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Volume 3: Archaeology in the Hauraki Region: A Summary |
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1 Cover |
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First published in 1997 by
Hauraki Maori Trust Board
PO Box 33, Paeroa
Aotearoa New Zealand
ISBN 1-877198-01-3
© Hauraki Maori Trust Board
This report was commissioned by the Hauraki Maori Trust Board
as part of its Waitangi Tribunal Claim research programme.
Any views expressed and condusions drawn are those of the author.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, including photocopying, recording or otherwise,
without the prior permission of the publisher.
Typeset by Wordset Enterprises Limited, Wellington
Printed by GP Print, Wellington, New Zealand
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2 Foreword |
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FOREWORD
The Hauraki Treaty Claim project has examined the nature and extent of the interaction of Maori with the Crown in the Hauraki tribal territory during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The claims, together with the research and supporting evidence are set out in a series of eleven volumes. These are presented to the Waitangi Tribunal to support the Hauraki case.
The history of colonisation in Hauraki—the social and economic deprivation endured by those who have gone before us and their years of responsible protest—has not been told before. These volumes, the foundation of the Hauraki case, will forever rewrite our nation's history books contributing, only now, a Maori perspective to the history of this region.
We began this project four years ago with a multi-disciplinary team approach. Louise Furey was part of this team contributing an archaeological perspective, to set the scene and examine Maori society in Hauraki before the influx of European settlers.
Louise Furey's Archaeology in the Hauraki Region provides a comprehensive summary of the economy that existed then and the places where that activity occurred. The maps depicting the distribution of archaeological sites clearly demonstrate a significant focus on the coastal marine area. The use of other natural resources, in particular, minerals is also well documented.
The Hauraki treaty claims are a consequence of the Crown's actions after it signed the Treaty of Waitangi. Louise Furey's report will significantly support the Hauraki case in the debate that will inevitably surround the Hauraki claims. I take this opportunity to thank Louise Furey for her contribution to this project.
No reira, noho ora koutou.
T.J. McEnteer
Claims Manag
Hauraki Maori Trust Board
III
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CONTENTS
FOREWORD III
PREFACE VII
INTRODUCTION
1. SITE DISTRIBUTION 5
The data 6
Types of sites recorded 7
Pa 7
Middens 10
Storage pits 12
Terraces 13
Garden sites 14
Artefact manufacturing places 14
Other sites 15
Burials 16
Pattern of settlement 16
Case study—Waihou River 17
CHRONOLOGY 18
SUBSISTENCE ECONOMY 23
Fish 23
Shellfish 26
Marine mammals 26
Dogs, rats and reptiles 27
Moa and other birds 31
Vegetable and forest foods 33
Summary 33
STONE RESOURCES AND MINERALS 23
Obsidian 35
Basalt 38
Greywacke 41
Chert 42
Other stone 42
Kokowai 43
Non-stone materials 43
HISTORIC ACCOUNTS 44
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
6. CONCLUSION |
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BIBLIOGRAPHY |
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FIGURES |
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1 The Hauraki region 2 Sites excavated |
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3 Distribution of recorded Maori sites |
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4 Recorded pa sites |
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5 Recorded sites with midden |
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6 Recorded sites with pits |
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7 Fishtrap at Sandy Bay |
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8 Radiocarbon age ranges of sites |
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9 Number of sites with each fish species |
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10 Number of sites with each bird species |
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11 A 19th century fishing camp, Pakihi Island, south of Ponui |
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12 Stone resources in Hauraki |
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13 Obsidian sources and distribution of Tahanga basalt |
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14 Flaked basalt adzes from Whiritoa |
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15 Ground greywacke adzes from Oruarangi |
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16 Maori settlements and estimates of population as noted by European visitors pre-1840 |
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TABLES |
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1 Excavated houses |
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2 Fish species in sites |
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3 Marine mammals and other species in sites |
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4 Forest birds in sites |
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5 Marine and river birds in sites |
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APPENDIX I
Excavated Hauraki sites 57
General summaries of excavations 59
Bibliography of excavation reports 59
APPENDIX II
Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites 68
APPENDIX III
Scientific names of plants and animals 75
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3 Preface |
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PREFACE
My name is Louise Furey. I have an MA in Anthropology from the University of Auckland. My thesis was on archaeological site recording on the Coromandel Peninsula. Between 1981 and 1984 I was employed by Historic Places Trust and NZ Forest Service on short-term contracts to carry out site surveys and excavations prior to site modification as a requirement of the Historic Places Act. From 1984–87 I was employed by NZ Forest Service as archaeologist responsible for management of archaeological sites in exotic forests on the Coromandel Peninsula and, on dissolution of the Forest Service, transferred to the Department of Conservation Waikato Conservancy, again taking responsibility for heritage sites in the Coromandel region. I was also Coromandel region filekeeper for NZ Archaeological Association's site recording scheme, the national data base of recorded archaeological sites. Between 1988–91 I had a change in career with the births of my two daughters although I continued to write papers for publication in archaeological journals. Since 1991 I have been employed by Auckland Museum under Lottery and Foundation for Research Science & Technology grants to research the recent history of artefacts recovered from the Hauraki pa, Oruarangi. This work culminated in a description of Maori material culture published as a Bulletin of Auckland Institute and Museum. A similar, recently completed, project has focussed on the archaeology and material culture of Mt Carmel, Houhora, one of the first landfall sites in Northland. Latterly I have been working as an archaeological consultant, again mainly on the Coromandel Peninsula.
