2008
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0801507105
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Dating the late prehistoric dispersal of Polynesians to New Zealand using the commensal Pacific rat

Abstract: The pristine island ecosystems of East Polynesia were among the last places on Earth settled by prehistoric people, and their colonization triggered a devastating transformation. Overhunting contributed to widespread faunal extinctions and the decline of marine megafauna, fires destroyed lowland forests, and the introduction of the omnivorous Pacific rat (Rattus exulans) led to a new wave of predation on the biota. East Polynesian islands preserve exceptionally detailed records of the initial prehistoric impac… Show more

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Cited by 466 publications
(383 citation statements)
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“…Examination of a large number of specimens of several species at the site, including studies of ␦ 13 C, ␦ 15 N, and ␦ 34 S, will be necessary to evaluate the contribution of marine carbon to the omnivorous chicken diet (28,29). It is also worth noting that the radiocarbon-dating laboratory used to date the El Arenal-1 sample has recently been suggested to have overestimated the age of zooarchaeological bones elsewhere in the Pacific (30). The uncertainty of the marine carbon contribution and accuracy of the date indicates that further analyses are needed to definitively identify them as pre-Columbian.…”
Section: Marine Carbon Input and The Presence Of Pre-columbian Chickensmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examination of a large number of specimens of several species at the site, including studies of ␦ 13 C, ␦ 15 N, and ␦ 34 S, will be necessary to evaluate the contribution of marine carbon to the omnivorous chicken diet (28,29). It is also worth noting that the radiocarbon-dating laboratory used to date the El Arenal-1 sample has recently been suggested to have overestimated the age of zooarchaeological bones elsewhere in the Pacific (30). The uncertainty of the marine carbon contribution and accuracy of the date indicates that further analyses are needed to definitively identify them as pre-Columbian.…”
Section: Marine Carbon Input and The Presence Of Pre-columbian Chickensmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In New Zealand, Polynesian expansion southwards (ca AD 1280), followed by European colonization (AD 1769 onwards), destroyed much of an indigenous biota that was naive to terrestrial mammalian predators (Higham et al 1999;Wilmshurst et al 2008). At least 41 per cent of the endemic bird species have become extinct, and 35 per cent of those remaining are now classified as threatened ( Worthy & Holdaway 2002).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since Māori settlement of NZ in the mid-13 th century (Wilmshurst et al 2008), followed by European arrival in the early 19 th century, NZ's disturbance regimes have been rescaled in space (effective size increased due to fragmentation and habitat loss) and time (made more or less frequent). Repeated and widespread fires have been the dominant disturbance agent during the period of human settlement in NZ (Perry et al 2014), with burning responsible for the largest part of forest loss over this time (from c. 90% forest cover pre-arrival to c. 24% today).…”
Section: Anthropogenic Disturbancesmentioning
confidence: 99%