique unclear Two separate fragments, one of which appears to be tied into a loose knot or crushed in a coiled-up position
Contents of boxes (KOH number and technique)
Numbers 298.1–8 340.1–10 300.1–9 301–302 295–297a 300.10–15 297A–C 303–308 299.1–5 340.11–12 341
Contents Cordage (various) Cordage (various) Raranga Cordage (various) Netting with braids and grommet Raranga (1/1, 2/2) 3 x 3-ply braids Cordage (various)
Discussion and conclusions
The Kohika fibre pieces were found in the swamp beside the site, near former houses and pataka and in the same areas as numerous wooden artefacts (G. Irwin, pers. comm. 2002). The cordage remnants (including the braids) consist of short lengths. The longest piece is 380 mm, so we cannot be certain whether they were intended for use as short lengths only, such as handles, or for greater lengths, such as would be used for tying and binding. There is no evidence of fibres emerging at regular intervals from each twist along one side of the braid, as would be the case if these braids had formed the edge or base of a kete-like article. The most unusual cordage in the Kohika collection is the two-ply, spiral-wrapped fragments. These are the only examples of twisted (as opposed to braided) cordage made with unscutched harakeke leaves and distinctive spiral-wrapping that the author has been able to locate. Enquiries to the four main New Zealand museums have yielded no further examples; all other examples of two-ply cordage the author has seen are made from processed muka. Nor has she been able to find a published description of this particular cordage technique. It is not described in Buck (1921, 1926a, 1926b, 1949), Connor (1983) or Crosby (1966). It is possible that this technique was common in the past but of no interest to collectors of the time (Pendergrast, pers. comm. 2002). This kind of cordage was perhaps useful, on the one hand, for making thick, strong rope when the only harakeke cultivars available lacked sufficient muka, or when the muka was particularly difficult to extract, so that unscutched leaf strips had to be used. On the other hand, perhaps it was made for specialised uses and certain conditions, as the waxy cuticle may have given the fibre some protection against the elements. However, if this were the only reason, the author believes, after experimenting with the technique, that three-ply braids would be easier to make. Further experimental research could explore techniques for making the two-ply twist from raw harakeke.
Kohika fibrework 159
It would be easier to make the two-ply using the twist-and-wrap technique with two people, because it takes two hands to maintain one set of bunched strips and wrapping strip, while performing the twisting action with even, correct tension. However, unless further information comes to light, the uses for this technique remain speculative. Table 8.8 lists other miscellaneous fragments of fibre and Table 8.9 shows the location of items by KOH number, as they were packed in boxes for return to Ngati Awa.
References Anderson, A., J. Goulding and M. White, 1991. Bark and fibre artefacts. In A. Anderson and R. McGovern-Wilson (eds), Beech forest hunters: the archaeology of Maori rockshelter sites on Lee Island, Lake Te Anau, in southern New Zealand. New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No.18, pp.43–55. Buck, P.H., 1921. Maori food supplies of Lake Rotorua. Transactions of the New Zealand Institute, 53:433–51. Buck, P.H., 1926a. Maori plaited basketry and plait work: 1, mats, baskets and burdencarriers. Transactions of the New Zealand Institute, 54:705–42. Buck, P.H., 1926b. The Maori craft of netting. Transactions of the New Zealand Institute, 56:597–646. Buck, P.H., 1949. The coming of the Maori. Christchurch: Whitcombe and Tombs. Connor, J., 1983. A descriptive classification of Maori fabrics: cordage, plaiting, windmill knotting, twining, looping and netting. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 92:189–213. Crosby, E.B.V., 1966. Maori fishing gear: a study of the development of Maori fishing gear, particularly in the North Island. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Hopa, N.K., 1971. The art of piupiu making: an instructional manual setting out the materials, design and assembly of the Maori skirt, central item of Maori costume. Wellington: Reed. Lander, M., 1992. Fibre fragments from the Raupa site, Hauraki Plains. Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum, 29:7–23. Lawrence, J., 1989. The archaeology of the Waitakere Ranges. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. McAra, S., 2001. Maori fishing nets in the Canterbury Museum. Records of the Canterbury Museum, 15:83–99. McFadgen, B.G. and R.A. Sheppard, 1984. Ruahihi Pa: a prehistoric defended settlement in the south-western Bay of Plenty. Wellington: National Museum of New Zealand. Pendergrast, M., 1986. Te mahi kete: Maori basketry for beginners. Auckland: Reed. Puketapu-Hetet, 1989. Maori weaving with Erenora Puketapu-Hetet. Auckland: Pitman.
9
Artefacts of bone, tooth, pumice and pounamu G.J. Irwin
The excavations at Kohika and the analysis of its waterlogged remains have established the presence of lakeside households in Area D and the Historical Society (HS) Area. There is evidence for houses, pataka and other more casual buildings, and the associated wooden and fibre artefacts cover the whole spectrum of domestic life. There is also some evidence suggesting a third household in the vicinity of Area B, which was also close to the lake. In contrast, Area A, which is located on the higher and drier part of Kohika, has provided evidence for cooking and for roofed storage pits and bins that could not have been built on low-lying land near the lakeshore without flooding. The main aim of this chapter is to investigate further the developing picture of Kohika by describing the nature and distribution of artefacts of more durable materials, including bone, tooth, greenstone (pounamu) and pumice (Table 9.1). This assemblage, unlike the waterlogged one, is more typical of many dryland sites in being neither large nor remarkable in its composition. However, the artefacts are known to fall within a short interval of time, and comparisons with other sites help to define Maori material culture in the Bay of Plenty as it was not long before the arrival of Europeans.
Pendants Pounamu
There are two greenstone pendants from Kohika and both are similar to examples from Oruarangi illustrated by Furey (1996:39). One is a kuru pendant (Plate 9.1a) and the other a chisel pendant (Plate 9.1b). The latter has a rounded cross-section and a suspension hole drilled at the end opposite the bevel. The edges of an earlier, broken suspension hole can been seen beyond it. This item might have begun its life as a chisel and then become an ornament, or it could have had a dual function. Bone
A fine bone pendant in the style of a tiki is shown in Figure 9.1 and Plate 9.2. The curvature of a human long bone has been used to create the torso, and the genital area conforms to a hei tiki. The head is broken but it retains the bottom of an eye and an open mouth. Tooth
A drilled human incisor is shown in Figure 9.1. Drilled human and dog teeth were commonly seen by Cook and his party in 1769, worn singly or in groups, suspended from an earlobe or sometimes from the neck (Davidson 1984, Furey 1996:47).
160
Artefacts of bone, tooth, pumice and pounamu
Table 9.1
161
Artefacts from Kohika
Artefact type Pendant (kuru) Pendant (chisel) Tiki pendant Tooth pendant Toggle Fishhook Fishhook Fishhook Fishhook blank Fishhook point Needle Needle Awl Awl Awl Chisel Chisel Adze Chisel Adze chip File Pigment bowl Pigment bowl carved Kumara god
Material greenstone greenstone human bone human incisor bird bone human bone human bone human bone human bone dog tooth bird bone dog mandible bird bone seal scapula dog humerus dog tibia dog tibia greenstone greenstone greenstone sandstone pumice pumice pumice
Provenance Square B2, drain spoil Square A1 Ext., Layer B HS Area Square D3, Yellow House HS Area Square D3, Yellow House Square D10, Yellow House Square D13, white pumice Square D3, White House Square B1, pre-flood layer Square B4, brown silt layer Square B4, drain spoil Square D13, white pumice Square B4, brown silt layer Square D5, Yellow House Square B4, brown silt layer Square D6, Yellow House HS Area Square B1, drain spoil Square D6, Yellow House Square B1, drain spoil Square D14, upper black sand HS Area HS Area
Illustration Plate 9.1a Plate 9.1b Plate 9.2, Fig 9.1 Fig. 9.1 Fig. 9.1 Plate 9.3a Plate 9.3b Plate 9.3c Plate 9.4a Plate 9.4b Plate 9.5a Plate 9.5b Plate 9.5c Plate 9.6 Plate 9.6b – – Fig. 9.2, Plate 9.7 Plate 9.8a Plate 9.8b Plate 9.9a – Plate 9.9b Fig. 9.3
Note: M. Taylor identified the bone by species.
Toggles Bone
A toggle made of bone from a mollymawk or albatross is shown in Figure 9.1. One end is notched and the other not, and the toggle is otherwise plain, which is the same as a toggle illustrated from Oruarangi (Furey 1996, Fig. 104). The Kohika example is broken, but the edge of a hole remains that would have held a threaded cord. Toggles can be taken as an indication that breast pendants were present, even when not found (Davidson 1984:87).
Figure 9.1 Bone hei tiki pendant, tooth pendant, bone toggle
162 Plate 9.1a (right) Greenstone kuru pendant. Plate 9.1b (far right) Greenstone chisel pendant.
Plate 9.2 Bone tiki pendant (human).
Kohika
Artefacts of bone, tooth, pumice and pounamu
163
Fishhooks Bone
Three one-piece fishhooks made of human bone are illustrated in Plates 9.3a–c. All three have straight shanks and two have very incurved points, the third being incomplete. Two of the hooks also have a decorative projection for the attachment of bait string. The Kohika fishhooks are of a widespread form and very similar to ones from Kauri Point Pa (Davidson 1984, Fig. 50, pp.67–68), and provide a close date for the use of this type of hook in the Bay of Plenty. Two were associated with the Yellow House horizon in Area D, and the third with a white pumice floor in Square D13 at a level equivalent to the White House. A fishhook blank of human bone, shown in Plate 9.4a, is also from the White House. Tooth
A dog-tooth point of a two-piece fishhook is shown in Plate 9.4b. It is finely shaped and could be an ornament as well.
Plate 9.3a–c One-piece bone fishhooks (human).
Plate 9.4a (far left) Bone fishhook blank (human). Plate 9.4b (left) Fishhook point (dog tooth).
164
Kohika
Needles Bone
One complete bone needle is made of bird bone (Plate 9.5a), while another has no perforation (Plate 9.5b). The latter is shaped from the lower edge of a dog mandible and three of these, minus ventral surfaces, were found in Area B. The unfinished item was ground and polished and, if it was intended as a needle, the eye had not yet been drilled.
Awls/chisels Bone
A hollow-sectioned awl of bird bone is illustrated in Plate 9.5c. Like examples from Oruarangi (Furey 1996, Figs 271 and 272), the shaft of a long bone has been sliced diagonally at one end and sharpened to a point. This item came from Square D13, from a layer similar in age to the White House horizon. Awls made from a seal scapula and a dog humerus are shown in Plates 9.6a and b. Two other chisels, not illustrated, were made from dog tibia. Perhaps surprisingly, no bone tattooing chisels were found at Kohika, but the explanation may lie in the relatively small number of bone tools found in the excavations.
Plate 9.5a (below left) Bone needle (bird). Plate 9.5b (below centre) Bone needle (dog). Plate 9.5c (below right) Bone awl (bird).
Plate 9.6a (right) Bone awl (seal). Plate 9.6b (far right) Bone chisel (dog).
Adzes and chisels
There were hundreds of pieces of worked wood of all kinds among the waterlogged remains, including carvings, and some unfinished items, while a large number of wood chips and shavings indicates considerable woodworking on site. In addition, a wooden adze handle was found along with a chisel handle and a socket, both made to hold small stone heads. Yet only two stone tools are associated with all this activity – one stone adze and one chisel. The situation is a striking reminder of the bias of archaeological sampling. We can assume that the people of Kohika owned other stone tools and, conversely, we have an insight into the wooden artefacts and manufacturing waste that must have disappeared from dryland sites where adzes have been found.
Artefacts of bone, tooth, pumice and pounamu
165
Pounamu
A greenstone adze of Duff-type 2B form is illustrated in Figure 9.2 and Plate 9.7. It has a wide blade, a width greater than twice its length, a defined bevel chin and a quadrangular cross-section with the front slightly wider than the back. There is a scarfing groove on the back. Such an adze would have been suitable for dressing timber, and there is abundant evidence for this in the site. A finely made, quadrangular crosssectioned miniature greenstone chisel, only 12 mm long, is shown in Plate 9.8a. It seems likely that such a tool was used for fine work, including carving, with the haft tapped with a wooden mallet. Finally, among the artefacts of greenstone, there was a chip from the corner of an adze (Plate 9.8b). Figure 9.2 Pounamu adze
Plate 9.7 Pounamu adze.
166
Kohika
Plate 9.8a (right) Pounamu chisel. Plate 9.8b (far right) Pounamu adze flake.
Plate 9.9a Sandstone file. Plate 9.9b Pumice pigment bowl.
Stone file
A small sandstone file with an oval cross-section and flattened abrading surfaces is shown in Plate 9.9a. J. Davidson (pers. comm. 2002) notes that it is interesting that only one stone file was found, which suggests that they were used here, as often assumed for earlier sites, for working bone rather than wood.
Pumice containers
There were two small bowls of a kind often called pigment pots (Furey 1996:42), and the broken one illustrated in Plate 9.9b has a stylised face on the back.
Pumice figure
A remarkable carved pumice figure of a kind commonly called a kumara god is shown in Figure 9.3.
Distribution of the artefacts and implications for functional areas
The artefacts described in this chapter were generally associated with houses, but none was found in Area A, which was used for pit storage and then cooking during the
Artefacts of bone, tooth, pumice and pounamu
167
occupation. The greenstone pendant of chisel form in Square A1 Ext., Layer B (Table 9.1) came from one of two late burials which date from after the village was abandoned. Nor was any artefact found in Area C, which lay partly in swamp beyond the perimeter of the site and partly in a cooking area. The absence of artefacts adds weight to the view that people did not reside in these areas. By contrast, Area D has striking evidence for buildings and a wide range of other evidence. All three one-piece fishhooks came from here, plus the fishhook blank. There was also a bird-bone awl, dog-bone awl and chisel, pumice pigment bowl, drilled human-tooth pendant and chip from a greenstone adze (Table 9.1). These artefacts are consistent with people living in this part of the site. In the vicinity of the carved house in the HS Area was a tiki pendant of human bone, a bird-bone toggle, a pumice kumara god, a pumice bowl and a greenstone adze. These items are consistent with the presence of a high-status household. The situation in Area B is not so clear. There were wooden timbers from at least one surface building, and three substantial posts standing in B1 (Fig. 4.4) probably supported a raised storehouse. It is likely that a house was nearby, but the area of archaeological excavation was too small to find it. Some valuable items were thrown out with the spoil from the agricultural drain, and these included two wooden hair combs, found by members of the Historical Society. Others found later by the university were a greenstone chisel (Square B1), greenstone pendant (Square B2) and dogjaw needle (Square B4). These all indicate rich deposits where the agricultural drain skirted the palisade. The excavation of undisturbed deposits yielded numerous bone artefacts, including a dog-tooth fishhook point, dog-bone chisel, bird-bone needle and seal-bone awl, together with a sandstone file that would have been suitable for bone working (Table 9.1). In addition, three dog mandibles with detached ventral margin were recovered. The pattern of evidence is consistent with another lakeside household in Area B that was only partly excavated.
References Davidson, J.M., 1984. The prehistory of New Zealand. Auckland: Longman Paul. Furey, L., 1996. Oruarangi: the archaeology and material culture of a Hauraki pa. Bulletin of the Auckland Institute and Museum No.17.
Figure 9.3 Pumice kumara god
10 Sources of the Kohika obsidian artefacts P.R. Moore
The analysis of obsidian artefacts can provide useful information about trade networks and wider cultural relationships by establishing where the obsidian came from. Generally, in the past, chemical analyses have been used to determine the original geological sources. An alternative method was developed by Moore (1988), in which a range of physical characteristics, such as colour, translucency and flow banding, could identify likely sources. However, this has rarely been applied to large assemblages. In this study, both physical characteristics and chemical (X-ray fluorescence or XRF) analyses were used to establish the sources of the Kohika obsidian artefacts.
Methods
The excavations at Kohika produced over 2400 obsidian flakes, tools and cores with a maximum dimension greater than 10 mm, and a further 1040 smaller pieces of shatter. First, the entire obsidian assemblage was separated into two groups, ‘green’ and ‘grey’, based on their colour in transmitted light. Only two or three pieces could not be readily placed into either group on this basis, and these were later examined more closely. The grey obsidian could be further subdivided into: pebbles and part-pebbles with smooth water-worn cortex, and flakes with similar cortex; and flakes generally lacking water-worn cortex. Other characteristics such as translucency, flow banding and lustre were then considered, which resulted in some flakes in the second group, lacking cortex, being transferred to the first group. The general characteristics of the obsidian in these two groups – here referred to as the ‘pebble-type grey’ and ‘other grey’ – were then documented. All the obsidian of both grey types was weighed and pebbles were also measured. Potential sources of the two groups of grey obsidian were considered by reference to the descriptions of geological sources given by Moore (1988), and direct comparisons were then made between pieces from each Kohika group and reference samples from various geological sources, to determine similarities and differences in physical characteristics. This procedure resulted in the identification of the most likely sources. Lastly, nine samples were selected for chemical (XRF) analysis, to test the reliability of source indications from physical characteristics.
Physical characteristics Green obsidian
The bulk of the Kohika obsidian assemblage consists of flakes, pieces and cores that have a distinctive olive-green colour in transmitted light, and only one flake (1040), 168
Sources of the Kohika obsidian artefacts
169
grey in colour and greenish-grey in transmitted light, could not be confidently assigned to this group. There is little doubt that all of the green obsidian originated from Mayor Island. Although this very large assemblage was not examined in detail during the sourcing study, it is evident from the types of cortex present on some pieces that the obsidian was obtained from several different localities on Mayor Island. At least eight of the flakes had been removed from water-rolled cobbles or boulders, probably collected from a beach environment. Several other pieces contained portions of rough, but not water-worn cortex, and could have come from colluvial deposits. The majority of flakes, however, lacked cortex and some of these may have been struck from blocks obtained from obsidian quarries on the island. ‘Pebble-type grey’
Thirty-five pieces of obsidian with smooth, water-worn cortex were identified in the collection. This included three almost complete pebbles, thirteen part or broken pebbles (many representing cores), and nineteen flakes with a small portion of cortex remaining. In addition, a further eight flakes, mostly lacking cortex but otherwise having similar characteristics to the above, were assigned to this group, making a total of 43. The ‘pebble-type grey’ obsidian is mostly greyish-black to black in colour, but some is medium to dark grey (Rock Colour Chart). In transmitted light the colour is a slightly different shade of grey from that seen in the ‘other grey’ group. However, the main factor that distinguishes the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian (apart from cortex) is its generally poor translucency. Many pieces also show weak flow banding, which is commonly vague or wispy. Only a few pieces show strong flow banding, and some are slightly colour-banded. Spherulites are generally rare – only about 20 per cent of the assemblage contains spherulites – although they are common in some individual pieces. Crystal inclusions (phenocrysts) are also rare, and usually very small. Vesicles (gas bubbles) were identified in two pebbles. One other feature of note is the streaky appearance of some material, which results in the obsidian having a dull or less vitreous lustre. Abundant microscopic gas bubbles are the probable cause. ‘Other grey’
This grouping consisted of 42 flakes without cortex, or with only a small portion of cortex. In general this cortex is very smooth and differs from that of the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian. It may have been produced by slight weathering of natural fracture faces (at the source) rather than by water rolling, although at least four flakes were clearly derived from water-worn pebbles or cobbles. About 25 per cent of the flakes have some cortex present. Most of the obsidian is black in reflected light, but some is greyish-black and one flake is dark grey in colour. A distinctive feature of the assemblage is that the majority of flakes have moderate to good translucency, with perhaps fewer than 20 per cent having poor translucency. Many also have a smoky tinge in transmitted light. The majority of flakes show weak flow banding which, in some cases, is vague or wispy. Strong flow banding is evident in only one flake and colour banding is very rare. Spherulites are present in about 30 per cent of flakes and are common in some. Crystal inclusions are rare. In contrast to the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian, flakes in this assemblage tend to have a more vitreous lustre, although a few show a slight streakiness (as described above). This obsidian, therefore, is of better quality overall.
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Potential sources
There are about twenty known obsidian sources, or source areas, in New Zealand, of which at least seventeen consist of grey obsidian (Moore 1988). The Kohika grey obsidian could, potentially, have come from almost any of these sources, although many can be ruled out on the basis of one or more criteria. ‘Pebble-type grey’
It is evident that the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian came from a source that consisted primarily of rounded to well-rounded, water-worn pebbles. Such pebbles are likely to be found only on beaches (coastal or lake) or in rivers, where rounding occurred either over a considerable period of time or as a result of rapid transportation by water over a considerable distance. The size and shape of the pebbles may provide a clue as to the type of environment they came from, and this is considered now. One possibility is that the pebbles were obtained from the Tarawera River, which flows past Kohika. Fluvial gravel deposits exposed along the river upstream from Kawerau contain common obsidian pebbles, but these are predominantly sub-angular to sub-rounded and not well-rounded like many of the Kohika pebbles. Virtually all of the Tarawera River obsidian is also perlitic and not of flake quality, and differs in many other respects from the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian. For example, it contains abundant crystal inclusions and lacks flow banding. No obsidian pebbles were found at the mouth of the Tarawera River, or on the beach at Matata just to the north. An alternative source for the pebbles is Maketu, which lies about 35 kilometres northwest of the Kohika site. There, all of the obsidian is in the form of pebbles, some of which are well-rounded. Useful comparisons can therefore be made in terms of the size and shape of the pebbles. Although adequate measurements could be obtained for only five Kohika pebbles and part-pebbles, these are clearly small to medium-sized, with the largest being close to the upper size limit for pebbles (Fig. 10.1). Most are also slightly elongated. However, the shape of the pebbles can be better expressed by calculating their sphericity, which ranges from about 0.7 to 0.8, with a mean of 0.78 (Table 10.1). A sphere has a sphericity of 1. The size range of twelve rounded to well-rounded pebbles from Maketu is very similar to that of the Kohika pebbles and most of them also show only slight elongation (Fig. 10.1). Their sphericity ranges from 0.69 to 0.82 with a mean of 0.74, which is almost identical to the mean value obtained for the five Kohika pebbles. Two well-rounded obsidian pebbles collected from the ocean beach at Otamarakau, which lies between Kohika and Maketu, were also included for comparison (Fig. 10.1). These are both relatively flat in shape and have sphericities of 0.75 and 0.66 respectively. Other characteristics of the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian closely match those of the Maketu material, particularly the poor translucency, flow banding (and minor colour banding), and proportion of spherulites. Of the twelve measured pebbles from Maketu, only two (17 per cent) contain spherulites, which is very similar to the proportion (about 20 per cent) for the entire assemblage of ‘pebble-type’ obsidian. The Kohika obsidian also shows a superficial resemblance to some of the Waihi material, notably in flow banding and the poor translucency, although there is a slight but distinct difference in colour in transmitted light. ‘Other grey’
The main features that distinguish this group are the moderate to good translucency and smoky tinge in transmitted light, weak flow banding and very vitreous lustre.
Sources of the Kohika obsidian artefacts
171
Table 10.1 Size, roundness and sphericity of Kohika obsidian pebbles
Number 1525 1529 1683 2434 3202–5
Roundness# Well-rounded Rounded Well-rounded Rounded Well-rounded?
Length (cm) 3.3 2.7 2.8 4.2 6.3
Width (cm) 3.0 2.5 2.3 4.2 5.5
Thickness (cm) 1.9 1.4 1.7 (min.) 2.3 2.4
Sphericity* 0.81 0.78 0.79 0.82 0.69
# Based on standard roundness scale. * Sphericity = 3冪 LWT/L3.
7 Cobble Kohika Maketu
6
Otamarakau
Length (cm)
5
4 Pebble 3
2
1 Granule 0 0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Width (cm)
Based on these criteria alone, potential sources would include Otoroa (Northland), Fanal Island, Te Ahumata (Great Barrier), Cooks Beach, Hahei, Whangamata, Whakarewarewa, Whakamaru and Ben Lomond (Moore 1988). Some of these sources, however, can virtually be eliminated on other criteria: Otoroa and Fanal (abundant crystal inclusions, no spherulites), Whakamaru (common to abundant crystal inclusions, poor fracture) and Whakarewarewa (poor fracture). The type of cortex present on some of the flakes also does not match that seen on most material from Cooks Beach, Hahei or Whangamata deposits. That effectively leaves Te Ahumata (Great Barrier) and Ben Lomond (Taupo) as the most likely sources. Typical Te Ahumata obsidian has moderate to good translucency and a slight smoky tinge, very vitreous lustre and shows weak flow banding. Spherulites are generally sparse (although common in some pieces), and crystal inclusions are rare. Overall,
Figure 10.1 Dimensions of obsidian pebbles from Kohika, Maketu and Otamarakau
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Kohika
there would appear to be a good match, although the type of cortex on Te Ahumata material (finely to coarsely pitted) is not the same as that seen on the Kohika flakes. Direct comparison of the ‘other grey’ flakes with source material from Ben Lomond revealed that many have very strong similarities in translucency, the proportion of spherulites and phenocrysts, and flow banding. Ben Lomond obsidian also has a smoky tinge in transmitted light. It seems very likely, therefore, that the bulk of this obsidian originated from Ben Lomond, although a few flakes – notably those with remnants of water-worn cortex – may have been derived from another source.
Chemical analyses Sample selection
The selection of samples for XRF was largely dictated by the amount of material (minimum 10 g) required for analysis. This meant that for the ‘pebble-type’ group only four pebbles or part-pebbles were of suitable size, and for the ‘other grey’ group only five larger flakes could be used. Fortunately, the latter were either from different parts of the site or from different squares, thus reducing the risk that they had come from the same core, although this cannot be entirely ruled out. The selected samples showed some variation in physical characteristics. Of the four from the ‘pebble-type’ group, two were black, one greyish-black and one medium to dark grey in colour. Flow banding varied from weak to strong and three of the pebbles showed slight colour banding. Of the five ‘other grey’ flakes, four were black and one (3201) greyish-black in colour. All showed weak flow banding and had moderate or poor translucency, and one (2281) contained common spherulites. Three flakes had remnants of cortex, and two of them (2281, 3201) were probably derived from waterworn cobbles. Analytical data
XRF analyses of the nine Kohika samples and one obsidian pebble from Maketu (MK1A), were carried out by J. Wilmshurst of the Geology Department, University of Auckland in 2002. The results are provided in Table 10.2. (Values for Sc, V, Cr, Ni and Cu were mostly at, or below, the limit of determination, and have been excluded from the table.) Plots of selected trace elements are presented in Figures 10.2 and 10.3. From Table 10.2 it is evident that all the ‘pebble-type’ samples have a very similar composition, with only minor variation in the values for most elements. Flakes from the ‘other grey’ group also have a remarkably similar composition, although the Ba concentration for 3201 is unusually high. There are, however, significant differences between the two groups for most major elements and some trace elements (notably Rb and Zr), and there is little doubt that they were derived from different sources. Sources
The ‘pebble-type’ samples from Kohika have an almost identical composition to the pebble from Maketu (MK1A). They also have very similar values to an earlier ‘bulk’ analysis of Maketu obsidian (MK-1) obtained in 1987, which represents the approximate average composition (Moore, unpublished data). The close similarity of the ‘pebble-type’ analyses to those of Maketu obsidian is clearly illustrated in Figures 10.2 and 10.3. The ‘other grey’ samples have a very similar composition to obsidian from the Ben Lomond (Taupo) source, with almost identical values for many trace elements, particularly Rb, Sr, Y and Zr (Figs 10.2 and 10.3). Minor differences in some major
Sources of the Kohika obsidian artefacts
XRF analyses of obsidian samples from Kohika and Maketu
Table 10.2
Pebble type Maketu Number wt (%) 1525 1529 1683 2434 MK1A 1429 SiO2 76.58 76.77 76.69 76.72 76.74 77.09 TiO2 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.18 Al2O3 12.76 12.67 12.75 12.74 12.69 12.42 Fe2O3 1.42 1.38 1.38 1.38 1.38 1.41 MnO 0.05 0.04 0.04 0.05 0.04 0.05 MgO 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 CaO 0.97 0.95 0.95 0.95 0.95 1.12 Na2O 3.91 3.79 3.83 3.82 3.83 4.06 K2O 4.1 4.18 4.14 4.14 4.16 3.44 P2O5 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 (H2O) 0.03 0.07 0.05 0.01 0.02 0.05 (LOI) 0.79 0.55 0.68 0.48 0.41 0.31 (Total) 99.83 99.68 99.66 99.88 99.81 99.84 ppm Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Ba La Ce Pb Th Zn Ga
173
142 81 29 113 9 767 26 50 19 16 38 14
142 80 28 111 9 751 29 52 20 17 32 15
143 80 29 112 9 749 24 54 20 13 33 14
144 82 29 115 9 751 26 50 20 16 36 15
144 81 29 116 9 759 26 44 19 14 35 14
Other grey 1834 2281 77.09 77.01 0.18 0.18 12.42 12.47 1.41 1.42 0.05 0.04 0.2 0.2 1.12 1.12 4.05 4.05 3.44 3.49 0.02 0.02 0.05 0.04 0.34 0.24 99.88 100.03
120 87 24 157 7 676 22 36 25 10 31 14
122 87 25 158 7 681 23 31 36 11 30 14
124 86 24 158 7 689 25 34 16 13 32 13
2812 77.04 0.18 12.46 1.4 0.04 0.19 1.11 4.07 3.48 0.02 0.05 0.3 99.63
3201 77.04 0.18 12.45 1.42 0.05 0.19 1.12 4.1 3.46 0.02 0.03 0.23 99.79
122 86 24 155 6 680 23 43 16 13 28 13
123 87 25 160 7 1141 24 52 14 11 32 13
LOD* (ppm) 177 26 116 14 8 61 42 73 14 16
3 2 2 2 2 16 10 26 6 4 4 4
* LOD = Limit of determination Figure 10.2 Rb-Sr plots for analysed obsidian artefacts from Kohika (solid symbols) and source samples from Maketu and Taupo
Rb-Sr 150 Pebble type Maketu 140
Rb (ppm)
Other grey Taupo 130
120
110 50
60
70
80
90
100
Sr (ppm) Note: Data from Table 10.2 and Moore (1988, unpublished report).
174
Zr-Rb 170
150
Zr (ppm)
Figure 10.3 Zr-Rb plots for analysed obsidian artefacts from Kohika (solid symbols) and source samples from Maketu and Taupo
Kohika
130 Pebble type 110
Maketu Other grey
90 110
120
130
140
150
Rb (ppm)
element concentrations (notably Mg and Fe, and also Ba) may be due partly to the fact that the Taupo sample was analysed on a different XRF machine, in 1987 (Moore, unpublished data). Although the Ba, and possibly Ce, values for sample 3201 appear anomalously high, these may still lie within the compositional range of the Taupo obsidian; most other element concentrations are very similar to those of the other flakes and source sample. This flake had a slightly different colour and partly waterworn cortex, which could indicate that it came from a different deposit within the source area. Comparisons with compositional plots for all the Coromandel Peninsula sources revealed that, while the Kohika samples had similar values for certain elements, there were significant differences in many others. For example, the Rb/Sr ratios of the ‘other grey’ flakes are similar to those of Cooks Beach and Tairua obsidian, but the Zr/Rb ratios are very different. Waihi can certainly be excluded as a source for the ‘pebbletype’ obsidian on the basis of Rb/Sr ratios alone. Te Ahumata can probably also be ruled out as a source for the ‘other grey’ flakes based on the PIXE data provided by Neve et al. (1994), which indicates that Te Ahumata obsidian has significantly different values for Rb, Sr and Zr. However, other central North Island sources cannot be entirely excluded since the compositional data available for those sources are at present very limited. It is possible, therefore, that, while the bulk of the ‘other grey’ obsidian was almost certainly derived from the Taupo source, a small proportion of the flakes in this group could have been obtained from other sources.