VII
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4 Introduction |
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INTRODUCTION
People have lived in Hauraki for about 800 years. During that time they have left their mark on the landscape both physically and in place names.
The Hauraki region reaches out from the nucleus of the Coromandel Peninsula and Hauraki Plains to include the western shore and islands of the Hauraki Gulf and into the Tamaki-Waitemata area (Fig. 1). An extensive coastline, a mountainous backbone and the swampy plains make this an environmentally diverse region and very rich in resources. Over time the Hauraki iwi have utilised the advantages of these different areas for gardening, hunting birds, harvesting kai moans, and for defence.
In the last 40 years there have been a number of archaeological excavations, making the wider Hauraki area one of the more intensively studied regions in Aotearoa (Fig. 2 and Appendix I). The attention has, however, been focussed on smaller areas within the region, such as the western Bay of Plenty, Coromandel east coast, Waihou River, Tamaki River and Motutapu Island, and on specific topics such as initial colonisation by East Polynesians, gardens in East Tamaki, and the undefended settlements of Motutapu Island and Tamaki.
Archaeologists sift through the physical evidence of the past to construct a broad picture of settlement and use of the landscape. The interpretations presented here are derived from excavation but are supplemented by early European eye-witness accounts and journals of missionaries and travellers. Land Court records are another important source of information: in establishing their rights to a land block, claimants often named occupation sites and resources used. Also, where appropriate, artefact collections have been used to interpret activities on specific sites.
This report is organised under broad topics to provide a picture of pre-European Maori life in the Hauraki area, outlining the pattern of settlement, food resources used and the subsistence economy as it can be reconstructed from archaeology This is complemented by, and contrasted with, historic accounts which demonstrate the extent to which European influence made an impact on traditional Maori society.
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Archaeology is limited as a tool to interpret the past. Specific events are rarely identifiable and the people who lived at a particular place, or their tribal affiliations, cannot be determined by archaeological methods. Broad patterns of activity can be identified in settlements. Archaeology can provide quantitative information on economy but only a partial picture is obtained for several reasons: generally only the bones, stone and shell survive to indicate what people ate, or as examples of technology. Radiocarbon dating provides a general indication of chronology, probably to within 100 years, but is unable to be precise on when a site was occupied.
Throughout this paper there are references to 'early' (Archaic) and 'late' (Classic), separating Maori culture into two broad periods of time. These are somewhat arbitrary as no date can be set for a change from one period to another. For a time after initial colonisation the settlers were culturally more East Polynesian than Maori but change in technology, social organisation and settlement, language and cultural practices occurred over the centuries prior to European arrival.
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5 1: Site Distribution |
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I. SITE DISTRIBUTION
Archaeologists have been actively working in the Hauraki region since the mid-1950s, carrying out excavations and recording the surface evidence of Maori occupation on the landscape. The information has been incorporated into the site recording scheme of the NZ Archaeological Association (NZAA), the national database on archaeological sites. The NZAA files are the basis of the lists of sites, called the County Inventories and published by the Historic Places Trust, to inform territorial local authorities, development and planning agencies, and the public of the presence of sites.
Site recording began in the late 1950s, using students and interested amateurs to identify the locations of past Maori and European occupation where there was physical surface evidence remaining. After the implementation of the Historic Places Amendment Act 1975, which provided statutory protection for all archaeological sites, the Historic Places Trust began sponsoring site surveys. The number of records incorporated into the site files increased steeply for about eight years until the NZ Historic Places Trust withdrew funding. By the early 1980s the Hauraki area was one of the better surveyed regions in New Zealand. Little systematic survey has been carried out since that time, and new records being added into the file are from small area surveys usually carried out because of a specific development threat.
The overall distribution of sites, shown in Fig. 3, indicates intensive use of the landscape. Not all of the sites, represented by dots on the map, were occupied at the same time but reflect the pattern of settlement over some 500–600 years. A small number of sites on the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula were clearly occupied within the first hundred years of Maori settlement of New Zealand. The full range of site types occupied at any one time by any one group of people is unknown but hints are provided from Land Court records and by using European observations of settlements in the pre-1840 period.
While site surveys provide information on where people lived on the landscape and patterns emerge from the distribution of occupation evidence, interpretation of the past is largely derived from excavations. The ability to use some of this information is however limited by poorly reported work or by the lack of substantial information about an excavation, by the small area of the site excavated, and by a focus on one particular aspect of information.
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FIGURE 3: DISTRIBUTION OF RECORDED MAORI SITES
Note: Dotted line shows Hauraki boundary.
The data
There are approximately 6000 recorded Maori sites in the Hauraki region. This does not represent all the evidence for several reasons including incomplete coverage, and damage to sites through erosion, forestry, farming practices or development. The total number of sites, or places where evidence of occupation is present on the landscape, can probably
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Site Distribution
realistically be doubled. However not all the sites still exist so the total number will never be known. In addition people often lived in favoured places again and again.
Sites are often difficult to find, especially where shell middens or obvious changes to the ground surface are absent. Consequently evidence of occupation in inland areas, or the use of the forested areas, is severely under-represented on the site distribution map.
Types of sites recorded
The sites are classified according to the evidence visible on the surface. Commonly recorded site types include pa (fortified or defended sites), middens (rubbish heaps including shell, bone, stone and charcoal), terraces (artificially levelled areas), storage pits (semi-subterranean structures for kumara and other foods), stone rows, heaps and mounds usually associated with clearing soil for gardens and for marking out garden plots, cultivated soil where the natural soil profile has been modified by repeated digging over, ovens (cooking sites including oven stones, charcoal and stained soil), working floors where stone tools have been made or prepared, rock carvings, rockshelters and caves which were used as occupation sites or for burials, botanical evidence such as wild taro, find spots where artefacts have been found but there is no other evidence of occupation, canoe landings (area on a foreshore cleared of stones) and human burials.
These site characteristics can appear singly or in combinations. The site records only identify the evidence which is visible on the surface. If excavation takes place, subsurface features such as storage pits, postholes, stone working areas or ovens may become apparent and expand on the interpretation.
Each of the main site types will be described, outlining the evidence uncovered by archaeology.
Pa
There are approximately 700 recorded pa within the Hauraki region (Fig. 4). These are usually on a headland, a ridge or spur end with natural slope defences supplemented by either a single or double ditch and high inner bank enclosing a living space and often having secondary lateral ditches or steepened scarps. Palisade posts provided extra security. Size varied considerably from very small, only large enough for a small family group, through to very large involving numerous terraces and complex defences. Many, but not all, pa were occupied more than once, with modifications to the defences or the layout of the pa.
On the Waihou and Piako Rivers pa were built on flat land adjacent to the river, taking advantage of naturally raised levees in an otherwise poorly drained landscape. The flatland pa were surrounded by large palisade posts enclosing the pa but may also have had ditches and banks such as those on Oruarangi and Paterangi. Parkinson (1784:106)
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FIGURE 4: RECORDED PA SITES
who accompanied Captain Cook on his first voyage also commented that the mud at low tide provided a form of defence from the river side.
In the Tamaki area the volcanic cones of Maungarei (Mt Wellington), Otahuhu (Mt Richmond) and Te Apunga o Tainui (McLennan Hills), Matanginui (Green Mt), Ohuiarangi (Pigeon Mt), Te Puke o Tara (Smales Mt), and also Motukorea (Browns Island), Takapuna (North Head) and Takarunga (Mt Victoria) were defended by a combination of steepened scarps and palisades on the terrace edges, and a ditch and bank s stem on the rim of the crater.
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Yet other sites likely to fit into the category of defended sites have little surface indication of their function. A site beside the Tamaki River (R11/1506) when excavated was found to have been entirely surrounded by a fence. The missionaries from the Royal Admiral in 1801 described a fenced village for about 100 people on the foreshore near Tapu (Missionaries' Journal ms:12). Yet another description of a fenced village, Whakatiwai in 1836, reported in Wade (1977:29–30), can probably be attributed to Rev. Henry Williams although Wade refers to the writer as 'a much esteemed individual'.