Proportions of obsidian
The relative proportions of the different obsidians may reflect their desirability and availability. Mayor Island was the major source and the two grey obsidians were of minor significance. Maketu lies on the way to Mayor Island, so the appearance of obsidian from there may be no surprise and its low frequency a measure of its perceived value. The presence of Taupo obsidian is more interesting, because it shows longer-
Sources of the Kohika obsidian artefacts
175 Figure 10.4 Relative proportions of ‘grey pebbletype’ and ‘other grey’ obsidian from Kohika
100
Relative Proportion (percent)
90 80
Pebble type Other grey
70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Total weight
Flakes only (weight)
Total number of flakes
distance contact and the possibility of political relations between the central North Island and the Bay of Plenty coast in late prehistory. Little can be said about the relative proportions of the two grey obsidians because the samples are so small, and what has been found may not be representative of the site as a whole. Certainly, the quantity of grey obsidian in Areas A, B and D is variable, as shown by S. Holdaway (in Chapter 11). The total weight of grey obsidian recovered from the site is only about 425 g. The ‘pebble-type’ constitutes approximately 250 g (60 per cent) of this, which would be equivalent to perhaps ten or twelve average-sized pebbles (Fig. 10.4). All of the 175 g of ‘other grey’ flakes could have been produced from the equivalent of just one handsized piece, although the variation in physical characteristics demonstrates that the flakes came from several different cores. Considering only the flakes, Figure 10.4 shows the relative proportions of each grey obsidian group by both weight and number. One could conclude that relatively fewer and smaller flakes were produced from the Maketu pebbles. In contrast, the higher-quality Taupo obsidian yielded a very high proportion of flakes and there were no cores (see Chapter 11).
Conclusions
Analysis of the large obsidian artefact assemblage recovered from Kohika has shown that, while the bulk of the obsidian undoubtedly originated from Mayor Island, a very small proportion – all grey in transmitted light – was obtained from other sources. Two different groups of grey obsidian were identified on the basis of various physical characteristics. One, ‘pebble-type’, was derived from water-worn pebbles and characterised in particular by poor translucency; the other, ‘other grey’, was distinguished
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mainly by the lack of water-worn cortex and predominantly moderate to good translucency. Consideration of the range of physical characteristics and direct comparisons with reference samples from potential sources suggested that the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian was probably derived from Maketu, 35 kilometres to the northeast. This was supported by comparison of the size and shape (sphericity) of pebbles from Kohika and Maketu. Physical characteristics of the ‘other grey’ obsidian suggested that it was obtained largely from either Te Ahumata (Great Barrier Island) or Ben Lomond (Taupo). Chemical (XRF) analyses of nine samples clearly demonstrated that the ‘pebbletype’ and ‘other grey’ groups had very different compositions and were therefore derived from different sources. Comparisons with analyses of source samples showed that the ‘pebble-type’ obsidian was obtained from Maketu, while the bulk (and possibly all) of the ‘other grey’ obsidian came from the Taupo (Ben Lomond) source. This provides the first definite evidence for prehistoric exploitation of the Maketu source. One might suggest (very tentatively on present data) that slightly more ‘pebbletype’ was present at Kohika but fewer flakes were produced from it, which reflects the difficulty in flaking well-rounded pebbles. Also, although the ‘other grey’ (Taupo) obsidian was of better quality and easier to work, it was obtained less often than the Maketu pebbles. Maketu, of course, is on the coast between Kohika and Mayor Island, from where the overwhelming bulk of the Kohika obsidian came.
References Moore, P.R., 1988. Physical characteristics of New Zealand obsidians and their use in archaeological sourcing studies. Unpublished report. Neve, S.R., P.H. Barker, S. Holroyd and P.J. Sheppard, 1994. Obsidian sourcing by PIXE analysis at AURA 2. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 26:93–121
11 The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution S.J. Holdaway
The excavations at Kohika produced over 2400 obsidian flakes, tools and cores with a maximum dimension greater than 10 mm, and a further 1040 smaller pieces of shatter. Although not the largest assemblage of obsidian artefacts excavated from a New Zealand site, it is certainly one of the more numerous and therefore has the potential to add to our understanding of how obsidian was processed in the past. This chapter presents the results of a study of the morphology of the artefacts. The attribution of the obsidian to geological sources was described by P. Moore in Chapter 10, and the results used to separate artefacts derived from different sources in the analyses presented below. The aim of this chapter is to develop an understanding of the way obsidian was used as a resource at Kohika at three levels: first, at the level of the artisans who worked the stone into usable flakes; second, in terms of the various activities undertaken in different areas of the site; and, third, in relation to other sites in New Zealand with obsidian assemblages. From a theoretical perspective, it is useful to consider the economics of procuring obsidian, its use and abandonment. Like other technologies, the way stone artefact production and use was organised in prehistoric Maori society reflects the overall economic system. For instance, a relationship exists between the time invested in stone artefact production, the complexity of stone artefact technology and the permanency of settlement (e.g. Parry and Kelley 1987). Torrence (1992) argues that there is a close relationship between the design of stone artefacts and the amount of time available to modify the artefact during use. Among some hunter-gatherers the opportunities to capture prey are limited. Artefact maintenance will therefore be scheduled, and the artefacts themselves may be designed to minimise the chance of failure through careful design. Among horticulturalists, on the other hand, the stress associated with food acquisition is different. It may be more important to invest time in ensuring a ready supply of raw material by stockpiling flakes or cores than in the over-design of particular artefacts. Archaeologists sometimes use the term curated to describe artefact technologies where the design of items is emphasised, and expedient to describe instances where the need to have material on hand to work is given more weight. Kohika would seem an ideal location from which to investigate an expedient technology, since there can be little doubt that the economy of the people who occupied the site included horticulture and the obsidian was definitely imported into the site. The significance of this observation is considered at the end of the chapter. The methods of excavation are relevant. As described elsewhere, two phases of excavation occurred at Kohika. The lithic assemblage obtained by the Whakatane and District Historical Society is dominated by large flakes, while the assemblage produced by the university excavation is more numerous and has much higher proportions of small flakes and flake fragments. Some of the difference results from the different 177
178
Kohika
excavation methods used, meaning that comparisons between the two assemblages must be made with caution. While there were genuinely more large obsidian artefacts in the HS Area, the absence of smaller pieces in this assemblage reflects the excavation method employed. Obsidian is a hard yet brittle material and extremely prone to damage after it is discarded, and a large proportion of the artefacts from both assemblages is broken. While much of the breakage probably occurred at the time of deposition, some of the damage, particularly from the society’s assemblage, occurred afterwards (e.g. Kamminga 1982:10). More care was given to the artefacts recovered from the university excavation. Although artefacts were stored together in the same bag, individual pieces were frequently wrapped in paper to prevent damage. As will be demonstrated below, there is good evidence that some of the edge damage is a product of tool function in prehistory rather than post-excavation modification. However, the level of damage for the society’s assemblage is considerably higher than for the university’s assemblage. Many of the flake edges on pieces from the society’s assemblage have been chipped, no doubt as a result of friction during storage.
Analytical approaches
The methods adopted to study a collection of stone artefacts depend very much on the nature of the research questions. It is perhaps easiest to visualise these questions in terms of a series of different levels of behaviour by the people who lived at Kohika. At the narrowest level, the assemblage may be studied from the viewpoint of the artisans faced with working blocks of obsidian into useful products. Given the density of occupation at the site, it is unlikely that the work of any individual will be identifiable, but trends in the way blocks of stone were worked can be investigated in the assemblage as a whole. These trends allow the identification of the general reduction sequence – that is, the way blocks of obsidian were worked to form useful products. At a wider level, the ways blocks of stone were worked or used at separate locations in the site may be investigated, and these patterns correlated with those identified from the study of other types of evidence. At a still broader level, consideration can be given to how, and from where, the obsidian was obtained, and to the form of the block that was brought to the site. Finally, comparisons can be drawn between the Kohika obsidian artefacts and those found in other sites in New Zealand. Different types of information are relevant to each level. Minimally, each artefact may be placed in a group depending on whether it is complete or broken, whether it has evidence of macroscopic retouch, and whether it is a flake (i.e. with both an exterior and interior surface, as shown in Figure 11.1) or a core (with only exterior surfaces). Occasionally a flake was used as a core, with a number of negative flake scars covering the flake interior surface. Such pieces are grouped with the cores for the purposes of this study. Complete flakes have both a striking platform and a flake termination. Broken flakes represent the proximal, medial or distal fragments of a flake defined on the position of the break (either proximal, distal or both), and the presence of a striking platform or distal termination. Tools are identified by the presence of small flake scars concentrated along an edge, and are divided into complete and broken fragments using the same criteria as flakes. Cores are defined as either complete or broken, depending on the presence of a snap. For each artefact two further sets of variables are recorded. The first set records aspects of morphology that give insights into the way the artefacts were produced from a block of stone, and in the way pieces were modified as a result of use. The
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 179 Figure 11.1 Terms used to describe flake fragments. Proximal flakes include a platform, distal flakes have a termination, and medial flakes lack a platform or a termination
Figure 11.2 Flakes with different exterior scar patterns. The identification numbers are given in brackets: a (1703), b (1637), uni-directional; c (1907), d (1735), bi-directional; e (1893), subradial; f (1688), radial
pattern of scars on the exterior surface of the artefact indicates the way flakes were removed from a core (Fig. 11.2). Scars that all originate from one direction or two opposed directions suggest that the core was worked by striking flakes from one platform or two opposed platforms. These are termed uni-directional and bi-directional patterns respectively. Flake scars that come from directions at right angles to each other, or from three or more directions, suggest that cores were worked from a number of platforms by turning the core. The first group is called sub-radial and the second radial. Scar direction can be assessed by orientating the flake relative to the platform (Fig. 11.3), and defining four arbitrary directions. Scar direction is then determined in terms of flake scars originating from one of the four quadrants. In the case of broken
180 Figure 11.3 Quadrants for assessing scar orientation. The flake is orientated with the platform at quadrant 1 (the figure is based on artefact 161)
Figure 11.4 Typology for edge modification: a (2617), b (2163), bifacial; c (2128), heavy; d (1145), e (1687), f (2175), g (1850), light; h (2490), i and j (1822), k (1635), notch
Kohika
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 181
fragments that lack a platform (medial and distal pieces), exterior scar direction can be assessed only when the orientation of the piece can be reconstructed on the basis of ripple marks on the interior surface. In many cases this is not possible, so exterior scar morphology cannot be recorded. Other variables that may be used to reconstruct the core reduction sequence include the proportion of cortex on the flake. Clearly, flakes with a high proportion of cortex were removed when the block was first worked. The proportion of cortical to non-cortical flakes gives an impression of the size of the obsidian block, since larger blocks will produce proportionally fewer cortical flakes. For the pieces with macroscopic, or secondary, flake removals along one or more flake edges, additional variables are used to describe the location and form of the modification. For the Kohika assemblage, a simple typology was developed based on the slope and invasiveness (how far it extends across the body of the tool blank) of the edge modification (Fig. 11.4). A flake edge is modified by three processes. First, edges may be modified to produce a tool of a particular shape. There are suggestions, for instance, that tanged flakes found in New Zealand sites were modified by retouch to form types similar to the Easter Island mataa (Jones 1981). Second, cutting or scraping a flake of obsidian across a hard surface, thereby removing miniature chips, may modify the edge. Third, a flake edge may be modified to change the characteristics of the edge itself. This may involve blunting a naturally sharp edge, or perhaps resharpening an edge that has become clogged with material through use. While it may appear conceptually easy to differentiate tools produced by these three processes, in practice this is not the case (e.g. Jones 1972, Kamminga 1982:8, Leach 1979). Differentiating tools that were deliberately shaped through edge modification is generally achieved by comparing tools of similar morphology among many sites. The problem is that stone tools can also achieve a uniform shape through processes like resharpening and even consistent use. None of the obsidian tools found at Kohika has traces of extensive edge modification, so it would be difficult to argue that they were being deliberately shaped into a particular form. But regularities in both the invasiveness of the edge modification and its shape do exist on tools from the assemblage (see below). Previous studies of New Zealand obsidian assemblages have related patterns based on more or less invasive modification to different functions, although no one-to-one correlation between form and function has been found (e.g. Fredericksen 1987, Leach 1979, Morwood 1974). The general consensus seems to be that steeper, more invasive retouch results from scraping, particularly of wood, while less invasive retouch is associated with lighter scraping and cutting. As Fredericksen (1987) comments, a wide range of scraping and cutting functions for shell tools is documented in the ethnographic literature (see Harsant 1983 for a review). It is likely that stone was used for a similar range of functions, so it should not be expected that a simple relationship existed between tool form and function. In this study the patterns of edge modification found within the assemblages were used to develop a morphological typology for the Kohika tools. Whether these types are the result of deliberate shaping of an edge or of tool use is difficult to say and, in terms of the analysis presented here, may not be particularly important. Some of the obsidian brought into Kohika was used in ways that resulted in edge modification. Investigating how edge-modified artefacts vary in relation to the rest of the Kohika collection allows behavioural inferences to be drawn at each of the levels discussed above. What is of interest is how blocks of obsidian brought to Kohika were worked into products that were subsequently used and abandoned. In addition to a set of variables that describe the morphology of the flakes, a second
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Kohika
set of variables is used to measure flake size. The conventions for recording the basic dimensions (length, width and thickness) for complete pieces are displayed in Figure 11.5. For broken pieces, these attributes are replaced by maximum length, the maximum dimension of the piece irrespective of the orientation. Likewise, for cores a maximum dimension is taken together with the length of the longest flake scar. These measures of flake size are combined with the attributes that describe flake morphology in the analyses presented below. As these progress from the narrowest to the broadest level of behavioural information, additional data concerning the spatial distribution of artefacts are introduced. In most cases, groups of artefacts defined on the basis of shared similarities in morphological attributes (the independent variables) are compared on the basis of measures of flake size (the dependent variables). Statistical tests (mainly t-tests, analysis of variance [ANOVA] and chi-square) are used to establish whether an inter-group distinction is significant. Most of the obsidian is sourced to Mayor Island, with a distinctive green colour in transmitted light. Most of the analyses presented below are limited to the material from this source. Moore (Chapter 10) also identified two groups of grey obsidian, one coming from the Maketu source and the other from Taupo. Less than 100 artefacts are from these sources and they have been excluded from most of the technological analyses. However, they are considered at the end of the chapter when raw material provisioning at Kohika is discussed. In summary, the analytical tests presented below are aimed at demonstrating the way the prehistoric inhabitants of Kohika exploited obsidian at three behavioural levels. To do this, two broad classes of attributes are recorded for each artefact. First, observations are made that relate to the technology of flake production and to modification of the artefact through use. A second set of attributes is taken as a measure of artefact size. Groups of artefacts combined on the basis of similarities in technological variables are then compared on the basis of artefact dimensions.
Core reduction sequence Complete flakes and cores
To begin at the narrowest behavioural level, the way the obsidian blocks were flaked at the site is investigated. As discussed above, the exterior scar morphology of each piece preserves a record of the flakes that were removed at an earlier stage in the reduction process. Flakes can be broken into groups based on their exterior scar patterns and comparisons made between groups in terms of their mean dimensions. Flakes with the same exterior scar pattern, which are on average larger than those belonging to other groups, were probably produced at an earlier stage in the core reduction sequence, while smaller flakes are likely to have been produced when the core was nearing exhaustion. Thus, a general idea of the core reduction strategy can be achieved simply by comparing the size of flakes with different scar patterns. Table 11.1 presents the results of a comparison of flake length, width and thickness for non-retouched flakes from Kohika according to exterior scar direction. Dividing the flakes into four groups, those with uni-directional, bi-directional, radial and subradial patterns, produces significant results. Radial flakes are the largest, followed by bi-directional and sub-radial flakes, with those having uni-directional flake scars being the smallest. This suggests that cores were rotated frequently during the first stages of reduction, leading to the production of radial flakes. As the cores became smaller, fewer platforms were worked, producing flakes with sub-radial and bidirectional patterns. Finally, flakes were removed from platforms in such a way that
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 183
Table 11.1
Complete flake mean dimensions (and standard deviation) by exterior scar direction for all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian
Radial N=21 Bi-directional, N=26 Sub-radial N=113 Uni-directional N=257
Length 32.5 (12.4) 29.2 (10.8) 27.3 (10.8) 24.1 (9.2)
Width 26.2 (9.9) 19.1 (6.4) 19.6 (7.4) 17.8 (6.9)
Thickness 7.8 (3.6) 6.0 (2.9) 5.8 (3.1) 4.4 (2.3)
Length F=6.5, df 3,413, p<0.001 Width F=9.5, df 3,413, p<0.001 Thickness F=17.0, df 3,413, p<0.001 Table 11.2 Maximum dimension of cores by scar pattern for all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian
Radial Multi-directional Uni-directional Bi-directional
Mean maximum dimension 39.3 33.6 32.7 34.1
Standard deviation 13.4 10.9 8.0 9.3
N 32 25 11 19
Maximum dimension F=3.7, df, 3,83, p=0.17
they did not intersect with flake removals from other platforms, producing flakes with uni-directional scars. This interpretation is supported to some extent by analysis of the cores. If cores are divided into groups based on the pattern of flake scars, and then compared according to maximum dimension, those cores with a radial pattern of flake removal are the largest, although the difference is not significant (Table 11.2 and Fig. 11.6). Cores with uni- or bi-directional flake removal, and those where flakes were removed from many platforms with no consistent pattern, have smaller mean maximum dimensions. This suggests that the radial cores were abandoned relatively early in the reduction sequence, while cores with other scar patterns were reduced further, the multi-directional cores representing small cube-like blocks that have been worked from every available surface. Flakes removed from these multi-directional cores would tend to have unidirectional exterior scars since these cores rarely have more than one platform on
Figure 11.5 Dimensions of a complete flake
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Kohika
Figure 11.6 Core shapes: a (1525), pebble; b (1747), c (2248), multiple platform; d (2875), e (3179), flake; f (2878), radial
each core surface. Finally, the same general pattern is evident among broken flakes where the direction of flake scars can be determined. Taking all fragments together, those with radial, sub-radial or bi-directional flake scars are significantly larger than those with uni-directional flake scars or where scar direction could not be determined (Table 11.3). A similar pattern is suggested by the comparison of complete flakes from the Historical Society assemblage, grouped according to exterior scar pattern (Table 11.4). Although fewer individual flakes are involved, radial flakes have a longer average length than bi-directional and sub-radial flakes, while uni-directional and plain flakes are the smallest.
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 185
Table 11.3 Maximum dimension for proximal, medial and distal fragments by exterior scar pattern, Mayor Island obsidian
Sub-radial Bi-directional Radial Uni-directional No clear direction Plain
Mean maximum dimension 29.9 30.1 28.2 24.8 24.4 23.4
Standard deviation 11.2 9.9 9.3 8.7 9.8 9.7
N 81 24 8 266 255 30
Maximum dimension F=5.5, df 5,658, p<0.001 No clear direction refers to those pieces too fragmentary to determine scar pattern. Plain refers to fragmentary cortical fragments. Table 11.4 Complete flake mean dimensions (and standard deviation) from the Historical Society assemblage by exterior scar pattern, Mayor Island obsidian
Bi-directional N=9 Plain N=7 Radial N=7 Sub-radial N=39 Uni-directional N=39
Length 48.9 (16.9) 46.2 (21.0) 62.1 (21.3) 51.0 (21.3) 41.6 (18.3)
Width 34.5 (16.2) 38.8 (17.1) 42.8 (17.2) 40.8 (14.0) 33.1 (17.9)
Thickness 11.1 (6.0) 6.5 (1.8) 12.8 (6.1) 11.3 (5.5) 9.6 (8.0)
Debitage
The analysis suggests that the blocks of obsidian brought to Kohika were reduced according to a coherent pattern related to the size of the core being worked. The products of this core reduction were a series of flakes of varying size that were then available for use in various tasks. It is well known, however, that the working of cores produces many flakes as a by-product of knapping. It is likely, for instance, that flakes were removed during the shaping of the core as a prelude to flake removal. Other flakes and flake fragments were produced when flakes shattered under the impact of the hammer stone (particularly common with a brittle material like obsidian). These flakes are referred to as debitage and fall into three groups. First are what might be called technologically special flakes: those with evidence of core platform preparation produced as a by-product of reworking the core to prepare new platforms for flake removals (Fig. 11.7). At Kohika these were limited to a few flakes with evidence of core platform remnants on their exterior surfaces, and unusual flakes that have remnants of an old interior surface on their exterior (in other words they have two interior surfaces). Table 11.5 gives the mean dimensions of the platform rejuvenation flakes, and it is interesting to note that these are relatively large, particularly when compared with the mean length, width and thickness of complete flakes. The large size of these platform rejuvenation flakes may indicate that the artisans attempted to control the shape of the platform when the core was fresh, but this became less critical as the core was reduced in size. The flakes with two interior surfaces are interesting because they suggest that large flakes were bifacially worked as cores. Flakes removed from the
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Kohika
Figure 11.7 Platform preparation flakes and flakes with two interior surfaces: a (2882), b (2491), c (1589), d (1752) and e (1588)
Table 11.5 Mean dimensions for complete platform rejuvenation flakes from all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian
Mean Standard deviation
Length 33.2 10.5
Width 20.7 3.6
Thickness 7.3 2.5
interior surface of a flake core would preserve a portion of the flake core bulb on their exterior surfaces. The second group of debitage flakes consists of small flakes and chips that are less than 10 mm in maximum dimension. These flakes are too small to measure easily, but for this analysis they were counted and weighed. Their distribution in different regions of the site is potentially informative, since they are produced in large numbers during the working of stone. They are considered in detail below in the section dealing with intra-site spatial differences. The third group consists of small flakes of normal morphology that are produced as debitage during core shaping. Larger than the small chips, they are virtually impossible to separate from the usable products of core reduction on the basis of morphology alone. One way to separate them, however, is to use the size of the negative scars on the cores. On every core the length of the largest flake scar can be thought of as a measure of the size of the last flake removed before the core was discarded. The mean length of these scars represents an average minimum length for flakes below which there is a good chance that the flake was not an intended product, but should be considered as debitage. In the case of Kohika, all cores can be treated together since the length of the largest scar (mean length = 23 mm, standard deviation = 7.9) is not statistically distinguishable among groups of cores with different scar patterns. If flakes with a length below 23 mm are removed, and size comparisons made between groups of flakes defined on the basis of exterior scar morphology, radial flakes continue to be larger than bi-directional and sub-radial flakes, and these in turn are larger than uni-directional flakes (see Table 11.6). Thus, we can conclude that blocks of obsidian were flaked at Kohika to produce flakes with a length in the range 23 to 42 mm. Flakes produced at an early stage in the reduction strategy tended to be significantly longer, wider and thicker than those produced at a later point. In addition to these products, a large number of smaller flakes was produced as debitage.
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 187
Table 11.6 Mean dimensions for complete flakes of length greater than 23 mm by exterior scar direction from all areas in the university excavation, Mayor Island obsidian
Radial N=15 Bi-directional N=16 Sub-radial N=62 Uni-directional N=116
Length 37.6 (10.7) 35.6 (8.9) 34.5 (9.2) 32.2 (7.2)
Width 28.8 (10.3) 22.1 (5.8) 23.0 (7.3) 21.6 (7.5)
Thickness 8.5 (3.9) 7.0 (3.0) 7.1 (3.5) 5.7 (2.6)
Length F=3.0, df 3,205, p=0.033 Width F=4.0, df 3,205, p=0.008 Thickness F=6.1, df 3,205, p=0.001 Flakes with a length less than the mean length of the largest scar on the cores have been deleted; see text for an explanation. Table 11.7 Mean dimensions (and standard deviations) of complete tools compared with complete flakes for all areas in the university excavations, Mayor Island obsidian
Complete flake N=547 Complete tool N=52
Length 25.2 (10.2) 29.8 (10.0)
Width 18.6 (7.2) 22.2 (8.2)
Thickness 5.1 (2.8) 6.8 (2.9)
Length t=3.3, df 582, p<0.001 Width t=3.7, df 582, p<0.001 Thickness t=4.29, df 582, p<0.001 Tests for complete flakes and tools with length >=23 mm Length t=0.4, df 298, p=0.671 Width t=1.1, df 298, p=0.258 Thickness t=1.6, df 298, p=0.106
Tools with edge modification
As discussed above, some of the flakes from Kohika were either modified by secondary retouch or used in such a way that produced this retouch. The significance of these pieces can be considered at the same range of levels as proposed for the nonretouched component. At the level of the individual artisan, it is clear that secondary edge modification was made on flakes that are among the biggest in the assemblage. Pieces with retouch are significantly longer, wider and thicker when compared with all complete flakes without retouch, although none of these comparisons is significant when pieces less than 23 mm long are excluded (Table 11.7). If it is accepted that flakes less than 23 mm long represent the debitage produced during core reduction, then in most cases only the flake products of core reduction received edge modification. Among these pieces a typology of edge form can be recognised, depending on the shape and invasiveness of the edge modification. Four types are apparent within the assemblage as a whole. Pieces categorised as having edge damage have regular retouch along one or more flake edges that acts to blunt the edge without altering the morphology of the flake. Flakes with more invasive modification, where the outline of the flake edge has changed, are described as heavily retouched. Those pieces where the
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Kohika
retouch is limited to a restricted region with a concave shape are described as notches. Finally, some pieces show bifacial retouch (flake scars originating from both the interior and exterior surfaces) along one or more edges. These are labelled as bifacial. Whether these four types were recognised by the inhabitants of Kohika is immaterial. What is of interest is whether these types can be used to demonstrate interesting patterns within the assemblage. If tools with different types of edge modification are compared by size, there is some evidence to suggest that more intensive types of modification were applied to larger flakes. Thus, although there are insufficient complete flakes with heavy or bifacial retouch, those with notched retouch have greater mean length, width and thickness measurements than the equivalent measurements for complete tools with edge damage. For fragmented tools, pieces with heavy and bifacial retouch have larger mean maximum dimensions than those with edge damage or notches, although once again these differences are not significant (probably due to the small numbers of some types – see Table 11.8). While the statistical tests are not conclusive, the evidence from flakes with edge modification does suggest that larger flakes were being selected for retouch in general, and that among these pieces the largest flakes were selected for the most intensive use. There is some support for this interpretation from analysis of the Historical Society assemblage. Here pieces with scraper modification have a greater mean length, width and thickness than those with edge damage or notching, although in this case the notched pieces have the smallest mean dimensions. The low number of tools involved means that the differences in mean length do not attain statistical significance (Table 11.9). The low number of edge-modified tools from Kohika compared with the large numbers of non-retouched flake products and debitage suggests that large amounts of obsidian were available for use at the site, but few flakes were used in a way that produced modification. The significance of this finding will be considered in relation to other sites below. In sum, the Kohika assemblage allows a series of inferences to be drawn concerning the way obsidian was worked at the site. Blocks of material were frequently rotated during the initial period of core reduction, but rotation became less frequent as the blocks of material became smaller. The products of this reduction strategy can be differentiated from the debitage on the basis of flake size relative to the mean length of scars on the core. Larger flakes, the products of core reduction rather than debitage, were selected for use that produced macroscopic edge modification. There is also some evidence that more invasive edge modification was applied to the largest flakes.