Wakatiwai (sic) consists of a quadrangular enclosure of about four hundred feet along the front, by about two hundred in depth; the fence composed of stakes of all sorts and sizes, varying in height from ten to twenty feet, driven into the ground about a couple of inches apart, and having, at intervals, large posts, of which the upper part is rudely shaped in the semblance of a human figure. ... Outside, in all directions, are large mounds of cockle shells. The entrance is by an opening about two feet from the ground, just wide enough for one person; a block of wood driven into the earth serving as a step. Within the enclosure, without the slightest attention to order or plan of any kind, are scattered, about a hundred rush huts and hovels, some with fenced enclosures and some without; with occasionally a small patch of potato ground. In all the enclosures, and elsewhere about the pa, are store houses, consisting of a platform raised upon stakes ten or fifteen feet high, on which are deposited the potatoes, &c., and here and there are poles on which are hung bundles of dried fish, scattering their fragrance abroad. In all directions the ground is covered with cockle-shells, fragments of potato baskets, and other remains; whilst its surface is everywhere broken into little pits and hillocks, occasioned by the constant formation of ovens for cooking. Pigs are seen wandering about, grubbing up the abandoned ovens ...
Excavations of pa at Kauri Point and Ongare Point in the Bay of Plenty, Sarah's Gully near Opito and Castor Bay on Auckland's North Shore all show complex histories with undefended living sites being overlaid at a later time by pa complete with ditch and bank, and palisades. In the case of Kauri Point, the pa in the final stage of use was smaller than the original. Excavation of the pa in Station Bay, Motutapu revealed a change in use over successive occupations from an undefended settlement with kumara store pits to a defended storage site to a fortified site without storage, reflecting the different pressures placed on the people of Motutapu Island.
Not all pa were occupied on more than one occasion. For instance Kauri Point, Birkenhead had very ephemeral evidence, and was occupied for only a short time. By contrast, Oruarangi may have been occupied semi-continuously for a considerable time with the site being enlarged on at least two occasions, until by the early 19th century it enclosed nearly five acres of flat land (Furey 1996).
In the early 16th century ditch and bank pa began to make an appearance on the landscape. However it is likely that conflict between groups of people dates back to the first settlement. Weapons were used in East Polynesia, the homeland area, so it can be inferred behaviour involving warfare and skirmishing was also brought here by the first settlers. No recognisable weapons have been recovered from sites of an early age in New Zealand. The earliest form of defence may have been simple fences around settlements, or refuge sites in the bush, as the evidence for conflict is rare.
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Some pa were constructed in the 19th century. The almost constant warfare in the 1820s and 1830s meant people needed to protect themselves. A pa built at Ongare Point by Ngai Te Rangi was attacked by Taraia of Ngati Tamatera in 1842 (Shawcross 1964), and Opita on the Waihou River was re-built in 1842 in anticipation of reprisals for Taraia's actions against Ngai Te Rangi at Ongare Point (Phillips 1994: 412). There is mention in the Land Court records of other pa constructed at this time, for example, on Waiheke (reported in Monin 1992), and Te Kari on the Waihou River re-fortified in 1831 (Phillips
1994:377)
It is apparent from the Land Court records and from European eye-witness accounts that the pa was often the focus of settlement in an area, with an undefended village nearby and gardens scattered through the area. John Nicholas (18171: 394) described several villages on the Wharekawa coast (on the western side of Firth of Thames) in 1815, one of which may be Whakatiwai, with the palisaded pa on the ridge above and gardens on hillslopes in the vicinity At Matatoki, Oruarangi was identified in the Land Court records as the principal pa with Paterangi a satellite pa, and kainga and gardens in the vicinity (Hauraki MB 63:133). By contrast, Captain Cook in Mercury Bay described the well organised Wharetaewa pa with numerous houses, and very little evidence of occupation outside of the pa, although there were people in different parts of the wider bay. (B eaglehole 1955:198-99).
Middens
Middens are the rubbish heaps of a settlement. There are approximately 4300 recorded sites containing midden (Fig. 5). They are made up mainly of shell, but may also contain small amounts of fish and other bone, charcoal, oven stones and other debris such as seeds. Shell deposits are highly visible in disturbed ground and are often the only indication that an occupation site is present. The amount of shell can vary from a few kitfuls to several cubic metres. For instance the middens at Kauri Point pa and Ongare Point pa were just under two metres in depth.