Intra-site spatial differences
The next level of behaviour to be investigated concerns differences in the way the obsidian was worked within the site. Four main areas of excavation produced sufficiently large assemblages of obsidian to enable comparisons (Table 11.10): Areas A, B, D and the HS Area. Area C produced only twelve pieces and a further thirteen came from post hole core samples and have no spatial significance (shown as P in Table 11.10). Using the core reduction sequence developed above, comparisons can be made for both the size of flakes produced at different stages in the reduction sequence and their proportions among Areas A, B and D. While there are too few complete flakes with radial or bi-directional flake scars to make comparisons, there are sufficient flakes with sub-radial and uni-directional exterior flake scars for comparison of the size of
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 189
Table 11.8
Mean dimensions (and standard deviation) for pieces with macroscopic edge modification by type for all areas excavated by the university, Mayor Island obsidian
Complete pieces Notched N=23 Edge-damage N=28
Length 30.4 (9.7) 27.9 (10.1)
Width 22.6 (8.5) 20.7 (7.6)
Thickness 7.3 (3.1) 6.0 (2.9)
Length t=0.9, df 49, p=0.379 Width t=0.8, df 49, p=0.406 Thickness t=1.5, df 49, p=0.136 Fragmented pieces Heavy N=10 Bifacial N=7 Notch N=46 Edge-damage N=57
Maximum dimension 36.9 (14.4) 35.7 (8.5) 30.2 (9.1) 29.9 (12.2)
Maximum dimension F=1.6, df 3,115, p=0.200 Table 11.9
Mean dimensions (and standard deviation) for complete tools from the Historical Society assemblage by edge modification type, Mayor Island obsidian
Heavy N=10 Edge damage N=32 Notch N=13
Length 56.4 (22.6) 52.3 (18.9) 44.8 (15.2)
Width 42.6 (12.7) 39.2 (13.4) 36.7 (14.4)
Thickness 12.2 (4.4) 10.5 (4.0) 10.4 (5.3)
Length F=1.6, df 2,71, p=0.211 Width F=0.7, df 2,71 p=0.500 Thickness F=0.4, df 2,71, p=0.440 Table 11.10 Frequency of edge-modified pieces, flakes and cores by area, Mayor Island obsidian
Area A Area B Area C Area D Area HS Area P
Edge-modified pieces 58 56 1 63 115 0
Flakes 396 624 11 622 234 13
Cores 31 24 0 27 28 0
flakes between different areas. Comparing these two types of flake distributed among the three regions reveals a pattern of size differences within each technological group. Thus sub-radial flakes are larger in Area A than in B and D, while flakes with unidirectional scars are slightly larger in Areas A and B than in D, although in neither case do these differences reach statistical significance (Table 11.11). A similar pattern is reflected in flake proportions among the different regions. All three have similar proportions of complete to broken flakes, although Area A has more flakes greater than 23 mm long (the mean of the largest flake scars on the cores),
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Table 11.11 Mean length (and standard deviation) of complete flakes with length > 23 mm by exterior scar morphology and area, Mayor Island obsidian
Area A Area B
Area D
Sub-radial 37.2 (9.8) N=24 32.7 (9.5) N=18 33.5 (7.7) N=19
Uni-directional 32.5 (7.6) N=25 32.5 (7.7) N=53 31.7 (6.2) N=37
Sub-radial F=1.5, df 2,58 p=0.222 Uni-directional F=0.2, df 2,112, p=0.848 Table 11.12 Frequency of complete and fragmented flakes of length > 23 mm by area, Mayor Island obsidian
Area A Area B Area D Total
Complete 73 93 89 255
Fragments 160 221 194 575
Total 233 314 283 830
Pearson chi-square 0.3 df 2 p=0.865 Frequency of complete flakes > 23 mm length and complete flakes < 23 mm in length by area, Mayor Island obsidian > 23mm < 23mm Total
Area A 73 58 101
Area B 93 96 189
Area D 89 109 198
Total 255 263 518
Pearson chi-square 3.7, df 2, p=0.16 Frequency of flake fragments of maximum dimension > 23 mm and flake fragments of maximum dimension < 23 mm by area, Mayor Island obsidian > 23mm < 23mm TOTAL
Area A 160 105 265
Area B 221 214 435
Area D 194 230 424
TOTAL 575 549 1124
Pearson chi-square 14.0 df 2, p=0.001, phi=0.112 Table 11.13 Number and weight of flakes and flake fragments of maximum dimension less than 10 mm by area, Mayor Island obsidian
Area A Area B Area D
Number 144 404 449
Weight (g) 25.7 91.9 75.1
compared with flakes less than 23 mm long, than either B or D. Finally, if the cut-off point of 23 mm is applied to broken flakes, then Area A has proportionally more flake fragments with a maximum dimension greater than 23 mm than either Area B or D (Table 11.12). These results suggest that there are significant differences in the
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 191
way blocks of obsidian were worked in different areas at Kohika. Area A has a greater proportion of large flakes, both broken and complete, compared with Areas B and D. Area D has the smallest proportion of large flakes, with Area B in the middle. A similar pattern is suggested by the distribution of cores, with Area D having the most (36) while Area A produced 31 and Area B 24. Given that high proportions of small debitage are produced during the working of cores, it would seem likely that Area D witnessed considerably more flake production than Area A. This interpretation is supported by the differences in the number of small flake fragments (with a maximum dimension less than 10 mm) among the three areas. As summarised in Table 11.13, both Areas B and D have over three times the number of small flake fragments than A. Small fragments like these are produced in abundance during the production of flakes, so their large numbers in Areas B and D would seem to confirm that these areas were the primary sites for obsidian flake manufacture, whereas A may have been a primary site for flake use. The complete flakes from the Historical Society assemblage are considerably larger than similar pieces from any of the areas excavated by the university (Table 11.14). Some of this size difference is no doubt due to excavation bias, particularly the failure to include smaller flakes in the HS assemblage. Still, this assemblage included some very large flakes, up to 111 mm long (Fig. 11.8). This would suggest that it came from a region in the site where some large blocks of obsidian were initially reduced, or that these large flakes represent a cache of pieces intended for later use as cores. Other activities are represented in this area, however, as evidenced by the 28 cores in this assemblage.
Figure 11.8 Large flakes from Historical Society: a (94), b (96), c (150), d (161), e (98) and f (158)
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Kohika
Table 11.14
Complete flakes with length > 23 mm from the university excavations compared with those excavated by the Historical Society, Mayor Island obsidian
Area A N=72 Area B N=75 Area D N=89 Historical Society N=106
Length 33.6 (8.5) 33.0 (8.6) 33.6 (8.0) 50.0 (18.1)
Width 23.0 (6.0) 23.0 (7.8) 21.0 (8.0) 39.1 (15.8)
Thickness 6.7 (2.8) 6.4 (2.9) 6.5 (3.5) 11.2 (6.5)
Length F=47.0, df 3,356, p<0.001 Width F=63.7, df 3,356, p<0.001 Thickness F=28.8, df 3,356, p<001 Table 11.15 Frequency of complete and fragmented tools by type of edge modification and area
Fragmented tools Area A Area B Area D
Edge-damage 21 11 24
Notch 13 20 13
Heavy 3 3 4
Notch 10 6 8
Heavy 3 0 2
Pearson chi-square 6.9 df 4, p=0.140 Complete tools Area A Area B Area D
Edge-damage 7 10 11
Pearson chi-square 4.2 df 4, p=0.380 Table 11.16 Length of notched area of edge modification for all notched tools by region
Area A Area B Area D
Mean 9.6 10.4 8.8
Standard deviation 3.5 2.3 3.8
N 22 26 21
F=1.4, df 2,66, p=0.262
Intra-site regional differences for tools with edge modification are much less apparent, possibly owing to the smaller numbers of artefacts involved. Neither complete pieces nor tool fragments show any significant difference in frequency among the three areas when divided by edge modification type (Table 11.15). Nor are there significant differences when the total length of the retouched edge is considered. In fact, the only intra-site pattern that is suggested among the edge modification pieces is for those with concave notches. If the mean length of the notched area (irrespective of whether more than one notch occurs on the artefact) is compared by region, those from Areas A and B have mean lengths slightly longer than those from Area D, although the statistical test comparing these means is not significant (Table 11.16). On the basis of these results, it must be concluded that, whatever behaviour was responsible for the application of secondary edge modification, it did not significantly vary among the three areas. It should be added, however, that the small number of artefacts involved may be masking patterns of intra-site spatial variability that are below the resolution imposed by the statistical tests used. To summarise, differences in the size and proportions of flakes among the areas
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 193
investigated, allow a strong case to be made that blocks of obsidian were worked primarily in Areas D and B, while higher proportions of large obsidian flakes were deposited in Area A, perhaps suggesting that they were used more often at this location. The large size of the flakes from the HS Area suggests that this region saw the initial working of large obsidian blocks into cores. The products of core reduction were used in all regions of the site in such a way that little difference can be found in the size and distribution of edge-modified tools.
Regional interactions
Behaviour at a regional level can be inferred by considering both the nature of the original obsidian blocks brought into Kohika, and the source of the raw material. In Chapter 10, P. Moore showed that almost all of it has the characteristics of Mayor Island sources. He also identified a small number of grey obsidian pieces from Maketu and Taupo and this section reports on the technology and distribution of these artefacts. Table 11.17 presents a breakdown of the numbers of flakes, cores and tools for both sources of grey obsidian. Complete and fragmented flakes occur in similar numbers from the two sources, but there are differences in the frequency of cores and tools. Fourteen cores or core fragments of Maketu obsidian are present but there is
Table 11.17 Maketu and Taupo obsidian technological types
Complete flake Complete tool Core Core fragment Distal flake Distal tool Medial flake Medial tool Proximal flake
Taupo 11 5 0 1 10 1 4 2 8
Maketu 13 0 12 2 8 0 6 0 5
Maketu obsidian technological types by area Area A Area B Complete flake 4 Core 2 Core fragment Distal flake 4 Medial flake 1 1 Proximal flake 1 Taupo obsidian technological types by area Area A Area B Complete flake 2 5 Complete tool 1 3 Core fragment Distal flake 5 2 Distal tool 1 Medial flake 4 Medial tool 2 Proximal flake 1 5
Area D 7 5 1 1 1 2
Area HS
Area D 4 1 1 2
Area HS
2
5 2
1
Area P 1
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Kohika
only a single core fragment from Taupo obsidian. On the other hand, all of the grey obsidian artefacts with macroscopic retouch are manufactured from Taupo obsidian. Maketu obsidian is concentrated in Area D, with smaller numbers of artefacts in Area B, and the HS Area. In contrast, Taupo obsidian is most frequent in Area B, with smaller numbers of artefacts in Areas A and D and only a single piece recovered from the HS Area. As discussed by Moore, the obsidian from Maketu occurs as small pebbles and, of the cores, only the core fragments manufactured from this material lack cortex. In addition, only one of the thirteen complete flakes lacks at least some cortex. Complete flakes of Maketu obsidian are smaller than the equivalent flakes from Mayor Island obsidian; with a mean length of 20 mm (standard deviation 4.6), they are smaller than the smallest of the Mayor Island obsidian flakes with uni-directional flake scars (Table 11.1). In contrast, complete flakes manufactured from Taupo obsidian have a mean length of 25.7 mm (standard deviation 8.7), slightly longer than the uni-directional complete Mayor Island obsidian flakes. Of the twelve complete flakes, half have no cortex, three have less than 10 per cent cortex and only two have more than 60 per cent cortex. Tools consist of a single artefact with bifacial retouch, three notches and four pieces with edge damage. The Maketu material was introduced to the site as pebbles. The Taupo obsidian artefacts, however, do not seem to have been introduced to the site as raw material. Instead, the Taupo artefacts may represent the discarded remnants of tool kits carried by individuals as they journeyed from the central North Island to Kohika. If this interpretation is correct, these people spent more time, or at least abandoned more artefacts, in Area B than they did in other parts of Kohika. Mayor Island sources
Table 11.18 provides frequencies and proportions of complete and fragmentary flakes and tools by proportion of cortex for Mayor Island obsidian. It is clear that, for all technological artefact classes, fewer than 20 per cent of the artefacts retain cortex. In any assemblage the proportion of cortical artefacts will vary in response to several factors. Rock that is quarried, or picked up from eroded flows, rather than retrieved as boulders, will often not retain any cortex. Proportionally, cortex will also vary in relation to the size of the boulder. Larger cobbles have a smaller surface area relative to their volume, and so will produce fewer cortical flakes for an equivalent amount of knapping compared with smaller cobbles. Finally, cortical cobbles may be partially worked at the source to remove cortex, particularly if cortical flakes are thought to be less useful than their decortified equivalents.
Table 11.18
Proportion of cortex on flakes and edge-modified pieces from all areas, Mayor Island obsidian
Complete flakes Complete edge-modified pieces Fragmentary flakes Fragmentary edge-modified pieces
0% 553 86.7% 116 85.9% 849 84.6% 127 80.9%
1–40% 47 7.4% 8 5.9% 77 7.7% 16 10.2%
41–90% 24 3.8% 4 3.0% 31 3.1% 9 5.7%
91–100% 14 2.2% 7 5.2% 47 4.7% 5 3.2%
Total 638 135 1004 157
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 195
If cortical cobbles are introduced to a site and subsequently knapped to remove cortex, flakes with cortex should be larger than those without cortex since, in general, core reduction leads to the production of progressively smaller flakes. That this pattern does not hold for complete Mayor Island obsidian flakes from Areas A, B and D suggests that cortical cobbles were not the major form in which Mayor Island obsidian was introduced into the site. Complete Mayor Island obsidian flakes without cortex from Areas A, B and D have a mean length of 25.1 mm (standard deviation 10.1), while those with cortex have a length of 26.0 mm (standard deviation 11.3), and this difference is not significant (t=0.19, df 505, p=0.848). It is possible, therefore, that some Mayor Island obsidian was decortified before it was brought to Kohika, or obsidian was obtained from the island in a decortified state. P. Moore (in Chapter 10) notes the presence of at least two types of cortex on Mayor Island obsidian artefacts: cortex from water-worn cobbles or boulders, and rough cortex that may have come from colluvial deposits. He also notes that most artefacts from Kohika do not retain cortex, and suggests that they derive from blocks that were quarried on Mayor Island. It is possible that some obsidian with a weathered fracture surface – not strictly speaking cortex at all – was produced by the exposure of obsidian flows on the surface. The results of recent surveys on Mayor Island report the presence of tabular boulders of obsidian littering some beaches and inland locations (Sheppard, pers. comm. 2002). Fracturing these boulders would produce pieces, either flakes or cores, suitable for transport that would not necessarily retain cortex in the normal sense. In fact, most of the cortex identified on the Mayor Island obsidian appears to reflect weathered, naturally fractured surfaces. These pieces may well be the form in which Mayor Island obsidian was transported to Kohika. They may, for instance, be the source of the large flakes recovered from the Historical Society excavation. Large flakes in the HS Area
The flakes, cores and tools abandoned at Kohika vary considerably in size. The largest flakes abandoned in the HS Area, for instance, are more than 60 mm long ranging in one case up to 111 mm. This is more than twice to nearly five times the mean length of complete flakes with uni-directional scars from Areas A, B and D. While the inhabitants of Kohika clearly had good access to Mayor Island obsidian, some artefacts were worked intensively while others were abandoned well before they were exhausted. This difference suggests various reasons for abandonment. Some pieces were no doubt abandoned because they were of no further use, but others may have been deposited with the intention of further use later – an intention that was never realised. It seems likely, therefore, that some obsidian artefacts, particularly the larger flakes, were retained rather than abandoned. As discussed above, following Torrence (1992), such behaviour provides some insight into the economic significance of obsidian to the people who occupied Kohika. Despite the relative proximity of Kohika to Mayor Island, obsidian was important enough to warrant maintaining a regular supply through the curation of large flakes, and efficient use through intensive core reduction at several locations within the site. Either it was important to maintain a ready supply of obsidian to fulfil a variety of purposes at Kohika itself, or obsidian was valued beyond immediate utilitarian needs. While of interest in interpreting the nature of occupation at Kohika itself, the full potential of assigning value to items like obsidian artefacts will come from comparing the results of technological analyses of assemblages from a number of sites occupied at different times in the past.
196
Kohika
Comparisons with other sites
The most striking aspect of the Kohika assemblage is its size in comparison with other New Zealand archaeological obsidian assemblages. In fact, the only assemblages of similar size or larger are those from Kauri Point (Shawcross 1964), Raupa (Prickett 1990, 1992), Whitipirorua (Furey 1990) and Houhora (Best 1975:22, Bolong 1983). The large and well-studied assemblages from Palliser Bay numbered over 4000 pieces, but these were distributed among many sites and were mainly composed of very small pieces (Prickett 1975). The large assemblage from Hahei was also dominated by small pieces, with only 534 of the 3376 flakes weighing more than 0.5 grams (Harsant 1985). Thus by New Zealand standards Kohika stands out as a large assemblage by containing many large flakes. In the most extensive comparative study of New Zealand obsidian assemblages to date, Seelenfreund-Hirsch (1985) analysed obsidian sourced to Mayor Island from a number of North and South Island sites. Mean weights are given as an estimate of flake size by assemblage for cortical flakes, non-cortical flakes and cores, but only obsidian sourced to Mayor Island is considered. Calculating the mean weight for all complete flakes from Areas A, B and D at Kohika gives a value of 3.9 grams (standard deviation 5.4), in the middle of the range of mean weights for secondary flakes (those without cortex) provided by Seelenfreund-Hirsch. However, the large standard deviation from Kohika, and the large standard deviations recorded for the assemblages studied by Seelenfreund-Hirsch, make it very difficult to draw meaningful conclusions from these figures. Other studies have focused on the proportion of flakes with secondary retouch in assemblages from different sites. In an early study, Morwood (1974) showed that the majority of obsidian flakes from the site of Tokoroa showed evidence of secondary edge modification. He compared this with the much lower values obtained from assemblages from Houhora and Great Barrier Island. Although calculating a ratio of retouched to non-retouched flakes has been criticised by Leach (1979) on the basis of inconsistency among observers, the substantial differences in the proportions of modified to unmodified flakes in sites like Tokoroa and that shown by her own study, compared with sites like Great Barrier, suggest that these ratios reflect important differences in the intensity with which obsidian was used. As noted above, the Kohika assemblages have low proportions of edge-modified pieces in relation to the unmodified component, a pattern similar to assemblages from sites like Great Barrier and Houhora. It would be interesting to determine whether this low proportion reflects the production of large numbers of unmodified flakes in excess of those required by the inhabitants of Kohika. Unfortunately, at present there are insufficient studies of obsidian technology to provide the type of data that might answer this question.
Conclusion
The reduction strategy reconstructed for the Kohika obsidian assemblage suggests that obsidian was reduced in a systematic manner, first through a process involving much core rotation that changed as the cores became smaller. While there is little evidence that flakes were subsequently shaped to produce particular tool forms, larger flakes tended to be used more frequently, giving rise to macroscopic edge damage. Within the site, the separate areas display different concentrations of obsidian flakes and debitage, suggesting that the material was primarily worked in Areas B and D, but that large flakes may have been used more frequently in Area A. The large flakes recovered by the Whakatane Historical Society may evidence an area where large blocks
The Kohika obsidian artefacts: technology and distribution 197
of obsidian were initially worked, or may represent a cache of large flakes introduced into the site. Given the large amount of obsidian, particularly large flakes, abandoned at the site, and the low proportion of flakes with macroscopic edge damage, it seems reasonable to conclude that residents at the site had few problems in gaining access to raw material. Inhabitants of Kohika either had direct access to Mayor Island or were in close contact with the island’s resident populations. There are several other collections from New Zealand archaeological sites of comparable size to that from Kohika, and there is certainly the potential to make interesting inter-site comparisons. Unfortunately, the lack of technological studies in New Zealand means that few such comparisons are possible at this time.
References Best, S., 1975. Adzes, rocks and men. Unpublished research essay, University of Auckland. Bolong, C., 1983. Automated isoprobe analysis of New Zealand and Oceanic volcanic glasses. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Otago. Fredericksen, C., 1987. Stone tools and cultural diversity: the analysis of stone tool assemblage variability in New Zealand archaeology. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Furey, L., 1990. The artefact collection from Whitipirorua (T12/16), Coromandel Peninsula. Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum, 27:19–60. Harsant, W., 1983. Historical evidence for the use of unmodified shell tools in New Zealand. In S.E. Bulmer, R.G. Law and D.G. Sutton (eds), A lot of spadework to be done. New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No.14, pp.149–83. Harsant, W. 1985. The Hahei (N44/97) assemblage of Archaic artefacts. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology 7:5–37. Jones, K.L., 1972. Prehistoric Polynesian stone technology: a study of usage and flaking technique with special reference to assemblages of stone flake debitage of New Zealand Archaic cultural provenance. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Otago. Jones, K.L., 1981. New Zealand mataa from Marlborough, Nelson, and the Chatham Islands. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 3:89–107. Kamminga, J., 1982. Over the edge: functional analysis of Australian stone tools. St Lucia: University of Queensland, Occasional Papers in Anthropology No.12. Leach, H.M., 1979. An analysis of an open-air workshop in Palliser Bay. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 1:139–51. Morwood, M., 1974. A functional analysis of obsidian flakes from three archaeological sites on Great Barrier Island and one at Tokoroa. Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum, 11:77–99. Parry, W.J. and R.L. Kelly, 1987. Expedient core technology and sedentism. In J.K. Johnson and C.A. Morrow (eds), The organization of core technology. Boulder: Westview Press, pp.285–304. Prickett, K., 1975. The prehistoric exploitation and knowledge of geological resources in southern Wairarapa. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Otago. Prickett, N., 1990. Archaeological excavations at Raupa: the 1987 season. Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum, 27:73–153. Prickett, N., 1992. Archaeological excavations at Raupa: the 1988 season. Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum, 29:25–101. Seelenfreund-Hirsch, A., 1985. The exploitation of Mayor Island obsidian in prehistoric New Zealand. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Otago. Shawcross, W., 1964. Stone flake industries in New Zealand. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 73:7–25. Torrence, R. 1992. What is Lapita about obsidian? a view from the Talasea sources. In J.C. Galipaud (ed.), Poterie, Lapita et peuplement. ORSTOM: Noumea, pp.111–26.
12 Faunal remains from Kohika G.J. Irwin, R.K. Nichol, M.A. Taylor, T.H. Worthy and I.W.G. Smith
This chapter describes the remains of mammals, birds, fish and shellfish from Kohika that represent food waste (bone used for artefacts was described in Chapter 9). Most of the material was recovered during the university excavations, but some was found previously by the Whakatane and District Historical Society. The assemblage dates from late prehistory. Much of it was found in peat and is unusual for its good preservation. Mammals were analysed by M. Taylor, birds by T. Worthy, fish and shellfish by R. Nichol. G. Irwin directed the excavations and compiled this report, and detailed comments were made by I. Smith. The spatial distribution of the remains is described by reference to the structural units detailed in the excavation report in Chapter 4.
Mammals
Bone was recovered from Areas A, B and D, but not C. At some time, clearly after the abandonment of Kohika, people returned to bury some of their dead. Five intrusive crouched burials were encountered during the excavation of Area A. These were left undisturbed or reinterred and were not included in this analysis. Area A was subject to regular wetting and drying. The burials were shallow and exposed and the bones showed advanced weathering, in marked contrast to the rest of the assemblage, which was well preserved. Dogs, a whale, seal and possibly humans were eaten as food and their bones used to make artefacts. The dogs were kept and eaten at Kohika. There are clear indications that bone refuse was gnawed by dogs and rats. Parasites from rat intestines found in dog faeces provide further evidence for the presence of rats, although none of their bones were recovered from the excavations. The bones were examined by M. Taylor and identified from reference material held at the Anthropology Department, University of Auckland. The minimum number of individuals (MNI) present was calculated by determining the minimum number of each element (MNE) and then taking the most frequently counted element, considering body side, age and element portion as relevant. The MNI was calculated taking the whole site as a single assemblage. The bones were examined individually under direct illumination for cultural and taphonomic modifications. These included breaking, burning, chiselling, cutting, drilling, gnawing by dogs and rats, and sawing (Taylor 1984). Table 12.1 Minimum number of individual mammals
Species Homo sapiens Canis familiaris Arctocephalus forsteri Cetacean sp. 198
Common name Human Dog NZ fur seal Whale
MNI 4 16 1 1
Faunal remains from Kokiha 199
Human bone
Four individuals were represented (Table 12.2), not counting the late intrusive burials in Area A described above. These were identified as possibly three women and one young adult male. Table 12.2 Human bone by excavation area
Element
Cranial piece Distal humerus Proximal femur Distal femur Proximal ulna Patella Calcaneus Pelvis Ribs Digits Unidentified fragments
Area D occupation level Dirty White Yellow pumice House House 1 2 2 1 1
Area B Bright Yellow 2 1
HS Area
1
1 1
1 1 1 1 1
1 1
Total
6 3 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 1
Chopping, breaking and sawing were observed on more than half of the long bone fragments. Evidently, the shafts were used for artefacts after the ends had been removed. Three of the four cranial fragments showed evidence for sawing (Plate 12.1), plus another fragment not identified to body part. Long bones useful for artefacts must have been kept away from dogs. The absence of dog gnawing on these bones, when it was present on a high proportion of those from other taxa, could suggest that human long bones were not food remains. However, the fragments of patella, pelvis and rib could have been food waste because these bones are not so useful for tools. One piece of human rib had dogtooth marks. Other cancellous body parts, such as vertebrae, that were absent from the site could have been eaten by dogs. In addition, knife cut marks near the ends of the long bones are consistent with the disarticulation of limbs during butchering (Plate 12.2). Marine mammal bone
The remains of a whale were found at Kohika. A lumbar vertebra in articulation with an epiphyseal plate came from the Yellow House horizon of Area D. The size is consistent with a medium-sized baleen whale such as a Bryde’s whale (Balaenoptera edeni). These occur today in some numbers in the Bay of Plenty (Gaskin 1967:14). The bones were probably deposited in a fresh state, as they disarticulate quickly. Only half of the spinous and articular processes of the vertebra survived and the remainder had been gnawed by dogs. However, the rim of the vertebra body and the epiphyseal plate had no trace of gnawing, and it is only when these bones remain as part of a larger articulated segment that dogs cannot gain access to them (Taylor 1984). A second intact and ungnawed epiphyseal plate in the peat associated with the White House was possibly derived from the same whale. A sub-adult fur seal was represented by a scapula, ulna and lower lumbar vertebra. The scapula had been made into an awl while the ulna had the anterior margin
Plate 12.1 A sawn section of human cranium.
200
Kohika
removed by sawing, which would have provided a sliver of compact bone useful as a point or a heavy needle. The spinous process of the vertebra showed clear evidence of dog attrition. Dog bone
Plate 12.2 Knife-cut marks on a human femur.
In a metrical study of the bones of the extinct Maori kuri, Clark (1995) described the dog remains from Kohika as the most complete and best-preserved collection from any site in the country. Some hundreds of dog coprolites showed that dogs were kept at the site, where they were also killed, skinned, butchered and eaten and some of their bones used for artefacts. A minimum number of sixteen dogs was identified from the crania, and the body part frequencies are presented in Table 12.3 by excavation area. While a relative absence of limb and other bones might be partly explained by their consumption by other dogs, as implied by the extent of gnawing on the surviving elements in Table 12.4, and by the use of bones for industrial purposes, the observed pattern may also represent the sharing of dog carcasses (Smith 1981:98–9). The estimated ages of the dogs at death, based on tooth eruption and fusion of epiphyseal centres, are presented in Table 12.5. Assessment of age is possible for fifteen of the sixteen dogs, showing clearly that most were killed after reaching maturity. Table 12.3 Dog body parts by excavation area (MNE)
Element
Crania Mandibles Vertebrae Ribs Scapulae Humeri Radii Ulnae Pelves Femora Tibiae Metapodials Phalanges Fragments Total
Area B
2 4 7 3 1 5 2 1 4 2 4
6 41
Area D occupation level Dirty White Yellow pumice House House 1
10 9 1
1
2 1
2 3 8 4 6 3 1 8
HS Area Bright Yellow Floor 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1
Total
Total D
12 11 2 4 3 9 8 7 5 2 8
15 86
2 12 3 6 4 3 6 6 8 9 1 4 64
16 27 9 7 7 20 14 11 15 10 20 9 1 25 191
Faunal remains from Kokiha 201
Table 12.4 Taphonomic variables for identified dog bone by excavated area (MNE)
Attrition Dog gnawed Rat gnawed Weathered Knife cut Sawn Burnt
Area B 17 41.5% 4 9.8% 4 9.8% 4 9.8% 3 7.3% 2 4.9%
Area D 21 24.4% 4 4.7% 3 3.5% 18 20.9% 3 3.5% 2 2.3%
HS Area 17 26.6% 4 6.3% 14 21.9% 2 3.1% 3 4.7% 1 1.6%
Total 55 28.8% 12 6.3% 21 11.0% 24 12.6% 9 4.7% 5 2.6%
Table 12.5 Estimated ages of dogs at death (MNE)
Element Crania Mandibles Humeri Femora Radii Tibiae
Juvenile 1 2 1 1 1
Adolescent 2 4 2 2 3 2
Adult 12 15 7 5 7 10
Not assessed 1 6 10 3 3 7
Total 16 27 20 10 14 20
Dog bone was recovered from two areas excavated by the university, Areas B and D, and also from the HS Area. Houses have been found in both Area D and the HS Area, and probably existed, although they were not excavated, in Area B. The method of killing three dogs was indicated on two of the crania by holes in the left parietal bone with inwardly crushed margins (Plate 12.3), indicating a heavy blow to the side of the head, probably with a stone. A third cranium had holes on both sides. Allo Bay-Petersen (1979:171) described this method as commonly used on Maori dogs, and observed that many were struck on the right side of the head. The two Kohika examples with holes on the left side might suggest left-handed butchery, if we could be sure where the butcher stood. Two of these crania were found in the Yellow House horizon in Area D and the third in the HS Area. The remaining crania showed no such damage, and some other method of slaughter must have been used.
Plate 12.3 Dog cranium with crushed parietal.
202
Plate 12.4 Dog cranium with cut marks on nasal bone.
Plate 12.5 Dog mandible with ventral margin removed.
Kohika
Commonly among prehistoric kuri the brain was extracted by the removal of the posterior part of the cranium, but none in the Kohika assemblage exhibited such damage – most were intact. Evidently, the brains of dogs were not eaten at this site. Knife cuts were observed on all principal dog long bones except radii. The marks could be from the disarticulation of limbs during butchering, although some on the mid-shafts of the ulna and the distal tibia may be from skinning. Further traces of skinning and butchering were observed on crania, mandibles, pelves and ribs. Five crania had numerous transverse cut marks on the nasal bone (Plate 12.4), indicating that the face was skinned. Two cases were from the Yellow House level of Area D, one from Area B and two from the HS Area. Some heavy cuts on the nasal bones could result from the head being skinned after the animal was cool, when skinning was more difficult. Skinning marks were also recorded on nine mandibles that exhibited between two and 30 cuts on their lateral surfaces, most commonly near the ventral margin below the molars. Four mandibles also had cuts on their medial surfaces, again in the region of the molar teeth, and such marks are often interpreted as a result of cutting out the animal’s tongue to eat (Binford 1981). Similar cut marks on both lateral and medial surfaces have been recorded from the Twilight Beach assemblage, where they were observed on New Zealand fur-seal mandibles (Taylor 1984). A dog mandible with its ventral margin removed to provide material for a tool is shown in Plate 12.5. The percentages of the various kinds of bone attrition shown in Table 12.4 are based on the frequency of body parts in Table 12.3. They show that dog gnawing was more prevalent in Area B than elsewhere, that knife cuts were highest in Area D, and that more bones were weathered in the HS Area, possibly as the result of farming disturbance. Finally, a suggestion that dog heads including mandibles were probably not cooked at Kohika is supported by the high survival rate of intact crania, and also by the recovery of a cranium complete with both mandibles and atlas and axis vertebrae from the Bright Yellow-level midden.
Faunal remains from Kokiha 203
Comments on the mammal bone
The recovery of a large sample of well-preserved bone from an archaeological excavation is rare in a North Island Classic Maori site. The excellent survival, notably of the fragile yet intact dog crania and whale vertebral plates, follows from its deposition in a stable wet environment. Dogs were unusually common at Kohika, and the pattern of evidence matches many of the general observations made in previous studies (Allo 1970, Allo Bay-Petersen 1979, Clark 1995, Smith 1981). As in some other Classic assemblages, most of the dogs were slaughtered after maturity and the long bones, mandibles and canine teeth used for making artefacts. Their skins were removed, and the skinning of the facial region argues for the value placed on the pelt. However, other features of the assemblage were more unusual, such as the brains not being eaten. Human long bones were used for artefact manufacture at the site. The recovery of a small number of other fragments may indicate that butchering took place elsewhere, or in an unexcavated part of the site. It remains possible, but uncertain, that flesh was consumed at the site. The whale (and possibly the seal) was probably found beached and its exploitation was opportunistic (see Smith 1996). The analysis of the mammal bone, with its emphasis on the observation of taphonomic features and cultural modifications, has produced some interesting conclusions concerning the use of dogs, sea mammals and possibly humans for meat and tools by the people of Kohika.
Avifauna
The avifauna from Kohika is small, with only 27 identifiable elements representing fourteen individuals. There appear to be no significant differences in species distribution, either by square or by layer, so all data are amalgamated into a single assemblage (Table 12.6). The bones were identified by T. Worthy with reference to modern specimens in either his own or the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa collections. The largest faunal component is wetland birds (pukeko, banded rail, scaup, brown teal, grey duck), which is as expected considering the site location. The presence of pukeko supports the late prehistoric age of the site, as this taxon is not known in prehuman sites in New Zealand nor in early sites dominated by moa (Holdaway et al. 2001). The banded rail bone was previously identified as godwit Limosa lapponica by Nichol (1988), so the latter is now known from only three archaeological sites (Haulashore Island, Ponui Island and Warrington; Worthy 1999, unpublished data). Banded rail is relatively rare in archaeological sites, partly because of the small size of its bones and also because of problems with identification (Worthy 1999). The rest of the terrestrial birds (kiwi, kaka, harrier) are common in prehistoric sites. While only six, or possibly seven, albatross bones were identified to taxon, a number of shaft fragments are most probably from one or another albatross species. The albatross bones were very fragmented and several pieces showed evidence of working, which suggests that their presence may have been for tool manufacture as much as, or more than, for food. They may represent beach-wrecked birds that were not used for food at all. However, this number of bones seems unusually high in relation to the total sample of identifiable bones, so it may be that the birds were taken from a colony near the site. The nearby islands of Tokata, Rurima, Moutoki and Motuhora would all be potential colony sites. Some of the bones could have been intended for trade, and we have already noted Kohika’s location on river routes to the inland North Island.
204
Kohika
Table 12.6 Avian taxa represented among identifiable elements in the Kohika assemblage with data from all squares and layers amalgamated
Species Porphyrio melanotus
Common name Pukeko
Apteryx spp. Apteryx mantelli Nestor meridionalis
Kiwi spp. indet, juvenile Brown kiwi Kaka
Aythya novaeseelandiae Anas chlorotis
Scaup Brown teal
Anas superciliosa Circus approximans Gallirallus philippensis Thalassarche spp. size T. bulleri
Grey duck Australasian harrier Banded rail Albatross, size of Buller’s albatross Thalassarche spp. size T. salvini Albatross, size of Salvin’s albatross Thalassarche spp. size T. cauta Albatross, size of white-capped albatross ?Thalassarche spp. ?Albatross Diomedea spp. Great albatross Totals
Elements 1R quad, 1d+sR ulna, 2sR fem, 1p+sR 1dL tmt 1dL tt 1L tt 1dR tt, mand, 1L1sR hum 1R cor, 1R hum 1R cor, 1R scap, 1 ant stern 1 ant stern 1sR ulna 1R tt 1L hum, 1L radius 1L1dR ulna
MNE 6
MNI 2
1 1 4
1 1 1
2 3
1 1
1 1 1 2
1 1 1 1
2
1
1dR ulna
1
1
Part shaft radius 1sL ulna
1 1 27
1 14
Abbreviations: R, right; L, left; d, distal; s, shaft; p, proximal; ant stern, anterior sternum; cor, coracoid; fem, femur; hum, humerus; mand, mandible; quad, quadrate; tmt, tarsometatarsus; tt, tibiotarsus. Comments on taxon identifications
The lesser albatrosses, or mollymawks, have species complexes in three main size groupings within which post-cranial elements are generally not distinguishable. The species listed in Table 12.6 are those most likely to be encountered on current distributional data. Albatrosses the size of Thalassarche bulleri include yellow-nosed albatross T. chlororhynchos and grey-headed albatross T. chryostoma. Thalassarche bulleri currently breeds at the Three Kings Islands and yellow-nosed albatross are relatively common in the Bay of Plenty in winter. The white-capped or shy albatross (formerly D. cauta) have recently been separated into several taxa: white-capped Thalassarche cauta, Salvin’s T. salvini, and Chatham Island albatross T. eremita. The specimen identified as similar to the white-capped albatross is larger than the Salvin’s albatross bones examined and, as it duplicates elements of bones attributed to that taxon, must indicate another individual. Both Salvins and white-capped albatrosses are common in northern coastal waters at present. The great albatrosses include four taxa with similar sized bones: wandering D. exulans, northern royal D. sanfordi, southern royal D. epomophora, snowy D. chionoptera. Of these, either of the first two listed taxa is a possibility, but neither could have been taken from a colony as all these species breed much further south. Therefore, the six partial bones indicate a minimum of four individual albatross in this small sample.
Faunal remains from Kokiha 205
Fish
The fishbone analysis was by R. Nichol. It considered the methods and seasons of fishing, environments exploited, butchering patterns and aspects of the taphonomy. Initially, all the fishbone from the site was searched for elements that could be identified as coming from particular taxa. The five main elements of the jaw apparatus (premaxilla, maxilla, dentary, articular and quadrate) were the most useful, but many crests, operculae, vertebrae, dorsal spines, scutes and cleithra were also identified. Quantification was by counts of the most numerous element present for each of the species represented in the material. These elements are listed in the results, set out in Table 12.7. Where this was a paired element, as was usually the case, the frequency of the species was taken to be the average of the frequencies of the two sides. This averaging explains the occasional occurrence of ‘half fish’ in the results. Thus the figures in the table are a version of MNI that could be called ANI (average number of individuals). One feature of this method is that counts of ANI in separate excavation areas can be added together without running the risk that the pair of elements in a single animal could be counted twice (Nichol 1988). Table 12.7 Frequencies of fish species from Kohika, by area
Numbers of Individuals Species
Common name
Most common element Shark/ray Vertebrae Zeus faber John dory Premaxillae Chelidonichthys kumu Red gurnard Operculae Polyprion oxygeneios Hapuku Vertebra Caranx georgianus Trevally Crests Trachurus spp. Jack mackerel Cleithra Arripis trutta Kahawai Dentaries Chrysophrys auratus Snapper Premaxillae Nemadactylus macroterus Tarakihi Premaxillae Pseudolabrus spp. Labrids Articular quadrate Parapercis colias Blue cod Premaxillae Leptoscopus macropygus Estuarine stargazer Articular Thyrsites atun Barracouta Dentaries Scomber australasicus Blue mackerel Dentaries Parika scaber Leatherjacket 1st dorsal spine Totals
Area B
Area C
Area D
(3)*
(27) 5.5 2
0.5 + (1) 1 5 0.5 0.5 0.5
0.5 + 0.5
+ 1 13
5
4 109 22 11.5 1 + 0.5 + 2 9 2 173
*figures in brackets are numbers of vertebrae found + represents a fragment
Preservation of fishbone was good in the peaty margins of the site but none was recovered from the HS Area. This was an area of housing and living activity and the absence of fishbone can only be a result of the excavation methods. Nor was any fishbone recovered from Area A, where there was evidence for the cooking of food. However, the top of the dune was subject to continual wetting and drying and the state of the late human burials indicates the poor conditions for preservation. By far the biggest sample came from Area D, which was an area of housing and cooking, with associated rubbish scatters. The fishbone contents of four superimposed levels are shown in Table 12.8. The dirty pumice was the upper depositional component of the White House horizon. Below this came the Yellow House, and underneath that again was the Bright Yellow floor, of which considerably less was excavated. The table also includes a number of small samples that could not be reliably associated
206
Kohika
with any of the four major units, and these have been grouped together as ‘Other’. Little can be said about the stability of the fish catch on the basis of these samples and it is unlikely that there was much change in the resource during the few decades in late prehistory when Kohika was occupied. Table 12.8 Fish species frequencies by layer, Area D
Species Shark (verts) John dory Red gurnard Trevally Jack mackerel Kahawai Snapper Tarakihi Labrid Blue cod Stargazer Barracouta Blue mackerel Leatherjacket
Yellow floor (1) + 0.5 4.5 2 2 0.5
Yellow House (1) 2 0.5 2 12 7 2 0.5
White House (1) 2
15.5 8 2.5
Dirty pumice (6) 1 0.5 + 66 1 0.5 +
Other (18) 0.5 0.5 2 11 4 4.5 +
+ 0.5 +
+ 9
0.5 + +
1
0.5
2
In the case of the snapper, kahawai and jack mackerel, estimates of fish size were made using calculations from Nichol (1988), and the resulting size–frequency distributions are presented in Figures 12.1 and 12.2. Algorithms based on the more recent study of larger samples were not available to us at the time (Leach and Boocock 1995, Leach et al. 1996, Leach et al. 1996). Estimates of size for other species were less reliable because of scarcer available reference material and smaller archaeological samples. The blue mackerel were generally from 35 to 50 cm in body length (average meat weight around 1 kg); the barracouta ranged from around 75 to 100 cm in body length, or about 1.5 to perhaps 3.5 kg meat weight (Morphett 1984); and the john dory were all large fish, around 50 cm in body length. One shark vertebra was so small (diameter 2.6 mm), it could have come from a foetal shark. One species that deserves mention because of its absence is eel. Though finds of eel bones in New Zealand sites are rare, it might have been expected that Kohika, surrounded by streams and lake, would produce some. This has proved not to be the case, however, and close examination of the material reveals no trace of their very distinctive bones. Clearly, eels were available locally and survival conditions for their bones were excellent had they been eaten and their bones disposed of in the same way as other fish. Season of occupation
Inferences of seasonality from faunal remains usually depend on the animals being available for only part of the year, and it is a serious difficulty with fish bones that most fish resident in an area are there more or less permanently (Nichol 1988). In general, summer could be expected to be the season when most fishing was done, but winter fishing could have been done in the sheltered estuary of the combined Tarawera and Rangitaiki rivers, Te Awa o te Atua. Two species in the Kohika assemblage suggest the possibility of winter fishing, although this must be tempered by their very low frequency in the site. First, barracouta are apparently somewhat migratory, with most catches in the Bay of Plenty being made between June and September (Nichol 1988:164). The second possible winter
Faunal remains from Kokiha 207 Figure 12.1 Size frequency distributions of snapper, kahawai and jack mackerel, Area D
indicator is john dory. According to Doogue and Moreland (1973:211), these fish are not often hooked, and Reece (1975) does not mention them in his survey of line fishing in Auckland. Their apparent rarity is caused by their feeding habits. They are midwater stalkers that slowly approach their prey before suddenly seizing it in their telescopic jaws. This means that fishermen would have to drop their lines rather close to john dory for them to take the bait. In winter, however, the fish seem to move into shallow water (Doak 1972:24, Ayling and Cox 1982:180), where they are more accessible and from where they can be chased ashore (Doogue and Moreland 1973:211) or even strand themselves (Doak 1972:24).
208
Kohika
Figure 12.2 Size frequency distributions of jack mackerel by layer, Area D
Environments exploited
Although some of the Kohika fish could be caught in a wide range of environments, it seems significant that almost all can be taken in estuaries, in this case Te Awa o te Atua. While they can also be caught in the open sea, relevant species include jack mackerel (Doogue and Moreland 1973, Graham 1974, Bradstock 1985), trevally (Bradstock 1985), kahawai (McDowell 1978, Bradstock 1985) and stargazer (McDowell 1978). Blue mackerel can be taken on the surface close inshore (Ayling and Cox 1982). Apart from snapper, these are all the common species present and in total they represent about 80 per cent of the assemblage. It seems likely, however, that the snapper and most of the relatively scarce species, such as gurnard, blue cod and terakihi, were taken at sea. Snapper are usually the most abundant fish in archaeological sites in northern New Zealand and, although this may reflect their greater availability (Crossland 1976), they were also sought after (Nichol 1988). It is very probable that people sometimes fished for snapper in the open waters of the bay and took specimens of several other species on those trips. However, most fishing could have been done in the estuary.
Faunal remains from Kokiha 209
Methods of capture
Although many species can be caught by different methods, it seems that, in terms of their feeding habits, kahawai, barracouta and blue mackerel imply trolling while snapper strongly suggests line fishing. Nets would have been useful to catch small jack mackerel in the confines of the estuary or in beach seining, so that the few schooling species available there were caught in considerable numbers, with the stargazer being the only incidental catch. There are the remains of nets from the site, along with a small number of bait hooks, but no trolling hooks. Taphonomic issues and butchering patterns
Nichol considered these issues in detail in his 1988 study of the Kohika fishbone assemblage. However, it is sufficient for the present purpose to list only the following observations. • Fishbone did not survive in Area A on top of the sand dune, although it was well preserved where it had been deposited in the peaty lake edge in Areas B, C and D. It must have been present, but was not collected, from the HS Area. • Dogs were kept on the small island site, where they were fed on scraps and scavenged. Some 300 of their faeces were found and there were fishbones in every one of those inspected (Horrocks et al. 2003; see also Chapter 13 of this volume). Dogtooth marks appear on several surviving snapper bones and on one barracouta jaw (Plate 12.6). It could be expected that body part frequencies were distorted by dogs eating the bones. • Head bones were the most common for every species except jack mackerel, where they were outnumbered by cleithra and the case could be complicated by a possible Plate 12.6 Dog-tooth marks on snapper bones and barracouta jaw.
210
Kohika
decline in the relative frequency of heads to cleithra over time in Area D (Table 12.9). Table 12.9 Bone class frequencies for jack mackerel, Area D
Dirty pumice White House Yellow House Bright Yellow floor
Numbers of bones Dentaries Premaxillae 27 4 14 7 24 6 9 4
Cleithra 132 31 12 5
Vertebrae 30 102 39 35
In fish, the cleithra line the rear surface of the gill slit and so belong with vertebrae as body bones. In a discussion of the data, Nichol (1988) suggests that most of the heads of jack mackerel were discarded at the time of capture to improve the eating. His alternative explanation is that many of the jaws of jack mackerel simply decayed in the ground and the rate of attrition was highest in the upper deposit. (The same argument could be made for the relative frequency of premaxillae over dentaries.) However, while this explanation of differential attrition may apply in some other sites (Nichol and Wild 1984), it does not fit the good survival conditions at Kohika. All that remains at Kohika of most of the delicate cleithra are bony nodules close to the ventral end of the bone. Investigation by Nichol (1988:174–9) indicates that probably only one species of jack mackerel, Trachurus novaezelandiae, has the bony nodules on cleithra while Trachurus declivis does not. Summary
On the evidence of the surviving fishbones from Kohika, it is possible that fishing occurred throughout the year. The snapper remains show that people were exploiting the open sea, but most of the fish could have been taken in the sheltered estuary of the two rivers. Many fish could have been taken in nets, while bait hooks can account for most of the remainder. Most species remains were dominated by jawbones, although vertebrae of all common species were present. In the case of jack mackerel, a portion of the cleithrum, behind the gillslit, dominates in later layers of Area D, which should probably be interpreted as evidence that the species was often headed at the time of capture to retain flesh quality. The relative frequency of heads and bodies could be complicated by the feeding of scraps to dogs.
Shellfish
A preliminary analysis of the shellfish from Kohika was made by R. Foster (1980). Data collected at that time included species identifications, weights and numbers of shells by species in each sample, and measurement of lengths of individual shells from the most common species, which in practice meant tuatua and, in two cases, pipi. The present study by R. Nichol involves combining many samples into fewer but larger ones for each of the excavated areas A to D, and also for the different stratigraphic horizons of Area D. The analysis presents species counts by sample and some of the shell length data as graphs. Some attention is given to patterns of exploitation and possible signs of environmental impact. With regard to the identifications, the data presented here are those previously tabulated by Foster. It is assumed on distributional grounds that the tuatua is Paphies
Faunal remains from Kokiha 211
subtriangulata and not the very similar southern tuatua, P. donacina. Freshwater mussel, presumably Hyridella menziesi, is represented by many fragments of skin or periostracum, but shells of the species are absent. Therefore, the few numbers given are significant underestimates. Because the range of species identified from the site is so limited – only ten gastropods and nine bivalves – the contents of each of the areas are considered within a standard table format (Table 12.10) listing all nineteen species (whether or not all species were present in the sample). In each case the counts given are numbers of individuals. For bivalves this was half the number of valves recorded, rounded up in each case. Species identified by Foster (1980) as merely ‘present’ are marked ‘+’ in the tables, or ‘++’ if appearing in more than one sample. (Note that the samples shown in the tables are made up of many smaller excavated samples combined. Therefore, a value in a table of, say, ‘5++’ means that five shells were counted in one sample and the presence of the species concerned was noted in more than one other sample.) Table 12.10 Shellfish from Kohika (MNI)
A5 Paua (Haliotis iris) Catseye (Turbo smaragdus) Cook’s turban (Cookia sulcata) Black nerita (Nerita atramentosa) Ostrich foot (Struthiolaria papulosa) White slipper shell (Crepidula monoxyla) White rock shell (Dicathais orbita) Knobbed whelk (Austrofuscus glans) Volute (Alchithoe arabica) Mudsnail (Amphibola crenata) Green mussel (Perna canaliculus) Queen scallop (Pecten novaezelandiae) Freshwater mussel (Hyridella menziesi) Trough shell (Mactra spp.) Triangle shell (Spisula aequilatera) Pipi (Paphies australis) Tuatua (Paphies subtriangulata) Ringed venus shell (Dosinia anus) Cockle (Austrovenus stutchburyi)
B1 / B4 1 1
C7 1 1
?
D 2+ 119 3+ 3 10+ 1 25 4
+
2 1+
95 1 1
+
1 ++ 1 3 13
++ 1 167
14+ 3 9+ 613 2307 2+ 2+
Note: Foster recorded that the ostrich foot shells from B4 were juvenile.
All four areas of the university excavation produced shellfish remains, though in very different quantities. In Area A, where conditions for preservation were poor, just a few traces of freshwater mussel remained in the firepits of Square A5. All samples from Area B were of much the same age, earlier than the flood alluvium, and are lumped together in this report. Square B1 produced three samples containing a very restricted range and quantity of shells, and Square B4 produced six small samples, all from inside the palisade, where the shell contributed to a build-up of the ground surface during lateral expansion of the site. In Area C, Square C7 was located in a cooking area with continual disturbance and reworking of the deposit. It contained four very small samples, as well as a fifth rather more substantial sample of midden, found below the pumice layer at a depth of 75 cm. No shell was collected from the Historical Society excavations. The great bulk of the shell came from Area D, where most samples can be related to one or other of the living horizons. Samples associated with the White House came
212
Kohika
from Squares D3, D10, D11 and D11 Ext. and the contents are summarised in Table 12.11. Samples associated with the Yellow House came from Squares D1, D2, D3, D6, D8 and D9 Ext. and the material is summarised in Table 12.12. Several samples associated with the Bright Yellow floor were found in Square D8 and in small quantities in Square DD, and this material is summarised in Table 12.13. Table 12.11 Shell samples from the White House, Area D
D3 Paua Catseye Cook’s turban Black nerita Ostrich foot White slipper shell White rock shell Knobbed whelk Volute Mudsnail Green mussel Queen scallop Freshwater mussel Trough shell Triangle shell Pipi Tuatua Ringed venus shell Cockle
D4 ++ 5
8 ++ 1 ++
D10 + 19
D11
Totals ++ 54 ++ 1 4+ 1 5
22 4 1
3
1
1
+ ++ + + 22 + +
+
++
3
1 11
+
++
2
2+
3 291 490 + +
3+ 292+ 526 + +
Note: Foster recorded that most of the pipi in D11 were small or juvenile shells
Table 12.12 Shell samples from the Yellow House, Area D
Paua Catseye Cook’s turban Black nerita Ostrich foot White slipper shell White rock shell Knobbed whelk Volute Mudsnail Green mussel Queen scallop Freshwater mussel Trough shell Triangle shell Pipi Tuatua Ringed venus shell Cockle
D1 2 35 1 1 1
D2 + 4
15
D3
D6
D8
D9
21
2 +
3
+
1
1 1
1
1 +
2 1+
17 1 2 1+
+
2+
8+
+
1+ 10 1004 1
3 2 126
309 111
Totals 2+ 63 1+ 1 5+
2+
8
+
12+
15
4+ 321 1264 1 1+
1+
Faunal remains from Kokiha 213
Table 12.13 Shell samples from the Bright Yellow floor, Area D
Paua Catseye Cook’s turban Black nerita Ostrich foot White slipper shell White rock shell Knobbed whelk Volute Mudsnail Green mussel Queen scallop Freshwater mussel Trough shell Triangle shell Pipi Tuatua Ringed venus shell Cockle
D8
DD
Totals
2++ 1juv 1 1
+
2++ 1 1 1
3 3
3 3
+
+
++ 3 2
+
++ 3 2
511 1 1
6
517 1 1
Interpretation
Comparison of Tables 12.11–13 shows that, with two exceptions, the contents of the various assemblages remain similar through time and across the whole site. One exception is pipi, which appear in high concentrations in two deposits in Area D, one associated with the White House and another from the Yellow House, but are extremely sparse or absent elsewhere. The other exception is ostrich foot, which is sparse except in Square B4, where juveniles are present. The assemblage is dominated by tuatua, a species of the open coast, while the occasional specimens of other bivalves such as scallop, Spisula and Dosinia, and the soft-shore carnivores Struthiolaria and Alcithoe, were probably collected incidentally to the taking of tuatua in bulk around the low-tide mark. The isolated shells of mudsnail, Mactra and cockle suggest the exploitation of limited areas of mudflat, probably around stream mouths, and the presence of numbers of pipi suggests that areas of sheltered soft shore were available. There is also a range of rocky-shore species. Catseye is consistently by far the most abundant of these, while there are small numbers of paua, Cook’s turban, white rock shell and green mussel. Small species such as Nerita and slipper shell might have arrived as passengers on paua or mussels. The rocky-shore species could have been collected from the coast to the west of Matata. Freshwater mussels appear in most deposits, though the numbers of shells cannot be estimated. These could have been obtained from streams and lakes, with Lake Kohika the nearest. The earlier study by Foster (1980) produced lists of shell sizes within each sample. These have been converted to size–frequency distributions for pipi from the White and Yellow houses, and for tuatua from the White, Yellow and Bright Yellow levels (Fig. 12.3). From these it appears that the size of the tuatua hardly changed during the occupation of the site, and this impression is strengthened by an examination of Foster’s summary statistics from other samples not included in Figure 12.3. However, it appears that there was a decline in the size of pipi shells between the Yellow House and the White House. Foster (1980) observed that most of the pipi shells in Square D.11,
214
Kohika
Figure 12.3 Size frequency distributions of pipi and tuatua, Area D
which are associated with the White House, were small or juvenile, and most could not be measured because of damage to the shells. So the decline in the size of pipi in the samples could have been greater than that shown by Figure 12.3. The site was occupied for such a short time that one would not expect marine resources to change very much. The consistency in the size of tuatua could also result from their being gathered from beds over very wide stretches of coast. In the case of pipi, there was a more restricted area of sheltered shore near Kohika where they could have been more exposed to over-exploitation. However, the pipi samples could also have been subject to other sources of behavioural and sampling variation.
Faunal remains from Kokiha 215
Finally, there is the question of the use of shells as implements or ornaments. One obvious possibility is the Cook’s turban shells, which were all recorded as having been reduced to fragments. Pieces of them could have been used in fishhook manufacture (Law 1984). Another possibility, not previously recorded, is that the numbers of juvenile Struthiolaria in Area B, where other shells are distinctly uncommon (Table 12.10), may have been used as necklace units.
Summary
The Kohika faunal assemblage belongs to a narrow period of late prehistory. It is not remarkable except for its large sample of dogs. The mammal bones show that dogs, a whale, a seal, and possibly humans were eaten and their bones made into tools. The bone preservation was generally excellent apart from gnawing by both dogs and rats. The bird species represent forest, swamp, estuary and open coast environments. Their bones represent food and, especially in the case of albatross, tools and possibly trade. A study of the fishbone considered fishing methods, ecology, seasonality, butchering patterns and the weathering of remains. Some fifteen species were identified and, while it is clear that people fished at sea, approximately 80 per cent of the catch could have been taken in Te Awa o te Atua, the estuary of the combined Rangitaiki and Tarawera rivers. Nets and bait hooks could account for most of the fish caught, and both have been found in the site. Eel bones were anomalously absent. A study of shellfish included species identification, the numbers and size of individuals, patterns of exploitation and possible signs of change through time. Some nineteen species of gastropods and bivalves represented open coast, mudflat, sheltered softshore and lake environments. The contents of the various collections remained fairly constant through time and across the site.
References Allo, J.L., 1970. The Maori dog: a study of the Polynesian dog of New Zealand. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Allo Bay-Petersen, J.L., 1979. The role of the dog in the economy of the New Zealand Maori. In A. Anderson (ed.), Birds of a Feather. New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No.11 and BAR International Series 62, pp.165–81. Ayling, T. and G.J. Cox, 1982. Collins guide to the sea fishes of New Zealand. Auckland: Collins. Binford, L.R., 1981. Bones: ancient men and modern myths. New York: Academic Press. Bradstock, M., 1985. Between the tides: shore and estuary life in New Zealand. Auckland: Reed Methuen. Clark, G.R., 1995. The kuri in prehistory: a skeletal analysis of the extinct Maori dog. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Otago. Crossland, J., 1976. Fish trapping experiments in northern New Zealand waters. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 10:511–16. Doak, W., 1972. Fishes of the New Zealand region. Auckland: Hodder and Stoughton. Doogue, R.B. and J.M. Moreland, 1973. New Zealand sea anglers guide. Wellington: Reed. Foster, R., n.d. [1980]. Kohika midden analysis – shells. Unpublished ms, Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. Gaskin, D.E., 1967. The whaling potential of the New Zealand sub-region. Fisheries Technical Report No.16. Wellington: New Zealand Marine Department.
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Graham, D.M., 1974. A treasury of New Zealand fishes. Wellington: Reed. Holdaway, R.N., T.H. Worthy and A.J. Tennyson, 2001. A working list of breeding bird species of the New Zealand region at first human contact. New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 28:119–87. Horrocks, M., G.J. Irwin, M. McGlone, M. Nichol and L. Williams, 2003. Pollen, phytoliths and diatoms in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. Journal of Archaeological Science, 30:13–20. Law, G., 1984. Shell points of Maori two-piece fishhooks from northern New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 6:5–21. Leach, B.F. and A. Boocock, 1995. Estimating live fish catches from archaeological bone fragments of snapper, Pagrus auratus. Tuhinga: Records of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, 3:1–28. Leach, B.F., J.M. Davidson, L.M. Horwood and A.J. Anderson, 1996. The estimation of live fish size from archaeological cranial bones of the New Zealand barracouta Thyrsites atun. Tuhinga: Records of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, 6:1–25. Leach, B.F., J.M. Davidson, L.M. Horwood and S.Mallon, 1996. The estimation of live fish size from archaeological cranial bones of the New Zealand kahawai Arripis trutta. Tuhinga: Records of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, 7:1–20. McDowell, R.M., 1978. New Zealand freshwater fishes. Auckland: Heinemann. Morphett, P., n.d. [1984]. Fish length and meat weight from bone size for barracouta (Thyrsites atun). Department of Anthropology essay, University of Auckland. Nichol, R.K., 1988. Tipping the feather against a scale: archaeozoology from the tail of a fish. PhD thesis, University of Auckland. Nichol, R.K. and C.J. Wild, 1984. Numbers of individuals in faunal analysis: the decay of fish bones in archaeological sites. Journal of Archaeological Science, 11:35–51. Reece, L., 1975. Fish galore. Auckland: Jason. Smith, I. W.G., 1981. Mammalian fauna from an Archaic site on Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum, 18:95–105. Smith, I., 1996. Historical documents, archaeology and 18th century seal hunting in New Zealand. In J.M. Davidson, G.J. Irwin, B.F. Leach, D.M. Brown and A. Pawley (eds), Oceanic culture history: essays in honour of Roger Green. Dunedin: New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, pp.675–88. Taylor, M.A., 1984. Bone refuse from Twilight Beach. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Worthy, T.H., 1999. What was on the menu? Avian extinctions in New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology, 19 (1997):125–60.
13 Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika G.J. Irwin, M. Horrocks, L.J. Williams, H.J. Hall, M.S. McGlone and S.L. Nichol
The excavation of Kohika yielded a large sample of faecal material or coprolites. The results of a battery of tests argue that they are the preserved excrement of Maori dogs rather than humans. Domestic dogs (kuri) were evidently taken to the island by canoe, as they could not have made their own way through kilometres of river and swamp. Dogs were fed on scraps but eaten by people. The overlap in the diets of people and dogs, plus the likelihood that dogs ate human faeces, means that these dog coprolites provide insights into human diet. The microfossil evidence, in particular, shows that prehistoric dog coprolites are virtual time-capsules of palaeoenvironmental and epidemiological evidence. Initially, a sample of specimens was analysed by L. Williams (1980) as an MA research essay. She investigated the macroscopic constituents of diet and their canine origin. Subsequently, sub-samples of all specimens analysed by Williams were sent to H.J. Hall for parasitological analysis, and this chapter presents the complete results of that. Further sub-samples were analysed by M. McGlone for pollen. Recently, further microfossil analyses of additional coprolite samples from Kohika include the study of pollen, phytoliths and bracken-fern starch by M. Horrocks, and of diatoms by S.L. Nichol (Horrocks et al. 2003, Horrocks et al. in press). The palaeoenvironmental evidence confirms that the coprolites are of prehistoric age but follow large-scale deforestation, that a freshwater lake lay adjacent to the site and that some coprolites were deposited during summer, specifically mid-summer. In the matter of diet, the presence of bracken-fern starch and high values for the pollen of puha (Sonchus type) and raupo (Typha) provide direct evidence that these were used as food by Maori, as described in ethnographic times. The archaeological study of coprolites in New Zealand and Polynesia has been confined mainly to macrofossil contents such as bones and plant fibres (Bellwood 1971, 1972, Roe 1969, Stapleton 1969, Williams 1980). A study by McGill (1989) considered biochemical methods to identify the source of coprolites. There has been little research into microfossils, although a study by Byrne (1973) included the analysis of parasite eggs. Parasites, pollen, spores, starch grains, phytoliths and diatoms are among the more likely types of microfossil to be preserved in coprolites, given their innate resistance to decay. The walls of pollen grains and spores of ferns and fern allies are composed of sporopollenin, a durable organic substance (Faegri and Iversen 1989), and opal phytoliths are silica bodies found in some plant tissue (Piperno 1988). Diatoms are microscopic aquatic and sub-aquatic algae common in a range of environments, including streams, ponds, lakes and estuaries (Round et al. 1990, Werner 1977) and, like phytoliths, their preserved remains are composed of silica. 217
218
Kohika
The analysis of coprolites is described in detail by Rheinhard and Bryant (1992), and the use of pollen and phytoliths by Pearsall (1989) and Piperno (1988) respectively. Coprolite pollen analysis has been used extensively in North America to provide information on diet and seasonality (Bryant 1974a, Bryant and Larson 1968, Gremillion and Sobolik 1996, Martin and Sharrock 1964, Riskind 1970, Schoenwetter 1974, Williams-Dean and Bryant 1975). However, there has been relatively little research on phytoliths and diatoms in coprolites (Bryant 1974b, Bryant and Williams-Dean 1975, Horrocks et al. 2003, Kondo et al. 1994) and also relatively little study of the coprolites of domestic dogs, even though their diets overlap with humans.
The Kohika coprolites
At Kohika, more than 300 coprolites were recovered near the swampy margins of the site in Areas B, C and D. None were found in Area A, where conditions were less suited to their survival, although their absence could also reflect a functional difference. Thirty-three came from Square B4, where the site had spread sideways beyond its marine sand core with the continuing deposit of occupational debris. Just a few coprolites were found in Area C, where occupation had been slight. The bulk of them came from Area D, where midden from house floors had spread into swamp outside the palisade. Generally, their distribution was scattered and suggested dogs rather than humans, although a concentration of some 130 coprolites was found in Square DD. At the time of excavation it was thought that this might have been a latrine, but later it became clear that dogs were sometimes restrained outside the palisade in this part of the site. Only a few coprolites were found inside the palisade of Area D between the living floors of artificially laid sand. Initially, 40 coprolites were selected for study, comprising sample numbers 1–18 from Square DD, 19 and 20 from D1, 21–23 from D6, 24 from D5, 25–30 from D3 and 31–40 from B4. Not all of these were analysed. More recently studied were sample D1E4 from Square D1 and sample DD from Square DD. Table 13.1 shows which samples were included in the various aspects of analysis.
Macroscopic analysis Methods
Specimens were cleaned, measured, weighed, photographed (Plate 13.1) and their physical attributes described (Table 13.2). They were then cut open for extraction of samples for various analyses. Those for macrofossil analysis were broken down by a combination of soaking in a solution of trisodium phosphate, supplemented by physical disintegration by hand and instrument, and ultrasonic agitation. Samples were then passed through screens of 2000, 600 and 210 microns and the residue and liquid retained. Material retained by the screens was dried, sorted, identified, quantified and the results were tabulated (Williams 1980). Results
A notable feature of the coprolites is that they were all found to be generally similar. All contained fish bone, charcoal, grit and plant material as the main components. However, there were differences in the relative proportions of these components, and also in the occurrence of additional ones, including fish teeth, marine shell, seeds and hair. Weights and percentages of the components are shown in Table 13.3 and a graph
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 219
Table 13.1 Samples included in coprolite analyses
Sample no. 1 2 3 5 6 7 10 11 12 13 14 17 19 20 22 24 25 31 34 35 37 D1E4 DD
Macroscopic x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
Combustion
x x x
x x
x x x x
x x
Parasites x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
Pollen x
Phytoliths
Diatoms
Starch
x x
x x
x x
x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x
of the percentages in Figure 13.1. Issues of quantification are discussed by Williams (1980:62–7). Fish bone
This was present in all samples and ranged from 86.2 per cent by weight of specimen no.14 to 12.4 per cent of no.35. In ten out of nineteen specimens analysed by Williams (1980), fish bone made up more than 50 per cent of components by weight (Fig. 13.1). Plate 13.2 shows that much of the bone was fragmentary, having been broken, splintered and chewed, and several pieces were arguably larger and sharper than a person would swallow. Table 13.4 indicates the body parts of fish represented by bones for which identification was possible. Head parts were found in ten and fish teeth with fragments of jaw in two; no.5 contained at least fourteen teeth and no.4 only three. The teeth were not identifiable as to species but were unlikely to be snapper. Vertebrae occurred in eleven of nineteen coprolites and spines and rays in almost all. Nine specimens contained cycloid scales
Plate 13.1 Examples of coprolites from Kohika.
15.82
7.77 14.67
27.70
9.52
6.36
20.06
6.43
5.86 16.41
13.10
14.40
6.30
7.14
57.77
16.33
4.65
3
5 6
7
10
11
12
13
14 17
19
20
22
24
34
35
37
1
2
2
0
0
2
2
2 1
1
1
1
1
0
0 0
2
2
4.0
4.7
(7.1)
–
(3.9)
4.5
5.7
3.9 4.3
3.2
5.7
3.2
3.8
10.0
4.6 (4.6)
4.7
4.5
Length (cm) 2 5.5
1.7
2.8
(5.5)
–
(2.9)
3.0
2.4
2.9 3.1
2.8
2.8
2.0
2.7
2.4
2.8 (3.9)
2.6
2.5
mixed
mixed
medium
mixed
mixed mixed
fine
mixed
Internal texture mixed
2.5Y 7/3
2.5Y 7/3 2.5Y 7/3
10R 6/2 2.5Y 7/4 2.5Y 8/3 2.5Y 4/1
2.5Y 7/3 2.5Y 7/3
–
2.5Y 8/3 2.5Y 8/3
2.5Y 7/3 2.5Y 7/2
2.5Y 7/3 2.5Y 7/3
coarse
coarse
mixed
mixed
mixed
mixed
mixed
2.5Y 7/3 2.5Y 7/3 coarse 10YR 6/3 2.5Y 7/2 2.5Y 7/2 coarse 2.5Y7/2 2.5Y 8/2 very fine
2.5Y 7/3 2.5Y 7/3
2.5Y 7/3 2.5Y 7/4
2.5Y 6/3 2.5Y 6/3
2.5Y 7/3
6/3 2.5Y 6/3 7/3 7/3 2.5Y 7/3 6/3 10YR 6/3
2Y 7/3
10YR 2.5Y 2.5Y 10YR
2.5Y 7/2 2.5Y 7/3
Maximum diameter External Internal (cm) 2 colour colour 3.0 10YR 7/3 2.5Y 7/3
Notes: 1. Graded according to number of intact ends 2. Dimensions of malformed stools given in brackets 3. O = oval, C = circular, I = irregular, T = rounded triangle
7.66
Weight Com(g) pleteness 1 24.40 1
Physical attributes of the coprolites analysed
2
Coprolite no. 1
Table 13.2
none
slightly sweet none
none
none
slightly faecal none
none none
none
slightly musty slightly musty slightly faecal none
musty none
none
none
Smell none
C
C
I
–
–
O
O
O O
T
O
C
O
O
O O-T
O
C-O
Crosssection shape 3 O
Curved lengthwise. Flat at one end. Poor surface. Convoluted. Varying diameter. Concave at one end. Good surface. Convolutions. One end narrows quickly into hooked point. Poor surface. Smooth. Two pellets pressed together. Poor surface. Blunt at one end. Good surface. Convoluted. Very hard to cut open. Bullet-shaped, blunt at one end. Surface good. Very smooth. Flat at one end, concave at other. Good surface. Convoluted. Very hard to cut open. Incomplete, no surface. Could be squashed stool or piece of large one. Crumbs only received in laboratory. Excavator’s description: large ovoid but squashed. Very irregular, an amorphous lump. Good surface, hard to break open. Slightly curved lengthwise, otherwise bullet shaped. Concave end. Poor surface. Convolutions. Sharply curved, tapers to bent point at one end. Good surface.
Comments Blunt at smaller end, concave at other but broken. Good surface. Convoluted. Tapered into hook at one end. Good surface. Smooth, hint of convolutions. Curved. Concave at one end. Good surface. Smooth, slight convolutions. Curved. Poor surface. Slight convolutions. Irregular, poss. squashed in middle. Oval at one end, triangular at other. Poor surface. Ovoid but curved back on itself. Good surface. Slight convolutions. Concave at one end. Good surface. Smooth.
220 Kohika
Table 13.3
0.210 0.611 0.456
0.014 4.1 0.008 2.4 0.085 25.2
0.338 100.0
0.904 100.1
Fish bone Fish teeth Plant Charcoal Grit Shell Hair Other Total components
wt 0.720
17
0.442 100.0
wt % 0.231 68.3
1.1
14
+
0.020
+
+ 21.6 51.1
% 27.3
10.5 30.6 22.8
% 36.1
1.997 100.0
19
0.139 100.0
+
+ 0.030 0.071
wt % 0.779 86.2 0.022 2.4 0.005 0.6 0.007 0.8 0.091 10.1
0.035 7.9 0.059 13.4 0.027 6.1
0.020 1.1 0.014 0.7 0.623 32.7
wt 0.038
Coprolite no.
wt % 0.321 72.6
wt % 1.224 64.4
3
1.901 100.0
2
1
+
0.455 100.0
0.031 6.8 0.152 33.4 0.150 33.0
wt % 0.122 26.8
20
0.489 99.9
+
wt % 0.121 24.7 0.035 7.2 0.006 1.2 0.051 10.4 0.276 56.4
5
0.8 2.0 14.3 0.5
% 82.5
2.3 4.0 68.9
% 24.8
0.476 100.0
0.011 0.019 0.328
wt 0.118
22
1.305 100.1
0.010 0.026 0.186 0.006
wt 1.077
6
Components of coprolites, weights and percentages (Williams 1980, Table 5)
Fish bone Fish teeth Plant Charcoal Grit Shell Hair Other Total components
Coprolite no.
1.5 0.008 14.6 0.030 54.2 0.059
% wt 29.8 0.153
10
3.2 0.014 12.0 0.012 23.6 0.154 0.056 +
% wt 61.2 0.146
11
3.7 0.005 3.1 0.083 40.3 0.077 14.7 +
% wt 38.2 0.522
12
0.7 12.1 11.2
% 76.0
34
35
1.0 0.050 1.5 0.097 29.3 0.607
0.1 0.084
0.001
% wt 68.3 0.119 0.3 0.007 1.0 0.011 22.4 0.207 0.1
% wt 76.2 0.487
1.489 100.0 0.713 100.2 0.957
0.005 0.015 0.333 0.001
wt 1.134
24
0.6 1.4 19.2
% 78.8
99.9 0.359 100.0
8.8
5.2 0.002 10.1 0.005 63.4 0.069
% wt 12.4 0.283
37
0.336 100.1 0.250 100.0 0.382 100.0 0.687 100.0
0.005 0.049 0.182
wt 0.100
7
0.6 5.1 45.9
% 48.4
1.594 100.0
0.010 0.082 0.731
wt 0.771
13
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 221
222
Kohika
Figure 13.1 Components of Kohika coprolite samples, percentages by weight
Plate 13.2 Fishbone extracted from coprolite no.24.
and six placoid ones; the latter could have come from a variety of species such as yellowtail, trevally or mackerel. In general, the fish bone looked like scraps fed by people to dogs. However, some bone of very small fish less likely to have been eaten by people may indicate that dogs ate fish guts.
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 223
Table 13.4 Incidence of fish body parts in Kohika coprolites
Coprolite no. Head Pelvic girdle Vertebrae Rays/spines Scales Placoid Cycloid Teeth
1
2 3
5
6 7 10 11
12
13 14
x x x x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x x x
x x x
x
x
x
x x
x
x
x x
x
x x
x
x x
x
x x
17
19 20
22
24
x
x
x x
37
x x x
x
x x
x
x
34 35
x x
x x
x x
x
x
x
Seeds
Nine of nineteen coprolites contained seeds, which were identified by means of a reference collection compiled by I. Lawlor (1979) with the assistance of L. Scott of the former Botany Division, DSIR, Mt Albert, Auckland. Because the seeds have negligible weight, they are quantified in Table 13.5 by number. Lawlor (1979) found remains of all of the same species in his study of the peat swamp adjacent to the site. Carex secta (nigger-head), Cyperus ustulatus (giant toetoe), Eleocharis acuta (spike rush) and Polygonom decipiens (swamp willow weed) all grow in wet or periodically inundated habitats (Lawlor 1979, Mason 1976). Coriaria arborea (tutu), Sonchus littoralis (thistle or puha) and Solanum nodiflorum (small flowered nightshade) all grow in disturbed areas (Eagle 1978). Thus these plants were probably growing near or on the site itself. The use of puha and tutu as food plants is discussed below. Table 13.5 Seeds from Kohika coprolites
Coprolite no. Species Carex secta Coriaria arborea Cyperus ustulatus Eleocharis acuta Polygonum decipiens Solanum nodiflorum Sonchus littoralis Unidentified a Unidentified b Total
2
6
10
1
1
2
11
19
22
24
34
37
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1
3
1 1
3
1
1
1
1
Other plant material
Other plant material was present in all 19 coprolites, but in just four specimens was it more than 5 per cent by weight of total components, and in seven there was less than 1 per cent plant material (Fig. 13.1). The material is represented by fragments of tissue, mostly pieces of leaf and stem. Many of the coprolites contained other unidentified woody tissue; some had what was probably bark and some the remains of nut shell. Five specimens (numbers 2, 17, 19, 22 and 35) contained bracken (Pteridium esculentum) leaf and stem fragments, some of which were charred. Charcoal
The percentage of charcoal in the specimens ranged from 33.4 per cent in no.20 to 0.7 per cent in no.1, with the average being 9.5 per cent by weight of the components
224
Kohika
Plate 13.3 Charcoal extracted from coprolite no.19.
(Fig. 13.1). Considering how light charcoal is for its bulk, these figures represent considerable amounts of charcoal in the coprolites and some pieces were quite substantial (Plate 13.3). Mostly it is burnt woody tissue and represents fuel remains rather than burnt food remains. Again, this indicates ingestion by dogs rather than people. Grit
Grit was found in all specimens, ranging from 6.1 per cent to 68.9 per cent by weight; the average was 33.2 per cent. In five samples, grit comprised more than 50 per cent. The grit was compared with samples of sediments collected from around the Kohika site by I. Lawlor (1979) and was found to be generally consistent with the presence of marine sand of the former dune and reworked tephra. All samples except numbers 2 and 12 also contained small pieces of water-rolled obsidian, a natural component of the local sediments. The simplest explanation for the considerable amounts of grit is dogs eating off the ground. Shell
Three coprolites, numbers 6, 11 and 24, contained fragments of marine shell, and of those all four pieces in no.6 and one of the pieces in no.11 had been burnt. Because of the small size of the fragments, none was identified as to species, although the shell in no.6 is probably bivalve similar to tuatua (Paphies subtriangulata), which is common in the Kohika middens. Hair
Several hairs and other fibres found in the coprolites were probably the result of contamination during analysis, but in one sample a hair was found that was not
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 225
(Williams 1980:82–3). This hair could have been from rat or dog only, but comparison with reference samples did not find a match. However, the characteristics of dog hair can vary from one part of the body to another (Coutts and Jurisich 1973:74). Additional analysis such as DNA characterisation could take the matter further, if it were of sufficient interest. Insects
In four coprolites were the remains of insects, including a thorax from no.1, a possible antenna from no.2, some chitinous material from no.7 and a possible fly pupa case from no.19. Organic component loss-by-ignition tests
Eight coprolites were tested to determine the proportions of the organic and inorganic components. The samples were selected according to apparent variations in coprolite texture, and the results are shown in Table 13.6. This shows that the inorganic component ranges from 77.4 per cent to 85.9 per cent by weight. The percentages of inorganic material are higher and less variable than those for grit (Table 13.3), and it could be inferred that specimens with low values for grit contained larger amounts of inorganic material of finer grain size, such as silt. Further discussion of the test is available in Williams (1980:80–81). Table 13.6 Percentages of inorganic material
Sample no. 2 5 6 7 17 19 34 35 Dry weight (g) 0.5986 1.9177 0.5860 1.8833 1.4999 0.3963 2.7404 2.5685 Combusted weight 0.4632 1.6173 0.4714 1.6095 1.2647 0.3142 2.2821 2.2075 Weight lost 0.1354 0.3004 0.1146 0.2738 0.2352 0.0821 0.4583 0.3610 Inorganic % 77.38 84.34 80.44 85.46 84.32 79.28 83.28 85.95 Variability within coprolites
It is established that coprolites can contain residues from more than one meal and vary in content. Specimen no.19 was selected to test the possibility, as it was a wellformed, long stool that could be expected to exhibit such variation. Two samples of the same weight, 19a and 19b, were taken from each end of the coprolite. The weights and percentages of the identified components are shown in Table 13.7. While the results are basically similar, the proportions of the components in different parts of a single coprolite can vary perhaps as much as different coprolites (from the same context) vary from one another. Further tests for variability in specimens are described in the analysis for pollen (below). Table 13.7 Variation in coprolite no.19
Sample no. Fish bone Plant Charcoal Grit Seeds Fly pupa case Total components
19a weight 0.411 0.078 0.326 0.199 x x 1.014
19b % 40.5 7.7 32.2 19.6 x
weight 0.306 0.130 0.284 0.260 x
% 31.2 13.3 29.0 26.5 x
100.0
0.980
100.0
226
Kohika
Parasite eggs in Kohika coprolites
An initial study by H.J. Hall was included as an appendix in Williams (1980). Hall has recently reviewed that study and the complete results are presented here. Methods
Samples of all nineteen specimens analysed by L. Williams (1980) were received by H.J. Hall in formalin solution. The faecal sediment was sampled at various depths using a pipette and the material transferred to glass microslides. No ova concentration techniques were used. Five microslides for each of the nineteen specimens were prepared and systematically searched with a Leitz SM-Lux laboratory microscope using appropriate lenses. Selected samples were photographed. Results
Two types of parasitic helminth eggs were identified. One coprolite (no.1) yielded one ascarid egg. Two other specimens (numbers 5 and 14) contained eggs of the genus Capillaria hepatica. Ascarid: Toxocara canis
Specimen no.1 yielded one parasite egg whose morphology places it within the nematode family Ascaridoidea, which contains numerous species that parasitise a wide range of vertebrates. The egg is ovoidal and measures 80 x 70 microns (Plate 13.4), and most closely resembles Toxocara canis, an ascarid of dogs that is cosmopolitan in distribution (Faust et al. 1968:235). The eggs of this parasite measure (on average) 85 x 75 microns, while those belonging to the ascarid of cats, T. cati, are a little smaller (on average, 75 x 65 microns). The Kohika specimen exhibited the characteristic pitting of the shell (Plate 13.5) that is shared by both T. canis and T. cati but is not found in Toxocaris, another ascarid found in dogs and cats (Chandler and Read 1961:456). We can eliminate the possibility of T. cati, as cats were not present in prehistoric New Zealand. Plate 13.4 Egg of Toxocara canis.
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 227
Infection by T. canis is acquired by ingesting infective eggs in soil, by eating paranetic hosts, by ingesting larvae passed in the faeces of unweaned pups, or by prenatal infection (Faust et al. 1968:235). In the last case, eggs swallowed by a pregnant bitch travel to the intestines of foetuses, often causing the death of the pups. If the egg recovered from the Kohika material does belong to Toxocara canis, which is very likely, its presence argues most strongly that dogs deposited the coprolites. Plate 13.5 Egg of Toxocara canis, showing characteristic pitting of the shell.
Plate 13.6 Egg of Capillaria hepatica.
228
Kohika
Capillaria hepatica
Sample no.5 yielded large numbers (more than five per slide) of barrel-shaped eggs with opercula at both poles whose shells exhibited radial striations (Plate 13.6). Four others recovered from Sample no.14 were identical in morphology. The eggs on average measured 59 x 30 microns, although the range varied from 56 to 63 microns long by 28 to 32 microns wide. General morphology places them within the group of primitive aphasmid nematodes of the order Trichuridea (Yamaguti 1961). Details identify them as the genus Capillaria and possibly the species C. hepatica. Although the case for C. hepatica in the Kohika specimens cannot be made with absolute certainty, since eggs of some other Capillaria species resemble those of this species (Skjrabin et al. 1957), it remains the most likely proposition given both the morphological detail and the New Zealand context. This species, although chiefly a parasite of rats, has been recovered from a wide range of vertebrates, including rodents, carnivores, insectivores, lagomorphs and primates, including humans (Beck and Beverley-Burton 1968, Skrjabin et al. 1957). Furthermore, it is cosmopolitan in distribution. Capillaria hepatica has an unusual life-cycle. Eggs are deposited in the host’s liver and are liberated only when the host dies. Thus they are released either when the host dies and the liver decomposes, or when the liver is eaten by a carnivore or scavenger and the eggs passed out in faeces (Faust et al. 1968:225). The eggs must be exposed to the air for four to six weeks before development of the infective stage. Mammals become infected only after ingesting embryonated ova that have developed in soil for a period of weeks. Once ingested, the eggs hatch and the larvae travel to the liver, where they mature into adult worms. However, eggs ingested before the infective stage is reached can pass through the gut without causing infection. The species occasionally infects dogs (Stokes 1973) and very rarely has been reported in humans (Cochrane et al. 1957), but its most common hosts are rats and other rodents (Smit 1960, Waddell 1969, Wright 1961). Of the above three mammals at Kohika, the most likely host would have been the rat. Certainly, rats were used as food by Maori and have been recovered from New Zealand archaeological sites (Matisoo-Smith et al. 1998). Polynesian rats were probably infected with C. hepatica when they came to New Zealand. If, on the one hand, dogs ate rat offal, the eggs of this worm would be expected to show up in examinations of dog faeces. If, on the other hand, humans ate rat livers, the eggs would be found in human faeces, and in this case, one would still expect to find the eggs in dog faeces because dogs scavenge human ones. Dogs could become infected with the parasite by ingesting the faeces of other dogs that had eaten dog livers (or infected rat livers). However, dogs would be unlikely to wait long enough for the eggs to reach the infective stage. The conclusion is that, given the triangular human–dog–rat relationship in the Maori way of life, the presence of Capillaria hepatica means that it is most likely the coprolites are dog. However, given the life-cycle of the parasite, its host was probably the rat. Summary
Two taxa of parasitic helminths are represented by eggs in the Kohika coprolites. One is a species of Capillaria, most probably C. hepatica, a common parasite of rats. The other belongs to an ascarid and most closely resembles Toxocara canis, an intestinal roundworm of dogs. The presence of both in this material, in the New Zealand context, points to a canine origin for the coprolites. Although both identifications should be treated with caution until further evidence from similar studies is found in prehis-
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 229
toric New Zealand samples, the result is significant. Not only does it represent the first recorded cases of these parasites in a prehistoric context, it greatly aids the assessment of coprolite origin. The discovery may in future prove to be of value in outlining the etiology and epidemiology of infection by these species throughout the Pacific and Southeast Asian regions.
Pollen analysis Methods
Sixteen coprolites were sampled for pollen analysis. To investigate intra-coprolite pollen variation, two sub-samples (7a and 7b) were taken adjacent to each other from one coprolite, and two more (12a and 12b) were taken from either end of another relatively long (5.7 cm) coprolite. Pollen samples were prepared for analysis by the standard acetylation and hydrofluoric acid method (Moore et al. 1991). Results
In Figure 13.2, the number of each pollen type counted within each sample is given as a percentage of the total in the pollen diagram. M. McGlone analysed fourteen samples (1–37) and M. Horrocks the remaining two (DD and D1E4). The coprolites are generally similar to one another in their pollen assemblages. One or more of four specific pollen types tend to dominate in each sample: puha (Sonchus) type pollen, sedge (Cyperaceae) pollen, raupo (Typha orientalis) pollen and bracken (Pteridium esculentum) spores. Puha-type and raupo occur in extremely high numbers in some samples. Tutu (Coriaria) pollen was also found in significant amounts in several samples. Brassicaceae pollen was found in small amounts in half of the samples. Myriophyllum pollen and Anthoceros spores were found in Samples DD and D1E4. All samples contained microscopic charcoal fragments. In samples DD and D1E4, these fragments included tracheids (a type of wood cell) of manuka (Leptospermum) type. The pollen counts in sub-samples 7a and 7b, from adjacent to one another in the same coprolite, are in close agreement. The pollen counts in sub-samples 12a and 12b, from opposite ends of another coprolite, agree to a lesser extent, with minor differences including more manuka-type pollen, less raupo pollen and no Coprosma or puha-type pollen found in 12a. This is discussed below.
Phytolith analysis Methods
Phytolith and diatom samples (DD and D1E4 only) were prepared for analysis by a combination of methods given in Pearsall (1989). As phytoliths and diatom remains are both composed of silica, they are extracted using the same process. Organic matter is removed with nitric acid and potassium chlorate, the <5 m fraction removed by gravity sedimentation, and the phytoliths and diatoms density-separated with sodium polytungstate. Sponge spicules were recorded with phytoliths but are excluded from the phytolith sum. Results
The two coprolites analysed for phytoliths (D1E4 and DD) are generally similar in their phytolith assemblages (Fig. 13.3). The phytolith sum is dominated by spherical
230
Figure 13.2 Percentage pollen diagram for Kohika coprolite samples
Kohika
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 231
Figure 13.3 Percentage phytolith diagram for Kohika coprolite samples
Figure 13.4 Percentage diatom diagram for Kohika coprolite samples
232
Kohika
verrucose (from trees), elongate (from grasses) and unknown type 1 phytoliths. Phytolithic fragments of fern tissue are present in both samples. Several types of grass phytolith (i.e. the three sheet element types) and sponge spicules present only in D1E4 differentiate the two samples. This is discussed below.
Diatom analysis Methods
These were extracted as for phytolith analysis. Five diatom groups are defined according to life habit after Denys (1991), as follows: benthic, meaning diatoms that live on the floor of an aquatic environment such as a lake or stream bed; epontic, diatoms that live firmly attached to a hard substrate such as a plant, rock or sand grain; tychoplanktonic, diatoms that readily occur in the water column but derive from other habitats; euplanktonic, diatoms that complete their entire life-cycle in the water column; and those of unknown life habit. Results
The two coprolites analysed for diatoms (D1E4 and DD) are generally similar in their diatom assemblages (Fig. 13.4), comprising species that are recognised as freshwater (oligohalobous) types commonly found in lakes and streams of the North Island of New Zealand (Foged 1979). The diatom sum in both samples is dominated by Melosira italica (a tychoplanktonic diatom of benthic origin) and the epontic diatoms Nitzschia amphibia and Cocconeis placentula. Achnanthes hungarica, another epontic diatom found in significant numbers, was present in Sample DD only. Except for the benthic diatom Nitzschia hungarica in Sample D1E4, benthic and euplanktonic species have low values.
Starch and xylem analysis
Starch is a complex insoluble carbohydrate and is the main substance for food storage for plants. It is commonly found in underground rhizomes and tubers. Xylem consists of vascular tissue through which water and minerals are conducted. M. Horrocks carried out starch and xylem extraction by density-separation for two coprolite samples, D1E4 and DD, using the method described in Horrocks et al. (in press). Starch grains from bracken fern were found in both samples. Also present were xylem tracheids matching those of reference bracken rhizomes. Bracken fern has figured largely in theoretical discussions of prehistoric Maori subsistence but this is direct evidence for its use as food. An earlier, less firmly identified instance of fern root from a latrine at Otakanini pa was reported by Bellwood (1971:71). No other starch or xylem types were found in the Kohika coprolites.
Discussion of microfossil results Intra-coprolite variation
It is established that coprolites contain the residues from more than one meal and that there will be variation between coprolites and even between the different ends of the same ones. The macroscopic analysis found that, while the identified components from
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 233
the two ends of coprolite no.19 were generally alike, their relative proportions varied as much as those of different coprolites from Kohika. With regard to the pollen study, and bearing in mind that the sample size was small, the close similarity of adjacent sub-samples from coprolite no.7 suggests that pollen variation within the same area of a coprolite is negligible. Some difference might be expected between the pollen assemblages from either end of a coprolite, and the minor differences between samples 12a and 12b may indicate that this is the case. However, these two sub-samples have low total pollen counts (58 and 145) relative to most other coprolites, so the minor differences found may not be meaningful. A dog origin for the coprolites
The macrofossil and parasite evidence pointed to dogs, and so does the pollen. People ingest pollen almost exclusively from the air they breathe or the food and water they consume. Pollen in the air is restricted largely to wind-pollinated types, and there is a much greater range on the ground because the pollen of animal-pollinated plants settles mostly within a few metres of parent plants. Dogs, by constantly sniffing the ground and eating off it, and grooming themselves with their tongues, produce coprolites that are treasure chests of pollen and other microfossils. Low values for grass pollen in the samples combined with high values for a type of grass phytolith (elongate) provide further evidence for dog origin. As grass pollen is normally produced in abundance and widely dispersed, low values for this pollen type suggest that grasses were not a major component of the local vegetation. The high values for grass phytoliths may indicate deliberate ingestion of grass leaves, and dogs were more likely than people to eat grass (Crowe 1981, Riley 1988). The age of the coprolites
The absence of European pollen, and especially the abundantly produced and widely dispersed pine Pinus and narrow-leaved plantain Plantago lanceolata types (Tauber 1965, Faegri and Iversen 1989), obviously supports a pre-European age, as do low values for grass (Poaceae) pollen (which is shown only for samples DD and D1E4). The relative lack of background pollen from forest trees in Kohika coprolites matches the upper part of the pollen sequence from Square D17 described in Chapter 3, and indicates that they followed widespread deforestation. Several common forest trees, especially beech Fuscospora and rimu Dacrydium cupressinum (McGlone 1988) produce abundant, widely dispersed pollen that could be expected to have been ingested by dogs had it been present. Aspects of diet indicated by the coprolites
Some of the more abundant taxa in the coprolites were used as food by prehistoric Maori (Best 1925, Crowe 1981, Riley 1988), including puha (eaten as leaves and young shoots), raupo (eaten as young shoots, roots and pollen), tutu (petals and juice of petals) and bracken (rhizomes and young fronds). However, questions arise about deliberate as against accidental ingestion and the interaction between humans and dogs. Both raupo and puha pollen are produced naturally in abundance, but the extremely high values for raupo pollen in sample numbers 1 and 6, and for puha-type pollen in sample numbers 19 and 25, would seem to preclude accidental ingestion as background pollen. The fact that neither of these two pollen types is well dispersed strengthens this supposition. Furthermore, percentages for all pollen types from the entire coprolite assemblage are in close agreement with the pollen diagram of the sedimentary core from Square D17 – with one major exception, puha. This type comprises
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31 per cent of the total pollen content of the coprolites, but only 1 per cent of that in the swamp, lending weight to our suggestion that its high frequency in the coprolites is a result of eating puha plants and/or human faeces. We take the discovery of bracken-fern starch grains and bracken-fern xylem tissue as evidence for human preparation and consumption of fern root followed by recycling by dogs. The contention that bracken fronds were ingested as food could be supported by the presence, albeit in small amounts, of fern phytoliths in the two coprolites analysed for this, but whether the fronds were eaten by people, or only by dogs, is an open question. However, there is a strong likelihood that some of the bracken spores in the coprolites were ingested as background pollen, because bracken forms extensive stands after repeated burning (McGlone 1983) and produces abundant spores that are well dispersed in the atmosphere (McGlone 1988). The microfossil evidence for ingestion of particular plants at Kohika is supported by macrofossil evidence (Williams 1980). A puha Sonchus littoralis seed was found in sample no.19, and tutu Coriaria arborea seeds in sample numbers 2, 6 and 10. In addition, fragments of bracken leaf and stem were found in numbers 2, 17, 19, 22 and 35. It is possible that some of the raupo pollen may have been consumed incidentally by dogs drinking swamp water. This is supported by the coinciding presence of swampderived diatoms and the pollen of Myriophyllum (an aquatic plant) and sedge, which do not figure significantly in Maori diet. The presence of traces of Brassicaceae pollen in half of the coprolite samples may indicate that plants of this family were part of the local diet. If this was the case, the likely candidate is poniu (marsh cress) Rorripa palustris, the leaves of which were eaten all year by prehistoric Maori (Crowe 1981). As this plant is insect-pollinated and produces relatively small amounts of pollen that is not well dispersed in the atmosphere, its presence as only a trace if ingested along with parent plants would not be unexpected. The charcoal fragments in the coprolites are most likely a result of eating food cooked over an open fire, and the manuka-type tracheids present in the charcoal of Samples DD and D1E4 suggest the use of this shrub or small tree as fuel. The larger pieces of charcoal are surely the result of dog scavenging. As the phytolith flora of New Zealand and elsewhere (Pearsall 1989) has been little researched compared with the pollen flora, the phytolith evidence from the Kohika coprolites is more difficult to interpret. As with the pollen, an uncertain but probably greater proportion of the phytoliths in the coprolites may be background phytoliths. According to Piperno (1988), phytoliths may sometimes comprise as much as 50 per cent of topsoil volume, so the potential for them to become wind-borne dust is high. Thus they could be expected to be ingested as background phytoliths by dogs in greater amounts than pollen and – unlike pollen, which is released seasonally – at all times of the year. This is probably the case for one of the more abundant phytolith types, spherical verrucose, in the two coprolites analysed. According to Kondo et al. (1994), spherical verrucose is found in New Zealand in the leaves and wood of beech (Fuscospora) and rewarewa Knightia excelsa, and in the rushes Empodisma minus and Leptocarpus similis, none of which figure in Maori diet. The presence of sponge spicules in Sample D1E4 reflects the close proximity of the site to the sea. Seasonality of the coprolites
Coprolites can be considered as snapshots of periods of time no longer than a few days and they provide evidence for the season of site occupation. Puha plants release their pollen from late winter to autumn, or August to April (Allan 1961), so it is likely
Evidence for diet, parasites, pollen, phytoliths, diatoms and starch grains in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika 235
that the coprolites studied belong to this rather broad span. The presence of significant proportions of tutu pollen in some samples may narrow this down to spring–summer, or October to March (Allan 1961), and the presence of raupo pollen constrains this further, suggesting that they were deposited in mid-summer, or December and January (Allan 1961). In the American southwest, Williams-Dean and Bryant (1975) found bulrush pollen of the same genus as raupo (cattail Typha latifolia) in human coprolites from the site of Antelope House, and suggested that some of it could have come from eating fresh cattail heads or from eating pollen in pure form. However, as various parts of puha and raupo plants were eaten all year by Maori (Crowe 1981, Riley 1988), it is possible that pollen of these taxa adhering to parent plants would have been ingested if the plants were eaten after the flowering period. Indications for the local environment
Rheinhard and Bryant (1992) suggest caution when looking for palaeoenvironmental signals in pollen assemblages in human coprolites because humans are highly mobile and selective. However, on the island of Kohika, the dogs were effectively marooned for most of the time. The close agreement of the percentages of each pollen type (except puha) in the entire coprolite sample with the general pollen diagram from Square D17 indicates that dog coprolites are potentially valuable in providing detailed evidence of palaeoenvironmental conditions. The paucity of tree pollen and the abundance of bracken spores suggest a deforested landscape. So does the presence of Anthoceros (a hornwort) spores, because this taxon typically colonises freshly exposed soils. However, the possibility that some of the coprolites were deposited in winter, when forest trees and many other types of plant would not have been releasing pollen, cannot be ruled out entirely. Significant amounts of raupo, sedge and Myriophyllum pollen in the Kohika coprolites indicate that wetlands containing these taxa were within the habitat range of the individuals who deposited them. This was most likely the swamp directly adjacent to Kohika. Diatoms provide further clues as to the nature of the swamp system. The assemblages are characterised by two life-habit groups that signal a common pH level for the local water source. First, the dominance of the freshwater tychoplanktonic taxon Melosira italica indicates alkaliphilous (or base-rich) to circumneutral waters with a pH range of 7–8 (Denys 1991). Second, the dominant taxa within the epontic group, Nitzschia amphibia, Cocconeis placentula and Achnanthes hungarica, are also known to prefer alkaliphilous waters (Denys 1991). Because these groups comprise a major proportion of the diatom sum, the Kohika swamp was probably weakly alkaline. As these species also indicate algal growth on firm surfaces such as plants, sand grains or rocks, it is likely that the water source was vegetated by aquatic plants (a notion supported by the coinciding presence of Myriophyllum pollen) and possibly had a sandy substrate. Both marine sand deriving from a former shoreline and sandy tephra are locally abundant.
Summary
It is clear that analysis of dog coprolites can provide evidence that bears on prehistoric human diet, site environment, chronology, season of occupation and health. At Kohika the macrofossil evidence indicates that fish and certain gathered plants were part of the regular diet. There is microfossil evidence for bracken fern, puha, raupo and marsh cress. It is now known that dogs in New Zealand prehistory suffered
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infestations of an identified round worm, and the rat was host to another specific parasite. By the time of occupation of Kohika, much of the forest had been cleared and there was lake and swamp in the immediate vicinity. Many of the coprolites belonged to summer and some of these to mid-summer.
References Allan, H.H., 1961. Flora of New Zealand, Vol. I. Wellington: Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. Beck, J.W. and M. Beverley-Burton, 1968. The pathology of Trichuris, Capillaria and Trichinella Infections. Helminthological Abstracts, 37:1–26. Bellwood, P.S., 1971. Fortifications and economy in prehistoric New Zealand. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 37:56–95. Bellwood, P.S., 1972. Excavations at Otakanini Pa, South Kaipara Harbour. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 2:259–91. Best, E., 1925. Maori agriculture. Wellington: Dominion Museum Bulletin No.9. Bryant, V.M., Jr, 1974a. Pollen analysis of prehistoric human feces from Mammoth Cave, Kentucky. In P. Watson (ed.), Archeology of the Mammoth Cave area. New York: Academic Press, pp.203–9. Bryant, V.M., Jr, 1974b. Prehistoric diet in southwest Texas: the coprolite evidence. American Antiquity, 39:407–20. Bryant, V.M., Jr, and D.L. Larson, 1968. Pollen analysis of the Devil’s Mouth Site, Val Verde County, Texas. In B. Sorrow (ed.), The Devil’s Mouth Site: the third season. Austin: Papers of the Texas Archaeological Salvage Project, No.14, pp.57–70. Bryant, V.M., Jr, and G. Williams-Dean, 1975. The coprolites of man. Scientific American, 232:100–9. Byrne, D.R., 1973. Prehistoric coprolites. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Chandler, A.C. and C.P. Read, 1961. Introduction to parasitology. New York: John Wiley. Cochrane, J.C., L. Sagorin and M.G. Wilcocks, 1957. Capillaria hepatica infection in man. South Africa Medical Journal, 31:751–5. Coutts, P. and M. Jurisich, 1973. Canine passengers in Maori canoes. World Archaeology, 5:2– 85. Crowe, A., 1981. A field guide to the native edible plants of New Zealand. Auckland: Collins. Denys, L., 1991. A check-list of the diatoms in the Holocene deposits of the western Belgian coastal plain with a survey of their ecological requirements. Service Géologique de Belgique, Professional Paper 1991/2, p.246. Eagle, A., 1978. Eagle’s 100 shrubs and climbers of New Zealand. Auckland: Collins. Faegri, K. and J. Iversen, 1989. Texbook of pollen analysis. Chichester: John Wiley. Faust, E.C., P.C. Beaver and R.C. Jung, 1968. Animal agents and vectors of human disease. Philadelphia: Lea and Febiger. Foged, N., 1979. Diatoms in New Zealand, the North Island. Bibliotheca Phycologica, 47. Vaduz: J. Cramer. Gremillion, K.J. and K.D. Sobolik, 1996. Dietary variability among prehistoric foragerfarmers of eastern North America. Current Anthropology, 37:529–39. Hall, H.J., 1978. Antelope House: a paleoscatological perspective. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Chicago. Horrocks, M., G.J. Irwin, M. McGlone, S. Nichol and L. Williams, 2003. Pollen, phytoliths and diatoms in prehistoric coprolites from Kohika, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. Journal of Archaeological Science, 30:13–20. Horrocks, M., G.J. Irwin, M. Jones and D.G. Sutton, in press. Starch grains and xylem of sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) and bracken (Pteridium esculentum) in archaeological deposits from northern New Zealand. Journal of Archaeological Science. Kondo, R., C. Childs and I. Atkinson, 1994. Opal phytoliths of New Zealand. Lincoln: Manaaki Whenua Press.
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Large, M.F. and J.E. Braggins, 1991. Spore atlas of New Zealand ferns and fern allies. New Zealand Journal of Botany (Suppl.). Wellington: SIR Publishing. Lawlor, I., 1979. Palaeoenvironment analysis: an appraisal of the prehistoric environment of the Kohika Swamp Pa (N68/140), Bay of Plenty. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. McGill, C.A., 1989. The identity of defecators in prehistoric coprolite studies: towards a solution by biochemical research. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Otago. McGlone, M.S., 1983. Polynesian deforestation of New Zealand: a preliminary synthesis. Archaeology of Oceania, 18:1–10. McGlone, M.S., 1988. New Zealand. In B. Huntley and T. Webb (eds), Vegetation history. Dordrecht: Kluwer, pp.557–99. Martin, P.S. and F.W. Sharrock., 1964. Pollen analysis of prehistoric human feces: a new approach to ethnobotany. American Antiquity, 30:168–80. Mason, R., 1976. Aquatic weeds. In J. Healy (ed.), Identification of weeds and clovers. Wellington: Editorial Services. Matisoo-Smith, E.G., G.J. Irwin, R.M. Roberts, J.S. Allen, D. Penny and D.M. Lambert, 1998. Patterns of prehistoric human mobility in Polynesia indicated by mitochondrial DNA from the Pacific rat. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA, 95:15145–50. Moore, P.D., J.A. Webb and M.E. Collinson, 1991. Pollen analysis. London: Blackwell. Pearsall, D.M., 1989. Paleoethnobotany: a handbook of procedures. San Diego: Academic Press. Piperno, D.R., 1988. Phytolith analysis: an archaeological and geological perspective. San Diego: Academic Press. Rheinhard, K.J., and V.M. Bryant Jr, 1992. Coprolite analysis: a biological perspective on Archaeology. In M.B. Schiffer (ed.), Archaeological method and theory. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, pp.245–88. Riley, M., 1988. Maori vegetable cooking: traditional and modern methods. Paraparaumu: Viking Sevenseas NZ. Riskind, D.H., 1970. Pollen analysis of human coprolites from Parida Cave. In B. Alexander (ed.), Archaeological excavations at Parida Cave, Val Verde County, Texas. Austin: Papers of the Archaeological Salvage Project, No.19, pp.89–101. Roe, N., 1969. Archaeological investigations. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Auckland. Round, F.E., R.M. Crawford and D.G. Mann, 1990. The diatom: biology and morphology of the genera. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Schoenwetter, J., 1974. Pollen analysis of prehistoric human feces from Salts Cave, Kentucky. In P. Watson (ed.), Archeology of the Mammoth Cave area. New York: Academic Press, pp.203–9. Skrjabin, K.I., N.P. Shikhobalova and I.V. Orlov, 1957. Trichocephalidae and Capillariidae of animals and man and the diseases caused by them. In K.I. Skrjabin (ed.), Essentials of nematodology, Vol. VI. Moscow: Academy of Sciences of the USSR (translated from Russian in 1970 by A. Birran for Israel Program for Scientific Translation, Jerusalem). Smit, J.D., 1960. Capillaria hepatica infestation in a dog. Onderdestepoort Journal of Veterinary Research, 28:473–8. Stapleton, A.M., 1969. The survival of organic residues after human consumption. Unpublished research essay, University of Otago. Stokes, R., 1973. Capillaria hepatica in a dog. Australian Veterinary Journal, 49:109. Tauber, H., 1965. Differential pollen dispersion and the interpretation of pollen diagrams. Geological Survey of Denmark II, Series 89. Waddell, A.H., 1969. Methyridine in the treatment of experimental Capillaria hepatica infection in the rat. Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, 63:63–5. Webb, C.J., W.R. Sykes and P.J. Garnock-Jones, 1988. Flora of New Zealand, Vol. IV. Christchurch: Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. Werner, D., 1977. The biology of diatoms. Berkeley: University of California Press. Williams, L., 1980. Kohika coprolites. Unpublished MA research essay, University of Auckland.
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Williams-Dean, G. and V.M. Bryant Jr, 1975. Pollen analysis of human coprolites from Antelope House. The Kiva, 41:97–111. Wilson, S.M., 1985. Phytolith analysis at Kuk, an early agricultural site in Papua New Guinea. Archaeology of Oceania, 20:90–97. Wright, K.A., 1961. Observations on the life cycle of Capillaria hepatica (Bancroft 1893) with a description of the adult. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 38:167–82. Yamaguti, S., 1961. Systema Helminthum, Vol.III: The Nematodes of Vertebrates, Parts 1 and 2. New York: Interscience.
14 Kohika as a late northern Maori lake village G.J. Irwin
The excavations at Kohika make an important contribution to our understanding of late prehistoric Maori culture in the North Island, because of the great diversity of evidence recovered from a wetland environment and the amount of specialist analysis done on the material. This chapter reviews information about environment, settlement pattern, site stratigraphy, material culture, economy, household structure and site function. The aim is to present an integrated picture of Kohika as a late northern Maori lake village in the Bay of Plenty.
Environment
Kohika was conveniently located for coastal travel by canoe, and lay near the junction of the Tarawera and Rangitaiki rivers, which were at the start of routes inland. It had ready access to the diverse foods of coastal and inland dunes, lakes, backswamp lowlands and peat swamps, levee systems of rivers and floodplains of alluvium. Geomorphology shows that this landscape was formed over millennia by continuing processes of coastal progradation, land subsidence, alluvial infilling, swamp growth and the formation of shallow freshwater lakes. Sudden events included occasional tephra showers and earthquakes, and frequent floods. The people of Kohika lived in an environment of hazards that gave no warning. There was an earthquake centred on the nearby Matata Fault while people lived at Kohika, and they abandoned the village following a flood. In the short span of recorded history, Mt Tarawera erupted in 1886, European settlers were driven from the plains by the 1892 flood, and the Edgecumbe earthquake occurred in 1987. Vegetation history shows that the pre-human Bay of Plenty lowland was densely forested, and diverse scrub and forest grew on the levees and sand dunes of the Rangitaiki Plains. Long before Kohika was settled, repeated Maori burning changed the natural vegetation to scrub and fernland, and wetlands covered with raupo, reed, sedge and fern. Destruction of forest improved access to the hinterland and assisted the spread of valued carbohydrate foods, such as bracken fern, ti and tutu. With a favourable climate, cultivation took place on fertile lowland soils, the dunes and the fans of the rivers and streams flowing on to the plains. However, plant remains recovered from the archaeological site indicate continuing use of remaining forest patches. Freshwater swamp resources, such as flax, raupo, puha, fish and water birds, were also important, and some of these were increased and made more accessible by continued burning. Marine resources were available on the adjacent coast, and many of the fish species found at the site could have been caught in Te Awa o Te Atua, the estuary of the combined Tarawera and Rangitaiki rivers.
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Settlement pattern
The distribution of archaeological sites in this part of the Bay of Plenty shows that Maori generally preferred to live on the coast, especially near harbours, or at inland sites with good gardening soil, defensible uplands and access to rivers. What is unusual about Kohika is its setting. Only a small number of sites is known in the interior of the Rangitaiki Plains (including pa dating from the musket wars), and Kohika is the only recorded site of its kind. Certainly, there cannot have been many others.
Site stratigraphy and age
Excavation involved unravelling natural sediments and cultural deposits. Kohika was a remnant of the 2000 BP shoreline and had a core of dune sand. The Taupo, Kaharoa and Tarawera tephras were present, plus the Taupo sea-rafted pumice. These had been mixed into the soil of the dune but survived intact as beds in the surrounding swamp, where they were interstratified with peats, silts and diatomaceous earth. In the peat around the site, a layer of cultural material occurred between the Kaharoa and Tarawera tephras in the upper part of the deposit. This ended when a band of alluvium was carried in by a local flood. Initial investigations by members of the Whakatane and District Historical Society were followed by University of Auckland excavations of Areas A–D. Area A was on top of the mound. Areas B, C, D and the HS Area all reached the swamp edge, which enabled close stratigraphic integration. Area B had encroached over the natural swamp stratigraphy by the spread of sediment and occupation debris from around Area A. Part of Area C was located in the swamp, where people never lived, and the remainder on the mound, where it was similar to Area A. Area D was low-lying and had three superimposed artificial floors, with houses and other buildings on them. The floor of a house built on the Yellow House horizon faulted during an earthquake, and that house was replaced immediately by another, on the White House floor. The later house was still standing at the time of the flood. Our reconstruction for the HS Area suggests a similar situation to Area D. A Bayesian analysis of the radiocarbon dates shows that Kohika was probably occupied during the second half of the 17th century. However, geomorphological and archaeological data suggest a more restricted period of one to two human generations.
Material culture
The comprehensive range of artefacts found, all in close association and from a restricted period of time, provides a detailed picture of late Maori culture in the Bay of Plenty. This has implications for other parts of the North Island. Wooden artefacts
These provide insights into several aspects of life. Some artefacts were finely made and reflect social value but others were casually made for day-to-day use. The collection of food is indicated by bird spears, digging and weeding tools, and the preparation of food by beaters and bowls. Woodworking is represented by adze and chisel handles; wedges and wood chips show that many wooden items were made on the site. There were many fibre-working tools, including thread reels and net gauges. Canoes, complete with thwarts, paddles and bailers, were the means of transport. Weapons were
Kohika as a late northern Maori lake village 241
absent, apart from javelins or darts, but palisade posts and coils of lashing vine reflect defence. Items of status, ornamentation, religion, art and play were represented by carved house parts, hair combs, spinning tops and a flute. Houses and pataka
There was one elaborately carved house made of dressed planks as well as other more simply constructed pole-and-thatch sleeping houses with minor decoration. While the prehistoric status of pataka has been uncertain, they were present at Kohika. The New Zealand climate and the availability of suitable trees seem to have favoured the development of well-insulated houses sometimes built of squared timbers and planks. The timbers from the site reveal the concealed methods by which superior houses were assembled and lashed together, which helps explain gaps in the ethnographic literature. The masking of construction details by adopting techniques that resemble those used in canoe-building may have contributed to the persistence of the traditional meeting house into modern times. Woodcarving and carving styles
Carving signifies religion and world-view, as well as art. Very few prehistoric or early contact-period stone-tooled carvings are documented for the Bay of Plenty, but the people of Kohika possessed a rich and varied tradition of woodcarving. Within the assemblage, the work of at least four individual carvers can be distinguished. The discovery of a prehistoric house with four poupou, a poutahuhu and poutokomanawa, all carved by the one artist, is exciting. Yet, while his carving style was distinctive, it cannot be closely linked to any other known early styles from the Bay of Plenty and East Coast, whether from Ngati Awa or further afield. This may suggest that the specific tribal styles of the Bay of Plenty are a more recent development. One other carver may have had connections with the Hauraki area. It seems likely that the concept of carved houses was widespread in late prehistory. They may have existed at comparable settlements, although dryland archaeological sites are unlikely to produce the evidence. Moreover, the relative isolation of regions and communities probably encouraged regional divergence of carving styles. Later on, the geographically variable stimulus of European contact would lead to other changes. We are unable to tell whether any of the carved timbers from the swamp (excluding the six by the single carver mentioned above) came from pataka, but this is possible. One piece of fretwork carving, KOH345, could be from a canoe, and a carved paddle was found in the same (HS) area. It is also considered likely that some of the roofed storage pits in Area A had carvings over the doorways, but the timbers from this dry part of the site did not survive. Fibre
The waterlogged assemblage included nets and cordage, both two-plied and braided. A rope-making technique identified as ‘two-ply spiral-wrapped’ appears to be unrecorded elsewhere. Woven items included both fine twill work and wider plaiting. Miscellaneous artefacts
A small assemblage of artefacts made of bone, tooth, pumice and pounamu provides useful comparisons with other late sites in the Bay of Plenty and elsewhere. Kohika had only a narrow range of forms confined to a relatively short period of time. Obsidian
Most of the obsidian came from Mayor Island and people at Kohika had either direct
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access to the island or close contact with its residents. Only a very small quantity of grey obsidian came from Maketu and Taupo. Maketu pebbles could have been picked up on the way to or from Mayor Island, and were found mainly in Area A, with a few pieces in Area B. The Taupo artefacts do not seem to have been introduced to the site as raw material, but appear to be tools discarded or lost by individuals. They were most frequent in Area B, with smaller numbers in Areas A and D, and just a single piece found in the HS Area. This may indicate late prehistoric social relationships between people in the Rangitaiki Plains (specifically, the people of Area B at Kohika) and Taupo, as reported in historic times by the missionary T.S. Grace. The distribution of obsidian in the site presents us with the further possibility that one of the Kohika households was more involved in obsidian trade than the others. A total of approximately 20.5 kg of obsidian was recovered from the site: 2.63 kg from Area A, 2.74 kg from Area B, 0.01 kg from Area C, 2.76 kg from Area D and 12.19 kg from the HS Area containing the carved house. Many of the largest flakes came from around the carved house, and some unworked (and unweighed) blocks were souvenired by visitors. The abundant large flakes in the HS area indicate where large blocks of obsidian were initially worked. They may represent a cache of large flakes stored at the site, but more probably were intended for trade. The large Kohika assemblage suggests that obsidian was reduced in a systematic manner. While there is little evidence that flakes were subsequently shaped to produce particular tool forms, larger flakes tended to be used more frequently, giving rise to macroscopic edge-damage. The separate areas of the university excavations display different concentrations of flakes and debitage, suggesting that the material was worked primarily in Areas B and D, and that a higher proportion of large flakes was used in Area A. Weapons
The only class of portable artefacts not found at Kohika was weapons. Given the scale of excavation and artefact recovery, it is likely that the absence of weapons was genuine and not the result of sampling error. The number of adzes found also seems anomalously low.
The economy
The resources of the environment provide the context for the study of diet. The wetland conditions at Kohika allowed the survival of food remains such as gourd shell, seeds and coprolites. The waterlogged artefact assemblage provides rich evidence for food procurement and preparation. Faunal remains
The faunal assemblage is not remarkable except for its large sample of dogs. Mammal bones show that dogs, a whale, a seal and possibly humans were eaten, and their bones made into tools. The preservation was generally excellent, apart from gnawing by both dogs and rats. Dogs would also have supplied teeth and skins. The bird bones represent food waste, occasional artefacts and, in the case of albatross, possibly trade. Some fifteen species of fish were identified and, while it is clear that people fished at sea, some 80 per cent of the catch could have been taken in the river estuary. Nets and bait hooks could account for most of the fish caught, and both have been found in the site. Eel bones were anomalously absent. Most of the fish could have been taken all year round, and the estuary would have been sheltered in winter. Some nineteen
Kohika as a late northern Maori lake village 243
species of shellfish found represented open coast, mudflat, sheltered soft-shore and lake environments, and the remains were fairly constant through time. Coprolites
Various analyses of dog coprolites provide evidence for human diet, site environment, season of occupation and health. The macrofossil evidence indicates that dogs ate scraps and that fish and gathered plants were part of the regular human diet. There is microfossil evidence for bracken fern, puha, raupo and marsh cress. It is now known that dogs in New Zealand prehistory suffered infestations of a roundworm, and the rat was host to another parasite. There are indications that much of the forest had been cleared and that there was lake and swamp in the immediate vicinity. Many of the coprolites belonged to summer, and some of these to mid-summer.
Household layout and composition
Some of the most striking remains were houses. Drawing the strands of other evidence together makes a compelling case for the existence of households, which are archaeological units that clearly had a social dimension (e.g. Davidson 1984, Kirch and Green 2001). One was found in Area D and fully exposed by areal stripping. Members of the Historical Society encountered another in their Squares 1 and 2, although this was not properly understood until later. The excavation of Area B intruded on part of a third one. The excavations elsewhere documented other aspects of occupation, but not households. The three known households were set some distance apart around the northern and eastern sides of Kohika, where the lake reached the former dune and canoes could land. Area D was located in a small natural embayment that provided shelter for moored and beached canoes (Fig. 4.1). In the HS Area an irregular shoreline useful for canoe landing was indicated by the excavations of Squares C1 and C12, and there were two small islets of relict dune in the lake adjacent to Area B. There was room for other households on the site, although any in the southwestern area, which was swamp at the time, could not have been approached by canoe except along meander channels. The one activity not found in these low-lying areas was underground storage, because any pits would have been flooded. Pits and bins were found in Area A, an elevated central part of the site, where there was also extensive cooking activity with possible fences for shelter. No buildings were found on top of the mound, although they could have existed in areas not investigated. However, no artefacts, apart from obsidian pieces, were found in Area A, which reduces the likelihood that households were located there. The household in Area D
The floor plans and timber remains of two successive pole and thatch houses with minor decoration (six items) were found in Area D, one house having been rebuilt immediately above the other without delay (there may have been an earlier building as well). The excavated plans of this household are shown in Figures 4.15 and 4.16. There were floor plans and timbers from cooking shelters that stood beside the houses. Pataka were represented only by timbers: KOH231 was a ladder, KOH19 and 20 an epa tied to a flashing, KOH32 a possible epa, and KOH34–36 three rafters much too short for the house floors. Figure 14.1 is a general schematic reconstruction of the layout of Areas D and HS, drawn by R. Wallace and based on the excavated evidence. In the foreground is Area
Figure 14.1 A schematic view northwards over Area D across the lake to the dunes and the sea. In the left foreground is a reconstruction of Area D during the Yellow House horizon. The houses, canoes, nets and racks on the right represent the artefacts and building timbers found in the Historical Society Area. The palisade follows the topography around the lake. The lakeshore vegetation of raupo, flax and cabbage trees with patches of kahikatea and kanuka scrub is based on the pollen record. The roofed pit and two small covered bins in the bottom right were actually found in Area A.
244 Kohika
Kohika as a late northern Maori lake village 245
D, with the palisade running approximately north–south, and showing the Yellow House with its back to the lakeshore and against the palisade. The house faces east and its artificially laid sand floor extends on both sides, as well as for several metres in front. Sheltered from the lake on the southern side of the house were cooking ovens and the remains of huts. The decorated front of the house faces an open space, with no evidence for buildings, and with ritual significance as implied by ethnohistorical literature. (Note that the roofed pits and bins at the right of Figure 14.1 were actually located in Area A, and not in D.) The actual location of the pataka in Area D is unknown and in Figure 14.1 is simply a matter of guesswork. However, its presence in the vicinity is indicated by distinctive wooden parts. Canoes and canoe parts were found in the area, both inside and outside the palisade, and there was most likely an entrance in the palisade. Among the wooden artefacts various ko, spades and weeders indicate gardening, while spears show hunting. Bowls and fern-root pounders reveal food preparation. Fibre-working tools, thread reels and net gauges show that craft activities took place in the household and among the fibre items were the remains of kits, fishing nets and ropes. Spinning tops and possibly darts show leisure activities and where there were toys there were presumably children and families. Other artefacts in Area D included a pendant made from a human tooth, three one-piece fishhooks and a blank of human bone, a bird-bone awl, two dog-bone chisels/awls and a chip from the corner of a pounamu adze. Much obsidian-working and woodworking, very possibly including canoe-building, took place on the artificial sand floors of Area D. There were a very finely made canoe bow, numerous canoe seats, paddles, a bailer and lengths of rope. At the swampy edge of the household there were food and other organic remains. Concentrations of dog faeces in particular places outside the palisade suggest that dogs sometimes gathered or were restrained there. Historical Society Area
Our reconstruction of the Historical Society data suggests that the carved house stood in the vicinity of Squares 1 and 2. Many of the contents were of fine quality and the context implies occupants of substance and rank. Three timbers identified as being from pataka came from Square 1, two from Square 2, three have no provenance and one was found in Square 4. As with Area D, the inventory of personal and domestic items provides evidence for art, craft and leisure. Among the valuable items from the same area as the house were a hei tiki pendant of human bone, two wooden hair combs and a possible plain wakahuia lid. Toys included spinning tops. Of the six darts found at Kohika, the three found here included the only barbed or carved ones (KOH120 and 121). Craft items included three fibre-working tools and a folded, finely plaited mat. Domestic items included two wooden bowls, one with a pouring spout, and a fern-root beater. Hunting tools were represented by many pieces of bird spear, including one two metres long, that did not survive intact. Gardening tools included a ko, a ko footrest, the carved top of a possible ceremonial ko, two other digging tools and a shaft-end knob. There was a carved pumice kumara god. Also found in the vicinity of the carved house in Squares 1 and 2 were the largest pieces of obsidian on the site, which suggests that someone living in the house had an important role in its acquisition and trade. The Historical Society’s notes record ‘barrowloads’ of wood chips in the squares further from the house. Thus there was a basic separation of obsidian storage and working, possibly in or near the house, and a zone of woodworking nearby. Beside the house at the lakeshore (in Squares 1 and 2) were parts of two canoes,
246
Kohika
one an unfinished bow section. Paddles were found in both of these squares, including the only carved example (KOH162), and various canoe fittings in Squares 0 and 2. Pointed posts were consistent with a palisade being in the vicinity, but this was not located. Further away from the house, in Squares 3–5, cultural items were more scattered and at lower density. However, they included a greenstone adze, sharpened posts and a bird spear, all from the modern agricultural drain. Also in the area was a pumice bowl with a face carved in the back, another spinning top, two fibre-working tools, a fern-root pounder and digging tools. There were two more fragments of canoe (Square 4), two paddles (Squares 3 and 4), a bailer (Square 4), various possible canoe seats and fittings (Squares 4 and 5) and miscellaneous rope. Unprovenanced items from the HS Area were a flute, a bone toggle, a wooden chisel handle, parts of bowls or bailers and more digging sticks. No evidence for food debris was reported, although it was surely present. Area B
The deposit here was quite rich but the area of excavation too small to demonstrate that a house was present, as seems likely. Timbers found included plank fragments and an epa or poupou (KOH26). However, three standing posts excavated in Square B1 were very possibly the remains of another pataka. When the modern agricultural drain was dug, the artefacts thrown out with the spoil included wooden hair combs found by the Historical Society. The university excavated a small greenstone chisel and pendant, and waterlogged items including a bird spear fragment, a fibre-working tool, various pegs, wedges and wood chips, and pieces of rope. Artefacts of other materials included a dog-tooth fishhook point, two needles (of bird bone and dog bone), an awl (seal bone), a chisel (dog bone) and a sandstone file. Outside the palisade in the swampy lake edge were a large unfinished steering paddle (KOH161) and a small but neat stack of long kanuka posts. Coils of vine were stored in the lake to keep them supple. Further support for the likely presence of a household in Area B is to be found in similarities with Area D, in terms of the patterns of faunal remains, coprolites and in the use of obsidian.
Issues of site function and location
Kohika was a settlement. The rare wood and fibre artefacts found were incidental to occupation. They were not buried as votive offerings, as in many wet sites in northwestern Europe (Coles and Coles 1996), or for storage, as in a small number of cases in New Zealand (Phillips et al. 2002). We can suppose that many of the same artefacts existed at dryland sites and it is only their survival that is unusual. The site was not a refuge hidden in the swamp for security, because its fires could have been seen at night from the hills near Matata, and its smoke from all over the plains during the day. Nor was it a stronghold, as its light palisade would have been defence against a sudden attack but not a sustained one. While it could have been difficult for strangers to navigate through the waterways of the swamp, it was very accessible by canoe for those who knew where it was. Kohika was not a temporary camp, because it had substantial buildings and evidence for diverse activities. It was not a settlement of low status, for it had fine artefacts, including carvings, and there was evidence of people of rank. Kohika was part of a wider sphere of communication, as shown by wooden items
Kohika as a late northern Maori lake village 247
made of kauri (a canoe hull and fern-root beaters) that had probably grown north of the Bay of Plenty. The woodcarvings have a range of individual styles linking to different areas of the North Island. Coastal items such as the albatross/mollymawk bones found at the site could have been moving inland. More obviously, the amount of obsidian at Kohika far exceeded domestic needs. Most of it was from Mayor Island, with very small amounts from Maketu and Lake Taupo. The presence of Taupo obsidian demonstrates movement from the interior of the North Island, and the abundant and large pieces from Mayor Island could have been taken inland. It would seem that trade in obsidian was organised at the level of the household and not at the level of the community. One might be misled into thinking that the people of Kohika chose to forgo more usual kinds of site location for access to the resources of the swamp itself, but ease of travel and, more particularly, ease of canoe transport meant that they retained access to most of the resources of dryland sites. Cargoes of food and industrial materials could be brought to the shores of Kohika that would have to be carried to the sites in the hills around Matata. Canoes, paddles and fittings were found in the households of Area D and the HS Area. An unfinished paddle measuring 2.73 metres long was found in Area B. Such a paddle could not have been used for normal paddling, nor for poling in the shallow waters of the swamp. It was more plausibly intended for steering a canoe under sail on the coast. The fine twill plaiting which our reconstruction of the HS Area places in the carved house could have been sailcloth as easily as matting or bedding.
Summary
The general picture that emerges from the evidence is a lightly defended lake village with a diverse economy based on fishing, fowling, gathering shellfish and plant foods, and gardening. The community practised a wide variety of industrial, craft, social and cultural activities, and had time for leisure. Trade in coastal produce, especially obsidian, was conducted along the rivers leading to the central North Island. Carving styles suggest external connections to people from other areas. Summer occupation is indicated but year-round occupation was entirely possible. All of the elements required for permanent settlement, both material and social, existed at Kohika. However, although this was a permanent village, questions about the mobility of the village population and the permanence of occupation are not answered by the archaeological evidence, unusually rich though it is. The site has clear evidence of functional and social differences. The evidence to hand indicates open, possibly communal land used for storage and cooking on top of the mound. Closer to the lake were households, most probably family units, identified by a range of buildings, diverse domestic and personal equipment. Evidence for craft and industrial activities included obsidian knapping, woodworking, house-building and canoe-making. The households in Areas D and HS show clear status differentiation in the quality of the buildings, their carvings and their contents. Individuals of rangatira class occupied the carved house and were leaders of the community. There was further intrasite differentiation. The evidence that the household in the HS Area played a dominant role in trade in Mayor Island obsidian is plain. However, the distribution of Maketu and Taupo obsidian in the site may suggest diverse external social relationships for different households. It is hoped that more detailed oral history will become available in the future to shed more light on the identity of the residents of this village.
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Risks faced by the community are to be seen in the palisade defences and in the hazards of the natural environment. Evidently, the people recovered from an earthquake but they left after a flood. The abandonment was caused not so much by the flood itself as by its consequences. Floods must have been fairly common, but on this occasion the lake around the shore filled with alluvium, which cut off direct canoe access to lake, stream and river. Without this the site was untenable. When people left, they evidently took their weapons. It could also be a sign of political stress that no one retrieved the wooden carvings, even though the carved house collapsed gradually, and the tops of the timbers left standing were burnt off by fire passing through. Kohika was probably occupied late in the 17th century. Its occupation ended suddenly around AD 1700 and its remains were fortuitously preserved in wetland. People returned in prehistory to bury their dead, but then the site was virtually forgotten until rediscovered in late 1974. The site is now regaining its mana and cultural heritage value. Kohika demonstrates the special value of wetland archaeology. A major excavation, conservation and a series of specialist analyses of diverse materials now make a new and important contribution to our understanding of late prehistoric Maori subsistence, settlement and society.
References Coles, J. and B. Coles, 1996. Enlarging the past: the contribution of wetland archaeology. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Monograph Series No.11. Exeter: Short Run Press. Davidson, J., 1984. The prehistory of New Zealand. Auckland: Longman Paul. Kirch, P.V. and R.C. Green, 2001. Hawaiki, ancestral Polynesia: an essay in historical anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Phillips, C., D. Johns and H. Allen, 2002. Why did Maori bury artefacts in the wetlands of pre-contact New Zealand? Journal of Wetland Archaeology, 2:39–60.
Appendix Inventory of wooden and fibre items found at Kohika R.T. Wallace and G.J. Irwin
The main inventory numbers have a KOH prefix (e.g. KOH120). Other numbers are present. Those with a WM suffix (e.g. 88/WM) denote items from the Whakatane and District Historical Society excavation area. Those with an AU suffix (e.g. 223/AU) denote items from the Auckland University excavations. Provenance details are shown in square brackets. Note that some WM items have no detailed recorded provenance. All AU items with no further provenance shown are from the peat swamp in Area D, and associated with the White House and Yellow House horizons. Note that departures from serial order in the Appendix result from reclassification of items by functional category, or the late addition or deletion of a small number of items. Carved pieces of houses
KOH1 KOH2 KOH3 KOH4 KOH5 KOH6 KOH7 KOH14 KOH44 KOH16 KOH17 KOH18
88/WM [Square 2]. Board fragment, elaborately carved on both sides, 435 by 120 by 43 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.7). 223/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Board fragment, elaborately carved on both sides, 100 by 85 by 30 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.11). 79/WM [Square 1, north]. Board fragment, elaborately carved on both sides, 172 by 45 by 43 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.8). 136/AU [D1 White House]. Long, narrow plank fragment with incised pattern visible, 459 by 32 by 18 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.13). 481/AU Slab of wood with incised line drawing on one side. Totara. (Fig. 7.10). 148/AU [D2 White House]. Weathered fragment with incised carving visible, 325 by 70 by 65 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.10). 32/WM [Square 1, north]. Human poutokomanawa figure executed in the round, probably central house post, 11030 by 280 by 155 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.10). 214(a)/WM [Square 1]. Carved poupou base with burnt-off top, 345 by 205 by 30 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.1). 214(b)/WM [Square 5]. Carved poutahuhu base with burnt-off top, 290 by 175 by 85 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.5). 27/WM Carved poupou base with burnt-off top and chisel-ended base, 460 by 240 by 40 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.2). 29/WM Carved poupou base with burnt-off top, 425 by 280 by 35 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.3). 25/WM Carved poupou base with burnt-off top, 365 by 220 by 37 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.4).
House boards
KOH9
34/WM [Square 1]. Nearly complete poupou with bottom rotted off, a square notch in the upper end and a face eyelet below, 765 by 165 by 24 mm. Kauri. (Fig. 7.5). KOH10 37/WM Poupou or poutahuhu, roughly constructed slab from the outer surface of tree dressed on sides and the inner surface, with notched top and three plain lashing holes along one side, 970 by 146 by 39 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.5). KOH11 41/WM [Square 1]. Epa, top cut at c.50 degrees from the horizontal and with three 249
250 Kohika
KOH12 KOH13 KOH15 KOH19 KOH20 KOH21 KOH22 KOH23 KOH24 KOH25 KOH26 KOH27 KOH28 KOH29
simple lashing holes along one edge and two along the other, 930 by 115 by 25 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.8). 63/WM [Square 1]. Wall slab, poupou or epa with top burnt off square and two edge eyelets opposite each other near top, 500 by 155 by 32 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.5). 26/WM House wall slab fragment with burnt-off top, rotted-off base, a single edge eyelet lashing hole at one edge, 560 by 225 by 40 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.5). 214/WM [Square 3?]. Amo, 70 by 280 by 41 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.5). 461(1)/AU [Area D]. Epa fragment possibly of pataka with five neatly chiselled holes along its edge, 562 by 76 by 20 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.14). 461(2)AU [Area D]. Pataka epa flashing strip semi-circular in cross-section. Formerly attached to KOH19, 555 by 15.5 by 8 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.14). 86/WM [Square 1]. Epa? fragment with two simple lashing holes, 310 by 85 by 25 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.8). 92/WM [Square 1]. Plank in three pieces with simple lashing holes at each surviving corner, 720 by 155 by 25 mm. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.8). 1/WM Epa or poupou split from outside of tree trunk, 1420 x 166 x 43 mm. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.9). 2/WM Epa or poupou split from outside of tree trunk, 1033 x 140 x 27 mm. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.9). 23/WM Epa or poupou split from outside of tree trunk with chisel end, 1827 x 226 x 60 mm. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.9). 344/AU [B3 peat below alluvium]. Epa or poupou split from outside of tree trunk with chisel end, 1480 x 172 x 49 mm. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.9). 501/AU Epa or poupou plank split from outside of tree trunk, 440 mm long. Pukatea. 502/AU Epa or poupou fragment split from outside of tree trunk, 675 by 295 by 100 mm. Pukatea. 33/WM [Square 1, north]. Poupou split from the outer surface of trunk with square hole in top, 600 x 180 x 53 mm. Pukatea.
Miscellaneous house pieces
KOH30 512/AU House plank with three large and two small holes, 700 by 200 by 30 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.14). KOH31 524/AU Slab with ends bevelled on alternate sides, 450 by 130 by 33 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.14). KOH32 511/AU Epa from end of wall? Triangular board with seven holes. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.14). KOH33 463/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Plank in fragments with curved outline, 855 by 200 by 35 mm. Pukatea. Rafters
KOH34 135/AU [D2 White House]. Rafter with three face eyelets, five holes along edge, tenon joint one end, bevelled on other, 1455 by 70 by 30 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.11). KOH35 528/AU Rafter with ten eyelet holes, tenon joint one end, bevelled end on other, 1420 by 85 by 35 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.11). KOH36 529/AU Rafter with three eyelets, tenon joint one end, other end bevelled, 1420 by 70 by 35 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.11). Maihi?
KOH37 531/AU [D1 Bright Yellow floor]. Maihi plank with L-shaped cross-section in five fragments, 2160 mm long. Kahikatea. KOH38 530/AU [D1 Bright Yellow floor]. Maihi plank with L-shaped cross-section (part of KOH37), 2160 mm long. Kahikatea.
Inventory of wooden and fibre items found at Kohika 251
Battens
KOH39 KOH40 KOH41 KOH42 KOH43 KOH45 KOH46 KOH47 KOH48 KOH49 KOH50 KOH51 KOH52
139/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Short batten with one end bevelled. Totara. 50/WM [Square 2]. Plank fragment. Totara. 509/AU Short batten with three lashing holes, 310 mm long. Totara. 3/WM [Square 1, north]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 4/WM [Square 1]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 5/WM [Square 1]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 6/WM [Square 1, north]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 7/WM [Square 1, north]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 9/WM [Square 1, north]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 16/WM [Square 1, north]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 18/WM [Square 1, north]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 17/WM [Square 1, north]. Wall batten (tumatahuki) with hole in end. Totara. (Fig. 7.7). 62/WM Wall batten with a hole in both ends (or canoe seat?). Pukatea. (Fig. 7.7).
Doors and windows
KOH53 89/WM Pare fragment very elaborately carved, 265 by 65 by 25 mm. Totara. (Plate 7.6). KOH54 273/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Window facing board (korupe) with four holes and zigzag upper margin, 350 by 95 by 25 mm. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.10). KOH55 35/WM [Square 1, north]. Pare with zigzag upper margin, unfinished, 575 by 135 by 20 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.6). KOH56 515/AU Window sill or lintel, U-shaped in cross-section, 398 mm long. Totara. (Fig. 7.10). KOH57 31/WM Door sill with deep U-shaped hollow along its length, 108 by 64 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.6). KOH58 43/WM [Square 1]. Door jamb with two large cut square holes and eyelet holes along one edge, 535 by 1230 by 20 mm. Totara. (Fig. 7.6). Slats
KOH59 61/WM [Square 1]. Wooden slat with slight taper, 1545 by 40 by 10 mm. Kahikatea. KOH60 319/AU [D4 White House]. Slat bevelled at each end, 860 by 50 by 10 mm. Rimu. Plank fragments
KOH61 KOH62 KOH63 KOH64 KOH65 KOH66 KOH67 KOH68 KOH69 KOH70 KOH71 KOH72 KOH73 KOH74
513/AU Plank fragment, 410 by 110 by 40 mm. Totara. 538/AU [D13 Layer 2]. Plank fragment, 410 by 38 by 8 mm. Kauri. AU [B3 sump]. Plank fragment, 90 by 35 mm. 263/AU [B4 peat below alluvium]. Plank fragment. Conifer spp. 100/WM Plank fragment. Pukatea. 535/AU Plank fragment, 370 by 28 by 18 mm. Totara. 534/AU [D1 Bright Yellow floor]. Plank fragment, 390 by 120 by 15 mm. Totara. 537/AU [D1 Bright Yellow floor]. Plank fragment, 440 by 50 by 8 mm. Totara. 598/AU Plank fragment, 535 by 60 by 23 mm. Totara. 527/AU Plank fragment with one lashing hole, 265 by 100 by 30 mm. Pukatea. 103/WM Corner of large plank with three lashing holes. Totara. (Fig. 7.8.). 82/WM [Square 4]. Plank fragment with simple lashing hole. Kahikatea. (Fig. 7.8). 93/WM Board fragment with three holes. Pukatea. (Fig. 7.8). 123/WM Plank fragment with one lashing hole. Totara.
252 Kohika
KOH75 KOH76 KOH77 KOH78 KOH79 KOH80 KOH81 KOH82 KOH83 KOH84 KOH85 KOH86 KOH87 KOH88 KOH89 KOH90 KOH349
605/AU Plank fragment with two lashing holes, 328 by 28 by 17 mm. Totara. 419/AU See entry under ‘Miscellaneous pieces’, below. 533/AU Plank fragment, 185 by 130 by 12 mm. Totara. 506/AU Plank fragment, 365 by 60 by 20 mm. Totara. 385/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Plank fragment. Totara. 492/AU [B3 sump]. Plank fragment. 429/AU [D2 Bright Yellow floor]. Plank fragment. Pukatea. 499/AU Plank fragment, 105 by 10 by 40 mm. Pukatea. 500/AU Plank fragment, 300 mm long. Pukatea. 13/WM Plank fragment, triangular shaped. Totara. 505/AU Plank fragment, 395 by 50 by 20 mm. Totara. 101/WM Plank, butt end. Pukatea. 508/AU Plank fragment, 380 by 35 by 25 mm. Totara. 510/AU Plank fragment, 130 by 45 by 25 mm. Matai. 514/AU Plank Fragment, 880 by 45 by 30 mm. Totara. 606/AU Palisade post butt, sawn off by WM. Pukatea. AU/599 Plank fragment, 85 mm long, 30 mm thick. Totara.
Miscellaneous pieces
KOH91 KOH92 KOH93 KOH94 KOH95 KOH76 KOH96
108/WM Y-shaped stick. Manuka. Carefully made wedge for adze lashing? Totara. (Fig. 6.26). Carefully made item. Totara. (Fig. 6.26). 79/WM [Square 1, north]. Carefully made item. Totara. (Fig. 6.26). 375(2)/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Carefully made item. Totara. (Fig. 6.26). 419/AU [D6 Yellow House]. Fragment. (Fig. 6.26). 138/AU [D2 Yellow House]. Chopping block. Kanuka.
Gourd shell
KOH97 KOH98 KOH99 KOH100
443/AU [B4 peat below alluvium]. Gourd. 372/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Gourd. WM Glued fragment of gourd. WM Two gourd fragments.
Combs (heru)
KOH101 KOH102 KOH103 KOH104 KOH105 KOH106
451/AU Hair comb. Rimu. (Fig. 6.14). 452/AU Hair comb. Rimu. (Fig. 6.14). 453/AU Hair comb. Rimu. (Fig. 6.14). 454/AU Hair comb. Rimu. (Fig. 6.14). 455/AU Hair comb. Rimu. (Fig. 6.14). 456/AU Hair comb. Rimu. (Fig. 6.14).
Flute
KOH107
130/WM Flute (putorino) fragment, front end of one side. Rimu. (Fig. 6.19).
Wakahuia lid
KOH108
42/WM [Square 2]. Wakahuia lid? 315 by 111 by 13 mm. Totara.
Adze and chisel handles
KOH109
445/AU Adze handle rough-out, 580 mm long, 25 mm in diameter. Rimu. (Fig. 6.17). KOH110 112/WM Chisel handle, 121 by 17 mm, socket 25 mm long by 11 mm wide. Kanuka. (Fig. 6.18). KOH111 457/AU Chisel socket for composite haft, 98 by 20 by 9 mm. Puriri. (Fig. 6.18).
Inventory of wooden and fibre items found at Kohika 253
Spinning tops (potaka)
KOH112 KOH113 KOH114 KOH115 KOH116 KOH117 KOH118
120/WM Spinning top, 94 by 47 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.16). 121/WM Spinning top, 118 by 38 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.16). 105/WM Spinning top, 89 by 43 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.16). 550/AU Spinning top, 65 by 31 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.16). 119/WM Spinning top. Manuka. (Fig. 6.16). 549/AU [D13]. Spinning top, 72 by 25 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.16). 551/WM Spinning top, 59 by 24 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.16).
Javelins/darts
KOH119 KOH120 KOH121 KOH122 KOH123 KOH124
45/WM [Square 1, north]. Complete dart, 1160 by 24 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.15). 116/WM [Square 1, north]. Barbed dart point, 259 by 20 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.15). 76/WM [Square 1]. Dart front end, tip missing, 513 by 28 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.15). 261/AU [D2 Bright Yellow floor]. Dart front end, tip missing, 368 mm long. Manuka.(Fig. 6.15). 53/WM [Drain ext.]. Front end of dart, tip missing, 385 by 29 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.15). 597/AU Most of a dart, tip and base missing, 794 by 20 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.15).
Bird spears
KOH125
564/AU Bird spear section, 680 mm long, 17 to 12.5 mm in diameter. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH126 496/AU [D1]. Bird spear section, 895 mm long, 18 mm thick, tapering rapidly to blunt point. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH127 565/AU Bird spear section, 1390 mm long, 17 to 14 mm wide. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH128 566/AU Bird spear section, end of spear 510 mm long, 14 mm wide tapering smoothly to point. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH129 567/AU Bird spear section, 1175 mm long, 18 mm thick. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH130 569/AU Bird spear section, 375 mm long, 16 mm thick. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH131 278/AU [D2 Bright Yellow floor]. Bird spear section, 620 mm long, 18 mm thick. Kanuka (Plate 6.1). KOH132 291/AU [D2 White House]. Bird spear section, 595 mm long, 10–16 mm thick. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH133 614/AU Bird spear section, 137 mm long, 17 mm thick. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH134 583/AU Bird spear section, 820 mm long, 14 mm thick. Kanuka. (Plate 6.1). KOH135 568/AU Bird spear section, 285 mm long, 19–15 mm thick. Maire. (Plate 6.1). KOH136 68/WM [Square 0]. Bird spear section, tapering to lap joint, 730 mm long, 18.5 mm wide. Rimu (mapara). (Plate 6.1). KOH137 540/AU [B3 peat above alluvium]. Bird spear section, 265 mm long, 16–9 mm wide tapering to point. Rimu (mapara). (Plate 6.1). KOH138 69/WM [Square 0]. Bird spear section, 700 mm long, 10–16 mm thick. Rimu (mapara). (Plate 6.1). KOH139 595/AU Barbed bird spear point, 167 by 7 by 3 mm. Tree-fern trunk wood. (Figure 6.1). Canoe hull pieces
KOH140 KOH141 KOH142 KOH143 KOH144 KOH335
19/WM, 20/WM, 21/WM and 22/WM [Square 2]. Canoe bow or stern piece in five pieces, 977 by 440 by 282 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.11). 212/AU [D2 Bright Yellow floor]. Detachable canoe bow or stern piece, 562 by 305 by 200 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.11). 24/WM [Square 4, north]. Hull fragment, 710 by 175 by 120 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.11). 64/WM Canoe gunwale fragment, 325 by 111 by 38 mm. Kauri. (Fig. 6.11). 78/WM Canoe gunwale fragment, 391 by 108 by 30 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.11). 310/AU Canoe gunwale fragment, 150 by 43 by 27 mm. Totara.
254 Kohika
Canoe fittings
KOH345
WM Fragment from elaborate carving, possibly broken from spiral fretwork. Totara. (Plate 7.9). KOH145 40/WM [Square 2]. and 49/WM Canoe bulkhead, 12 mm thick plank with Dshaped outline and six lashing holes. Rata or pohutukawa. (Fig. 6.12). KOH146 96/WM [Square 5]. Canoe seat, fragment, 420 by 70 by 30 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.12). KOH147 593/AU Canoe seat, 980 by 55 mm diameter. Manuka. KOH148 594/AU Canoe seat, 780 by 60 mm diameter. Tawa. KOH149 54/WM [Square 0]. Canoe seat. Ramarama. (Fig. 6.12). KOH150 97/WM [Square 4]. Canoe seat. Ramarama. (Fig. 6.12). KOH151 594/AU Canoe seat, 785 by 70 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.12). KOH152 593/AU Canoe seat, 975 by 55 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.12). KOH153 590/AU Canoe seat fragment, 200 by 25 mm. Coprosma spp. (Fig. 6.12). KOH154 587/AU Canoe seat fragment, 190 by 30 mm. Coprosma spp. (Fig. 6.12). KOH155 591/AU Canoe seat fragment, 230 by 25 mm. Vine rata. (Fig. 6.12). KOH156 592/AU Canoe seat fragment, 810 by 18 mm. Vine rata. KOH157 124/AU Canoe seat fragment. Manuka. (Fig. 6.12). KOH158 588/AU Canoe seat fragment, 435 by 30 mm. Fivefinger. (Fig. 4.12). KOH159 586/AU Canoe seat fragment, 307 by 45 mm. Taraire. (Fig. 6.12). KOH160 589/AU Canoe seat fragment, 858 by 28 mm. Mahoe.
Paddles
KOH161
288/AU, 289/AU, 289/AU, 291/AU and 619/AU [Square B3 peat below alluvium]. The parts of a rough-out of a large steering paddle, 2730 by 150 by 50 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.9). KOH162 38/WM [Square 1], 65/WM [Square 1]. Four parts of a nearly complete canoe paddle with decorative carving on handle base, 1670 by 306 by 40 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH163 316/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Paddle with simple double-spiral pattern incised on handle top, 95 by 26 by 26 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH164 57/WM [Square 3]. Paddle handle, 820 by 41 by 32 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH165 554/AU Paddle handle, 745 by 25 by 26 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH166 556/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Paddle blade fragment, 629 by 78 by 32 mm together with 389/AU also a paddle blade fragment, 479 by 62 by 12 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH167 555/AU Paddle blade, 575 by 88 by 19 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH168 157/AU Paddle blade fragment, 290 by 68 by 5 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH169 486/AU(a) [D15]. Paddle tip, 184 long by 94 wide by 8 mm thick. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). KOH170 486/AU(b) [D15]. Fragment of paddle blade and probably part of 486/AU(a), 75 by 56 by 10 mm. Tawa. KOH171 176/AU [C1 peat below alluvium]. Paddle blade fragment, 434 by 25 by 8 mm. Tawa (Fig. 6.10). KOH172 557/AU and 618/AU Paddle blade fragment in four pieces, 370 by 55 by 8 mm. Tawa. (Fig. 6.10). Bowls and bailers
KOH174 KOH175 KOH176 KOH177 KOH178
613/AU Bailer with projecting handle, knob with carved human face, damaged. Totara. (Fig. 6.13, Plate 7.14). 83/WM [Square 1, north]. Narrow bowl, complete with spout. 482 by 80 by 38 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.8). 80/WM [Square 1, north]. Half a bowl, 437 by 173 by 65 mm with 10 mm thick walls, oval. Totara. (Fig. 6.8). 107/WM Bailer rim fragment, 341 by 53 by 10 mm. Totara. 74/WM Bowl fragment, 227 by 101 by 55 mm; side wall 10 mm thick, end wall up to 55 mm, burnt. Matai. (Fig. 6.13).
Inventory of wooden and fibre items found at Kohika 255
KOH179 KOH180 KOH181 KOH182
98/WM [Square 4]. Bailer scoop fragment, 285 by 51 by 41 mm; 10 mm thick side walls, end wall 35 mm thick. Totara. (Fig. 6.13) 84/WM Rim fragment indicating the original bowl was c.465 by 58 by 20 mm with 5–10 mm thick walls. Totara. (Fig. 6.8). 109/WM Bowl fragment, 398 by 36 by 17 mm with 10 mm walls. Totara. (Fig. 6.8). 94/WM Bowl fragment, canoe shaped, 73 by 59 mm, with walls 10–20 mm thick. Matai.
Fern-root beaters (patu aruhe)
KOH183 KOH184 KOH185 KOH186 KOH187 KOH188 KOH189 KOH190 KOH191 KOH192 KOH193 KOH194 KOH195 KOH196 KOH197
90/WM [drain]. Complete beater, 235 by 42 by 40 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 353/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Complete, worn beater, 289 by 52 by 42 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 154/AU and 315/AU [D2 Bright Yellow floor]. Two pieces found separately from nearly complete beater, 287 by 65 by 41 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 78/WM (note: 78/WM is recorded twice). Complete beater, 341 by 52 by 32 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 544/AU Beater with broken blade, 225 by 41 by 24 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 489/AU Complete beater, 297 by 40 by 30 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 279/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Beater fragment, 221 by 45 by 25 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 488/AU Damaged beater, 101 by 43 by 27 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 472/AU Damaged beater, 90 by 38 by 23m. Maire. (Fig. 6.7). 545/AU Complete beater, 333 by 49 by 43 mm. Kanuka. (Fig. 6.7). 155/AU Complete beater, 243 by 35 by 35 mm. Rata. (Fig. 6.7). 81/WM [Square 3]. Complete beater, 214 by 55 by 57 mm. Kauri. (Fig. 6.7). 546/AU Weathered complete beater, 268 by 60 by 50 mm. Kauri. (Fig. 6.7). 547/AU Weathered beater, 200 by 67 by 47 mm. Kauri. (Fig. 6.7). 548/AU Fragment of beater blade. Kauri. (Fig. 6.7).
Ko
KOH8 KOH198 KOH199 KOH200 KOH201 KOH202 KOH203 KOH204 KOH205 KOH206 KOH207 KOH208 KOH209
77/WM [Square 1, north]. Carving of three-fingered hand from top of ceremonial ko. Totara. (Fig.6.5) 580/AU Ko, 2485 by 60 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2). 578/AU Ko, 2340 by 65 mm. Kanuka.(Fig. 6.2). 579/AU Ko, 1889 by 65 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.2). 576/AU Ko, 1652 by 35 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2). 498/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Ko, 1620 x 40 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2). 60/WM [Square 1] Ko top, 1580 by 23 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2). 582/AU Ko top, 585 by 35 mm, burnt. Kanuka. (Fig. 6.2). 571/AU Double-ended ko, 1342 by 35 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2). 572/AU Ko tip, 372 by 38 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2). 573/AU Ko tip, 670 by 27 mm. Kanuka. (Fig. 6.2). 577/AU Ko tip, 860 by 30 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2). 615/AU Ko tip, 545 by 35 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.2).
Other digging tools
KOH211 KOH212 KOH213 KOH214 KOH215 KOH216 KOH339
91/WM [Square 1]. Teka (ko foot-rest). Mahoe. (Fig. 6.2). 581/AU Ketu blade, 460 by 75 by 10 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.3). 39/WM [Square 1, north]. Spatulate ko, 1817 mm long. Manuka. (Fig. 6.3). 55/WM Composite digging tool handle, 998 by 27 mm. Pohutukawa or rata. (Fig. 6.3). 617/AU Composite digging tool shaft, 780 by 38 mm. Mahoe. (Fig. 6.3). 575/AU Composite digging tool shaft (?), 670 by 37 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.3). 575/AU Composite digging tool shaft (?), 1020 by 30 mm. Manuka.(Fig. 6.3).
256 Kohika
KOH217 596/AU Composite digging blade, 509 by 102 by 21 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.4). KOH218 561/AU Composite digging blade, 306 by 91 by 18 mm. Pohutukawa or rata. (Fig. 6.4). KOH219 560/AU Composite digging blade, 251 by 57 by 20 mm. Pohutukawa or rata. (Fig. 6.4). KOH220 559/AU Composite digging blade, 194 by 55 by 15 mm. Pohutukawa or rata. (Fig. 6.4). KOH221 73/WM Composite digging blade, 224 by 50 by 17 mm. Rimu (mapara). (Fig. 6.4). KOH222 478/AU Composite digging blade, 170 by 45 by 16 mm. Rimu (mapara). (Fig. 6.4). KOH223 292/AU [D1 White House]. Composite digging blade, 189 by 41 mm by 17 mm. Rimu (mapara). (Fig. 6.4). KOH224 158AU–458/AU Composite blade rough-out, 553 by 78 by 22 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.4). KOH355 Edge split off detachable digging tool blade (?), 200 by 25 mm by 15 mm. Rata or pohutukawa. (Fig. 6.4). Shaft end knobs
KOH225 KOH226 KOH227 KOH228 KOH229 KOH230 KOH347
117/WM [Square 1, north]. Broken top of shaft, 304 by 32 by 27 mm with plain terminal knob. Matai. (Fig. 6.6). 620/AU Broken top of shaft with plain terminal knob, 110 by 35 mm. Matai. (Fig. 6.6). 469/AU Broken top of shaft with phallic knob, 248 by 35 by 30 mm. Rata or pohutukawa. (Fig. 6.6). 570/AU Broken top of shaft with flared knob, 195 mm by 30 mm. Kanuka. (Fig. 6.6). 584/AU Burnt top of shaft with plain knob, 259 by 31 mm. Kanuka. (Fig. 6.6). 585/AU Broken top of shaft rough-out, 353 by 46 mm. Kanuka. (Fig. 6.6). Knob from end of shaft. (Fig. 6.6).
Ladder
KOH231
303/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Ladder with four steps, trunk-wood, 1205 by 100 mm. Mahoe. (Fig. 6.23).
Wedges/pegs
KOH232 KOH233
623/AU Wood-splitting wedge, 233 by 51 by 36 mm. Maire. (Fig. 6.24). 621/AU Casually made wood-splitting wedge, 182 by 66 by 27 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.24). KOH234 622/AU Casually made wood-splitting wedge, 218 by 44 by 45 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.24). KOH235 283/AU [B4 peat below alluvium]. Wood-splitting wedge, 150 by 31 by 26 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.24). KOH236 101/WM Wood-splitting wedge or peg, 210 by 28 by 27 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.25). KOH237 156/AU Wood-splitting wedge or peg, 222 by 41 mm. Mahoe (Fig. 6.25). KOH238 624/AU Wood-splitting wedge or peg, 226 by 39 mm. Rata. (Fig. 6.25). KOH336 310/AU(a) Wood-splitting wedge (?), 210 by 35 by 27 mm. Totara (Fig. 6.24). KOH337 310/AU(b) Wood-splitting wedge (?), 118 by 40 by 22 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.24). KOH343 188/AU [B1 brown silt shown in Fig. 4.6]. Peg, 229 by 29 by 20 mm. Totara (Fig. 6.25). KOH249 563/AU Peg, 213 by 23 by 20 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.25). KOH348 Peg, 20 by 90 mm. Manuka. (Fig. 6.25). Thread reels
KOH239 KOH240
482/AU(a) Flat strip with zigzag outline. Totara. (Fig. 6.21). 482/AU(b) Flat strip with zigzag outline. Totara. (Fig. 6.21).
Inventory of wooden and fibre items found at Kohika 257
Net gauges
KOH241 KOH243
636/AU Net gauge (?), 131 by 35 by 5 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.20). 480/AU Net gauge (?). Totara. (Fig. 6.20).
Bevelled strips
KOH242
401/AU [D7 White House]. Eight strips bevelled on one face, 16 by 3–4 mm and 25–150 mm long. Totara.
Fibre-working tools
KOH244 KOH245 KOH246 KOH247 KOH248 KOH250 KOH251 KOH252 KOH253 KOH254 KOH255 KOH256 KOH257 KOH258 KOH259 KOH260 KOH261 KOH338
192/AU [C12 lower peat]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui), 219 by 45 by 13.5 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.22). 542/AU [D10]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Totara. (Fig. 6.22). 562/AU Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Totara. (Fig. 6.22). 231/AU [B2 spoil from drain]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui), 155 by 15 by 11 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.22). 189/AU [C12 lower peat]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui), 15 by 13.5 by 7 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.22). 538/AU Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Totara. (Fig. 6.22). 232/AU [C12 lower peat]. Marlin spike, 115 by 27 mm. Totara. (Fig. 6.22). 132/WM [drain]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 131/WM [Square 1, north]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 541/AU Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 133/WM [Square 1, north]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 113/WM [drain]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 129/WM [Square 1, north]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 412/AU [D6 Yellow House]. Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 291/AU Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. (Fig. 6.22). 539/AU Pointed weaving tool (kaui). Manuka. 479/AU Finely made kaui. Totara (Fig. 6.22). 310/AU Weaving tool (?), 52 by 8 mm. Manuka (Fig. 6.22).
Posts, stakes and pointed sticks
KOH262 KOH263 KOH264 KOH265 KOH266 KOH267 KOH268 KOH269 KOH270
11/WM Stake adzed to point. 1360 by 80 by 40 mm. Matai. 634/AU Pointed stick. 275/AU [D1]. Post tip, broken off, 670 mm long. 276/AU [D1]. Post tip, broken off, 1240 mm long. Post tip, broken off, 950 mm long. 370/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Post tip, broken off, 465 mm long. 52/WM [Square 1]. Sharpened stick. Mahoe. 627/AU Sharpened stick. Manuka. 347/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Stake.
Adzed fragments
KOH271 KOH272 KOH273 KOH274 KOH275 KOH276 KOH277 KOH278 KOH279 KOH280 KOH281 KOH282
342/AU [D2 Bright Yellow floor]. Wood, adze marked. 601/AU Fragment of adzed timber, 775 by 95 by 40 mm. 602/AU [D1 Bright Yellow floor]. Fragment of adzed timber, 460 by 75 by 70 mm. 603/AU Fragment of adzed timber, 710 by 140 by 110 mm. 604/AU Fragment of adzed timber. 15/WM [Square 1, north]. Small flat stick. 30/WM Adzed wood chunk. 170/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Adzed log. Adzed stick. 127/AU Adzed chunk. 494/AU [D2 yellow House]. Adzed stem. 633/AU Adzed stick.
258 Kohika
Coils of vine
KOH283 KOH284 KOH285 KOH286 KOH287 KOH288 KOH289 KOH290 KOH291 KOH292 KOH293 KOH294
637/AU [D12]. Two coils of lashing vine. 220/AU [D2 sump]. Coil of vine. 229/AU [B1 brown silt shown in Fig. 4.6]. Coil of vine. 230/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Coil of vine. 247/AU [B1 brown silt shown in Fig. 4.6]. Coil of vine. 266/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Coil of vine. 324/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Coil of vine. 328/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Coil of vine. 371/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Coil of vine. 381/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Coils of vine. 208/AU [D2 Yellow House]. Coil of vine. 324/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Coil of vine.
Fibre artefacts
KOH295 KOH296 KOH297 KOH298 KOH299 KOH300 KOH301 KOH302 KOH303 KOH304 KOH305 KOH306 KOH307 KOH340 KOH341
AU [B3 peat below alluvium]. Rope sections. AU [D12 Yellow House]. Rope sections. 490/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Rope and netting. AU [D2 Yellow House]. Rope, various. AU [D1 Yellow House]. Rope, various. AU [D2 Yellow House]. Rope, various. AU [D2 Yellow house]. Woven material, kit or net. WM Rope fragments. WM Rope and matting fragments. WM Fine matting. WM Fine matting. WM Fine matting. WM Rope and matting. WM Rope, two plaited pieces. WM Rope, two-ply twist.
Wood chips
KOH308 KOH309 KOH311 KOH312 KOH313 KOH314 KOH315 KOH316 KOH317 KOH318 KOH319 KOH320 KOH321 KOH322 KOH323 KOH324 KOH325 KOH326 KOH327 KOH328 KOH329 KOH330 KOH331
99/WM Wood chip. 310/AU [D1 Bright Yellow floor]. Wood chip. 149/AU [D2]. Wood chip. 188/AU [B1 brown silt in Fig. 4.6]. Wood chips, burnt. 226/AU [C12 lower peat]. Wood chips. 394/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Wood chip. 118/WM Bag of wood scraps. 396/AU [D7]. Wood chip. 151/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Wood splinter. 135/AU [D2 White House]. Wood chip. Totara. 352/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Wood chip. 372/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Wood chips. 287/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Worked wood. 160/AU [D2 Yellow House]. Bag of wood chips. 397/AU [D7]. Wood chips. 321/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Wood chips. 388/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Wood chip. 361/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Wood chips. 365/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Wood chips. 122/WM Wood chips. 95/WM Wood chip. 420/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Wood chip. 401/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Wood chip.
Inventory of wooden and fibre items found at Kohika 259
KOH332 KOH333 KOH334 KOH346 KOH351 KOH352 KOH353 KOH354
319/AU [B4 peat below alluvium]. Wood chip. 161/AU [D2 Yellow House]. Wood splinter. 259/AU [C1 upper peat]. Wood chip. 87/WM and 150/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Nine chopped-off pieces of manuka. AU [B3 sump]. Four wood chips with one side adzed. 293/AU [D1 sump]. Wood chip with one side adzed and other flake scars. 296/AU [D1 Yellow House]. Wood chip with one side adzed and other flake scar. 302/AU [D7 Yellow House]. Wood chip with one end adzed, the other smashed off.
Index
adzed fragments, 118 adzes handles, 110–1 pounamu, 74, 165, 166, 167 adzing technology, 118–9 albatrosses, 161, 203, 204 alluvium, 16, 17, 18, 29, 31, 37, 38, 41, 46, 51, 54, 55, 57, 58, 59, 63, 76, 239, 248 amo, 122, 126, 131 architecture, Maori, 122, 123–8 artefacts, 46, 69, 71, 72, 77. See also obsidian artefacts; wooden artefacts; and specific artefacts curated, 177 expedient, 177 manufacture, 119–20 arts, 120 Auckland Museum, 84, 98–9, 107, 109, 111, 127, 135, 144, 146 Awaiti Paku Stream, 14 Awaiti Stream, 1, 14 awls, 164, 167 bailers, 69, 104, 146 banded rail, 203, 204 Banks Peninsula, 149 barracouta, 206–7, 209 battens, 126, 135–6, 140 Bay of Plenty, 4, 6, 163, 204, 240. See also specific placenames and site names canoe paddle style, 100 carving styles, 146, 147, 241 cyclonic weather systems, 55 earliest ages of archaeological sites, 40 political/social relations with central North Island, 1, 3, 175, 194, 242, 247 timing of permanent Maori settlement, 42–3 vegetation, 20–44, 239 Bayesian calibration, 78–82, 240 beaters, fern-root, 69, 84, 92, 94–6 Ben Lomond, Taupo, obsidian source, 171, 172, 173, 174–5, 176, 193–4, 242, 247 260
bevelled strips, 114 bins, 1, 49, 160, 243, 245 bird bone, 69, 161, 164, 203–4 bird spears, 69, 74, 85–7 bone, 54, 69 bird, 69, 161, 164, 203–4 dog, 30, 164, 167, 198, 200–2, 203 fish, 55, 69, 205–210 human, 160, 162, 163, 198, 199, 203 seal, 164, 198, 199–200, 203 whale, 198, 199, 203 bone artefacts awls/chisels, 164, 167 fishhooks, 163, 167 needle, 164, 167 pendants, 160, 161, 162 toggle, 161, 167 bowls, 96, 97, 119 bracken, 19, 22, 24, 29, 30, 31, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42, 55, 69, 70, 78, 235, 239 as food, 217, 223, 229, 232, 233, 234 braided cordage (whiri), 149, 152–4, 158 Bright Yellow floor, 63–4, 68–9, 78, 122, 123 faunal remains, 199, 202, 205, 206, 210, 212, 213, 214 broadleaf woods, 96, 102. See also specific woods buildings, 119, 122–48. See also houses; pataka burials, 46, 47, 50, 51, 74, 77, 167, 198, 248 cabbage trees, 19, 22, 40, 60, 244 Cambridge University, Oldman Collection, 100 canoe fittings, 102–3 canoe hull pieces, 66, 100–2, 145 canoe paddles, 69, 74, 96–100, 247 carvings, 145–146 canoes, 46, 66, 69, 74, 127, 130, 240, 245– 6, 247 carvings from, 145 construction, 119, 141–2 Canterbury Museum, 146, 150
Index 261
capillaria hepatica, 228–9 carvings. See woodcarvings charcoal, 21, 29, 24, 29, 30, 31, 37, 38, 39– 40, 48, 54, 55, 57, 58, 59, 67, 69, 70, 71, 74, 77 in coprolites, 223–4, 229, 234 Chartwell, Hamilton, 127 chisels bone, 164, 167 handles, 110–1 pounamu, 46, 53, 164, 166, 167 Classic Maori culture, 77, 120, 203 climate, 18 coastal progradation, 12, 37 combs. See hair combs conservation techniques, wooden artefacts, 61, 83–4 Cook, James, 42, 100, 105, 146, 160 cooking structures, 1, 46, 50, 60, 65, 77, 136, 141, 243, 245 cooking stones, 48, 54, 55, 57, 58, 60, 65, 65, 69, 70, 71, 74 Cooks Beach, 171, 174 coprolites, 57, 69, 200, 209, 217–38, 243 age of, 233 diatom analysis, 232 macroscopic analysis, 218–25 palaeoenvironmental indications, 235 parasite eggs in, 226–9, 243 phytolith analysis, 217, 218, 229, 231–2, 233, 234 pollen analysis, 217, 218, 229, 230, 233–4 seasonality, 234–5 starch and xylem analysis, 232 variation, 225, 232–3 cordage, 69, 158–9 single ‘spiral-wrapped’, 149, 150 three-ply braids, 152–4, 158 ‘two-ply spiral-wrapped’, 149, 150–2, 158–9 Coromandel Peninsula, 94, 102, 146, 174 curated technology, 177 darts, 108–9 defence, 120, 240–1, 248 deforestation, 40–1, 42, 233 diatom analysis of coprolites, 217, 232, 235 diatomaceous earth, 16, 17, 18, 22, 46, 54, 55, 59, 64, 65, 249 diet, 92, 217, 222, 228, 233–4, 242, 243. See also food acquisition and preparation digging tools, 87–92 dogs bone, 30, 164, 167, 198, 200–2, 203 coprolites, 57, 69, 200, 209, 217–38, 243
door jamb, 135 door sills, 126, 134–5 doors, 126, 138 dunes, 13, 16, 17–8, 37, 42, 45, 46, 47, 51, 53, 56, 57, 63, 64, 71, 76, 92 earthquakes, 11–2, 18, 64–5, 66–7, 68, 239, 248 East Coast, 42, 100, 146, 147, 241 Edgecumbe, 38 Edgecumbe earthquake, 11, 64, 239 eel, 206 epa, 125, 130, 135, 136, 140 expedient technology, 177 Fanal Island, 171 faulting, 11–2, 64–5, 76 faunal remains, 198–216, 242–3. See also birds; fish bones and scales; mammals; shellfish Fermah Rd, 38 fern root, 92, 217, 232, 233, 234 fern-root beaters, 69, 84, 92, 94–6 fibrework, 149–59, 241 fibre-working tools, 112–3, 120, 240, 245 file, sandstone, 166, 167 Fiordland, 149 fire, impact of, 38–41 fire-pits, 50, 59 firescoops, 50, 65, 77 fish bones and scales, 55, 69, 205–210 in coprolites, 218, 219–23 fishhooks, 163, 167 fishing, 208–10, 242 flax (harakeke), 19, 29, 30, 40, 41, 148, 150, 158, 239, 244. See also cordage; netting; plaiting floods, 29, 31, 38, 41, 55, 239 during occupation of Kohika, 1, 18, 46, 51, 54, 55–6, 57, 59, 63, 65, 74, 76, 239, 248 floors, artificial, 46, 51, 53, 60, 63–4, 71. See also Bright Yellow floor; White House horizon; Yellow House horizon flute, 111, 146 food acquisition and preparation, 65, 77, 119, 160, 166, 177, 240, 245. See also cooking structures; diet gardening, 18, 40, 42, 47, 59, 74, 92, 177, 239, 245 geomorphology Kohika, 46, 239 Rangitaiki Plains, 11–19 gourd shell, 58–9, 69, 74, 242
262
Kohika
Great Barrier Island, 171–2, 174, 176, 196 greenstone. See pounamu Hahei, 171, 196 hair combs, 46, 55, 105–8, 167 manufacturing method, 108 hangi. See cooking structures harakeke (flax), 19, 29, 30, 40, 41, 148, 150, 158, 239, 244. See also cordage; netting; plaiting Haulashore Island, 203 Hauraki area, 144, 146, 147, 149, 241 Hawai Bay, 23. See also Tunapahore A; Tunapahore B Hawkes Bay, 42 hei tiki, 160, 161, 162, 167 heke (rafters), 125–6, 138–40 heke ripi, 126, 138 heru (hair combs), 46, 55, 105–8, 167 manufacturing method, 108 Holdens Bay, 38 hotu, 87, 89, 92 Houhora, 196 households, 128, 149, 160, 167, 247 layout and composition, 243–6 houses (whare), 1, 50, 51, 62, 63–4, 65–8, 122–3, 128–40, 241, 243–6. See also Bright Yellow floor; White House horizon; Yellow House horizon carved house (whare whakairo), 1, 74, 122, 123, 124, 129, 130, 134, 137, 141, 245, 247, 248 construction methods, 77, 124–6, 141–2, 243 earliest known NZ carved house, 1, 74 human bone, 198, 199, 203 hutu, 30, 31, 38 jack mackerel, 206, 207, 208, 209–10 javelins, 108–9 Jessop, P., 6, 9, 46 john dory, 206, 207 Kaharoa eruption, 11, 14, 17, 19, 30, 39, 40, 42, 51 Kaharoa Tephra, 11, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22–3, 24, 29, 30, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 46, 76, 79, 240 Area A, 47 Area B, 51, 54, 55 Area D, 63, 64 Historical Society excavations, 72 kahawai, 206, 207, 208 kahikatea, 19, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 37, 38, 140
kaho, 126 kaho-paetara, 126, 135 kanuka, 37, 86, 87, 92, 94, 96, 98, 110, 140 kaui, 112 kauri, 30, 37–8, 39, 84, 94, 96, 102, 140, 247 Kauri Point, 40, 105, 107, 108, 109, 163, 196 Kawerau, 13, 38 ketu, 59, 69, 87, 89, 91, 92 ko, 87–8, 91, 92 Kohika. See also specific aspects of the excavation, e.g. artefacts; faunal remains; houses abandonment, 1, 51, 53, 54, 59, 63, 65, 74, 77, 248 Area A, 46, 47–51, 76, 137, 160, 166–7, 188–91, 192–3, 195–6, 198, 199, 205, 211, 240, 242, 243 Area B, 46, 51–7, 76, 128, 137, 140, 149, 160, 167, 188–91, 192–3, 195–6, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 211, 240, 242, 243, 246 Area C, 46, 57–60, 76, 167, 188, 198, 211, 240, 242 Area D, 46, 60–71, 76, 122, 128, 134, 137–40, 149, 160, 167, 188–91, 192– 3, 195–6, 198, 200, 201, 202, 205, 211–4, 240, 242, 243–5 chronology, 48–51, 76–82 economy, 242–3, 247 excavations and site history, 6–9, 45–75 features, 48–51 first human impact, 39 function and location issues, 246–7 geomorphology, 46, 239 history and tradition, 3–4 local environment, 235, 239 radiocarbon dates, 22–3, 77–82, 240 settlement pattern, 240 stratigraphy, 16–7, 18, 46, 47–8, 49, 51– 3, 56–7, 58, 61–4, 69, 70–1, 72, 74, 76, 240 vegetation, 21–3, 24–30, 37, 38, 40, 41 volcanic ash and disturbance, 47 korupe, 126, 134, 137 kowhai, 98 kowhaiwhai, 145 kuaha, 126 kumara god, 166, 167 kuri. See dogs ladder, 114, 122 lashing vine, 55, 56, 69, 118, 241 lintels, 126, 137
Index 263
mahoe, 91, 114, 118 maihi, 122, 126 maire, 30, 37, 86–7, 92, 94, 96, 98, 114 Maketu Basin, 37, 38, 39 Maketu obsidian, 170, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 193–4, 242, 247 Mamaku Plateau, 37 mammals, 198–203, 242. See also dogs; human bone; seal bone; whale bone manaia, 145 Mangakaware, Lake, 123–4 manuka, 19, 22, 29, 30, 31, 37, 87, 91, 98, 102, 109, 112, 118, 140 Maori settlement, impact of, 40–3, 239 mapara (heart rimu), 86, 87, 91, 107, 111 mataaho, 126 matai, 37, 92, 96, 104, 114, 140 Matakana Island, 37, 39 matapihi, 126 Matata, 2, 3, 9, 13, 14, 21, 22, 170 Matata Fault, 11–2, 18, 64–5, 67, 76, 239 matting, 74 Mayor Island obsidian, 169, 174, 175, 182, 183, 185, 188–90, 192, 193, 194–5, 196, 241–2, 247 midden, 6, 30, 65, 69, 70, 71, 211 Miranda, 127, 144 Mokoia Island, 146 Motu River, 37 Motuhora Island, 203 Moutoki Island, 203 muka, 150, 158 Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, 144, 203 mussels freshwater, 54, 57, 69, 211, 212, 213 marine, 69, 211, 212, 213 needles, 164, 167 net gauges, 111–2 netting, 69, 149, 150, 155–7, 158, 209, 210 New Zealand Archaeological Association, 5 New Zealand Historic Places Trust, 5, 6 Ngaropo, P., 9 Ngaroto, 64 Ngati Awa, 3, 9, 77, 147, 159, 241 Ngati Porou, 146 Ngati Tuwharetoa, 3 North Island Shear Belt, 11 obsidian artefacts, 48, 54, 55, 57, 58, 67, 68, 70, 71, 74, 241–2, 245, 247 chemical analyses, 172–4, 176 core reduction sequence (scar patterns), 179–81, 182–7, 190, 194–5, 196
debitage, 185–6, 196 flake edge modification, 181, 187–8, 189, 192, 194, 196 flake size and proportions, 174–5, 182, 185, 186, 187, 188–93, 195, 196–7 green, 168–9, 182 ‘other grey’, 169, 170–2, 172, 173, 174–6 ‘pebble-type grey’, 169, 170, 172, 173, 174–6 sources, 168–76 technology and distribution, 177–97 obsidian hydration dates, 40, 47 Ohiwa Harbour, 40 Omarumutu, 146 Omeheu, 19 Opouriao Plains, 40 Orini Stream, 14 Oruarangi, 127, 135, 160, 161 Otago Museum, 98, 100 Otamarakau, 170 Otoroa, 171 ovens. See cooking structures paepae, 126, 127, 131 pahautea, 30, 37, 38 palaeosol, 17, 55, 59, 69 palisades, 46, 47, 51, 53, 57, 59, 66, 74, 78, 140, 241, 244, 245, 248 western, 72 Palliser Bay, 196 Papamoa Bog, 38, 39 pare, 126, 129, 131, 134, 137, 144, 145, 147 pataka, 1, 46, 65, 114, 122, 123, 125, 136, 137, 138, 140, 141, 241, 245, 246. See also houses architecture, 127–8 patu aruhe, 84, 92, 94–6 peat, 1, 14, 17, 18, 21, 22, 24, 29, 30, 37, 39, 46, 54, 64, 69, 70, 71, 72, 76, 149 Lower Peat, 51, 55, 57, 58 Upper Peat, 51, 54, 55, 56–7, 58, 59 pegs, 114, 116 pendants bone, 160, 161, 162, 167 pounamu, 160, 162, 167 tooth, 160, 167 phytolith analysis of coprolites, 217, 218, 229, 231–2, 233, 234 pigment pot, 166, 167 pihunga, 126 pipi, 210–1, 212, 213–4 pits, 1, 49–50, 77, 141, 160, 243, 245 plaiting (raranga), 59, 149, 154–5, 156, 157, 158 podocarp forest, 19, 31, 60
264
Kohika
pohutukawa, 37, 91, 92, 102 pollen analysis of coprolites, 217, 218, 229, 230, 233–4 pollen stratigraphy, 21–37 Kohika, 21–3, 24–30 Thornton-Atkinson archeological complex, 22, 23, 31, 32–3 Tunapahore A, 22, 24, 31, 34 Tunapahore B, 22, 24, 31, 35–6 Polynesia architecture, 125, 127, 141, 142 impact of settlement from, 20–44 poniu, 234 Ponui Island, 203 postholes, 50, 52–3, 54, 55, 60, 66, 122, 124, 126, 137 posts, 52–3, 55, 63, 65, 66, 69, 74, 78, 83, 114, 140, 167, 241. See also palisades potaka, 109–10 pou matua, 126 pounamu adzes, 74, 165, 166, 167 chisels, 46, 53, 164, 166, 167 pendants, 46, 53, 160, 162, 167 poupou, 74, 122, 123, 125, 126, 129, 130, 134, 140, 143–4, 146, 147 poutahuhu, 129, 131, 143–4, 147 poutokomanawa, 122, 130, 133, 144–5, 147 Poverty Bay, 100, 145–6 puha, 217, 229, 233–4, 239 pukatea, 29, 37, 98, 114, 134, 136, 137, 140 pukeko, 203 pumice, 48, 54, 55, 69, 74. See also Taupo pumice containers, 166, 167 kumara god, 166, 167 puriri, 92, 98, 110 putorino, 111 puwerewere, 144 radiocarbon dates earliest ages, Bay of Plenty archaeological sites, 40 Kohika, 22–3, 77–82, 240 Matata Fault, 11, 64–5 Thornton-Atkinson archaeological complex, 23 Tunapahore A, 24 Tunapahore B, 24 rafters (heke), 125–6, 138–40 Rangitaiki Plains. See also specific placenames and site names archaeological site distribution, 4–6 climate, 18 drainage, 4, 14, 18
geomorphological context, 11–9 history and tradition, 3 political/social relations with central North Island, 1, 3, 175, 194, 242, 247 river courses, 2, 3, 13–5 vegetation, 38, 39, 41 Rangitaiki River, 1, 3, 4, 11, 12, 14, 19, 22, 24, 29, 64, 239 raranga (plaiting), 59, 149, 154–5, 156, 157, 158 rata, 29, 31, 32, 39, 91, 92, 94, 96, 98, 102, 118 rats, 42, 198, 201, 228, 243 Raupa, 196 raupo, 22, 29, 30, 31, 41, 59, 60, 72, 235, 239, 244 as food, 217, 229, 233, 234, 235 as insulation material, 126 rauponga surface decoration, 145 reeds, 19, 55, 57, 58, 59, 69, 70, 72, 239 ridgepoles (tahuhu), 122, 125–6, 129, 130 rimu, 31, 37, 86, 87, 91, 107, 110, 111, 112, 114, 140 rope. See cordage Rotoaira, Lake, 109 Rotorua, 146 rua, 5–6 Rurima Island, 203 seal bone, 164, 198, 199–200, 203 sedges, 30, 31, 40, 229, 235, 239 seeds, in coprolites, 223 shaft knobs, 92, 93 shellfish, 57, 78, 210–5, 243. See also mussels snapper, 206, 207, 208, 209 soils, 16–17 Area A, 47–8 Area B, 51–2, 53, 56–7 Area C, 58 Area D, 61, 62–4 spears, 69, 74, 85–7 spinning tops, 109–10 starch analysis of coprolites, 232 sticks/stakes, 58, 118 stone file, 166, 167 storehouses. See pataka stratigraphy Kohika, 16–7, 18, 46, 47–8, 49, 51–3, 56– 7, 58, 61–4, 69, 70–1, 72, 74, 76, 240 pollen, 21–37 supplejack, 126 tahuhu (ridgepole), 122, 125–6, 129, 130 Tairua, 174
Index 265
tapu, 105, 127 taratara-a-kai surface decoration, 145, 146, 147 Tarawera eruption, 1886, 239 Tarawera River, 1, 3, 4, 11, 12, 14, 18, 22, 29, 45, 46, 55, 63, 170, 239 Tarawera Tephra, 6, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22, 23, 24, 30, 38, 46, 72, 76, 79, 240 Area A, 47 Area B, 53, 54, 55, 56, 58 Area C, 59 Area D, 61, 65, 66 Historical Society excavations, 72, 74 Tasman, Abel, 100 tatau, 126 Taupo, 146 Taupo eruption, 11, 19, 29, 38–9 Taupo obsidian, 171, 172, 173, 174–5, 176, 193–4, 242, 247 Taupo pumice, 13, 14, 17, 29, 46, 48, 74, 240 Taupo Tephra, 13, 14, 16, 18, 21, 24, 38–9, 46, 47, 48, 240 Taupo Volcanic Zone, 11 tauwhenua, 126, 130, 138 tawa, 31, 32, 42, 96, 98, 99–100, 102, 114, 140 Te Ahumata, Maketu, obsidian source, 171– 2, 174, 176, 193–4, 242, 247 Te Arawa, 3 Te Awa o te Atua, 1, 14, 206, 208, 215, 239 Te Kaha, 127, 146 Te Puke, 37 teka, 87, 88, 92 tephra, 12. See also specific tephra teremu, 125 Thornton-Atkinson archaeological complex doorway carvings from, 144, 146 radiocarbon dates, 23 vegetation, 22, 23, 31, 32–3, 41 thread reels, 112 Three Kings Islands, 204 tiki, 160, 161, 162, 167 Tikopia, 111 toggle, bone, 161, 167 toitoi, 126 Tokata Island, 203 Tokitoki site, 40 tokoihi, 144 Tokoroa, 196 Tolaga Bay, 42, 146 tooth fishhook, 163 pendant, 160, 167 topsoil, buried, 63, 65
totara, 19, 29, 30, 31, 37, 96, 98, 100, 102, 104, 110, 111, 112, 114, 119, 129, 134, 135, 140 toxocara canis, 226–7, 228–9 toys, 120, 245 trade, 1, 247 transport, 1, 120, 240, 247. See also canoes tuatua, 210–1, 212, 213–4 tukutuku panels, 126, 135, 141 tumatahuki, 126, 135, 136 Tunapahore A first human impact, 39–40 radiocarbon dates, 24 vegetation, 22, 24, 31, 34, 37, 38–9 Tunapahore B first human impact, 39–40 radiocarbon dates, 24 vegetation, 22, 24, 31, 35–6, 37, 38–9 tutu, 24, 30, 31, 40, 229, 233, 234, 235, 239 Twilight Beach, 202 twill work, 154, 155, 157 unidentified items, 117, 118 University of Auckland, 6, 9, 83–4, 85, 172 vegetation, 19 impact of first human settlement, 39–40 impact of Maori settlement, 40–3, 239 impact of Polynesian settlement, 20–44 impact of volcanic disturbance and fire, 38–9, 41, 239 Kohika, 21–3, 24–30, 37, 38, 40, 41 prehistoric, 37–8, 239 vine coils, 55, 56, 69, 118, 241 volcanic ashes. See tephra; and specific tephras volcanic eruptions, 11, 12. See also Kaharoa eruption; Tarawera eruption; Taupo eruption impact on vegetation, 38–9, 41 Waihi, 37, 38, 174 Waihi Beach Swamp, 38, 39 Waioeka, 144, 146 Waipa, 134 Waitahaarikikore, 3 Waitakere Ranges, 105, 107, 108, 149 Waitara, 123 wakahuia lid, 113 Warrington, 203 weapons, 120, 240, 242, 248 weaving tools, 112 wedges, 114, 115 weeding tools, 59, 69, 87, 89, 91, 92
266
Kohika
wetland archaeology, 1, 120, 248 Whakamaru, 171 Whakarewarewa, 171 Whakatane, 9, 11, 40 climate, 18 Whakatane and District Historical Society, 6, 9, 149, 150, 167, 200, 201 excavation area, 46, 47, 57, 59, 72–4, 76, 122, 123, 128, 128–37, 149, 154, 160, 199, 202, 205, 240, 243–4, 245–6 obsidian artefacts, 177, 178, 184, 188, 189, 191–2, 193, 195–7, 242 wooden artifacts, 83, 85 Whakatane Ash, 13 Whakatane Graben, 11, 64 Whakatane Hill Soil, 24 Whakatane Museum, 146 Whakatane River, 5, 11, 12, 14 whale bone, 198, 199, 203 Whangamata, 171 Whangara, 41, 42, 146 whare. See houses whata, 127 whatitoka, 126 whiri (braided cordage), 149, 152–4, 158 White House horizon, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67–8,
70, 77, 78, 114, 122, 123, 137, 163, 240 faunal remains, 199, 200, 205, 206, 207, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214 Whitipirorua, 196 windows, 126 wood chips, 30, 54, 55, 58, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 74, 118–9 wood, worked, 55–6, 58 woodcarvings, 74, 77, 122, 123, 127, 129– 30, 131, 132–3, 138, 141, 143–6, 241, 248. styles, 146–7, 241, 247 wooden artefacts, 83–121, 240–1, 245 field treatment and laboratory conservation, 61, 83–4 overview, 119–20 reassembly and identification, 84–5 woodworking, 59, 118–9, 240, 245 xylem analysis of coprolites, 232 Yellow House horizon, 63–4, 65–8, 69, 70, 76, 77, 78, 122, 123, 137, 149, 163, 240, 243–4 faunal remains, 199, 200, 201, 202, 205, 206, 207, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214