By sorting the midden into its various components and identifying shell and bone material, archaeologists can interpret diet and preferences for food although the information has many limitations.
Because shell middens are highly visible, the absence of this site type from some areas appears significant but can be explained by environmental conditions. Thus a comparison of Fig. 5 with the overall site distribution map (Fig. 3) shows a general absence of shell midden at the northern end of the Coromandel Peninsula and along the upper west coast north of Colville. By contrast almost all of the Coromandel east coast sites contain shell. On the Wharekawa coast middens are generally only present in the coastal sites. Some of these absences can be explained by distance from sources of estuarine and sandy shore shellfish (such as the rocky Moehau coastline on Coromandel) but shellfish have been carried some distance in other places, for example, to Raupa near Paeroa, and cockles are present in middens on Slipper Island.
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Site Distribution
FIGURE 5: RECORDED SITES WITH MIDDEN
On close examination the middens vary enormously in content. Some contain the every day debris of the settlement, with stone flakes, oven rake-out, shells, bone fragments and broken oven stones, but others are very specialised. For instance from a midden at Galatea Bay on Ponui Island only the head bones of snapper were recovered indicating the bodies had been taken elsewhere (Shawcross 1967). Seasonal camps where fish were caught, deheaded, dried and taken away to another settlement were probably common around the Hauraki coast.
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Storage pits
Storage pit depressions in the ground indicate semi-subterranean roofed food stores were present in many undefended sites as well as pa. Often there are one or two pits in association with the same number of terraces but in some areas large numbers of pits are present over some distance along a ridge or spur. For instance in the Colville area, up to 33 pits are to be found in one site. By contrast, on the opposite coast of the Coromandel Peninsula, at Waikawau Bay, pits occur singly. This suggests that in some places there was a greater community emphasis on storage of food, while the small sites with single pits may be associated with small family groups responsible for their own food supply. Over 1700 sites with storage pit depressions have been recorded.
Many storage pits have been excavated in the Hauraki region. Sites at Opito and nearby Sarah's Gully had rectangular pits with small bin pits dug into the side walls and into the floor, dated to the 13th and 14th centuries. This is amongst the oldest evidence for storage in New Zealand, displaying sophistication in what was apparently a newly developed technique for storing kumara. A number of excavated pits have features such as external perimeter drains for keeping water out of the stores, or for removing water from within pits where internal drains and tunnels to the outside slope were constructed. There appears to be no regional pattern to the use of these features. Pits not visible on the surface are often uncovered during excavations, having been completely and deliberately filled in and the level surface used for another purpose.
The most common form of pit is rectangular. Rua, or underground pits with a narrow circular entrance at ground level, and pits dug into a scarp or slope are rare in the Coromandel area although they are common in the western Bay of Plenty.
Like middens, variation is also evident in the distribution of storage pits. It is noticeably apparent from Fig. 6 that few sites with pits have been recorded on the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula south of Opito. This may be due to several factors which have not yet received any archaeological investigation, ranging from erosion of the soft volcanic ash soil infilling pit depressions through to a change in type of settlement. Excavations at Kauri Point and Ongare Point revealed numerous storage pits and an extremely complex pattern of infilling and reconstruction, very little of which was apparent at ground level. Pits were also uncovered in two sites at Whangamata during excavation. The inference is that pit storage was not carried out in the lower eastern Coromandel area to any great extent in the 17th and 18th centuries.
The absence of storage pits in sites on the Hauraki Plains can be easily explained by the unsuitable storage conditions in the poorly drained ground. However above ground storage structures were noted by European visitors to the area (Wilson ms). Food grown in the naturally fertile soil around the river settlements may also have been taken to higher ground where pit storage would have been more appropriate. This is apparent on Fig. 6 where numerous pits have been recorded in the low hills bordering the Hauraki Plains.
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Site Distribution
FIGURE 6: RECORDED SITES WITH PITS
Terraces
Terraces often contain evidence of houses, cooking and storage. They vary in size from small flat areas of approximately 3m x 2 m up to 30 m x 10 m which might have had several houses and associated features. Terrace construction on some sites would have required a large labour input. By contrast small sites with two or three terraces may have been occupied by a small whanau.
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TABLE 1: EXCAVATED HOUSES
Place Site No. Size of house (in metres)
Motutapu Is R10/31 1.8 × 2.8
Fisher Road R11/887-9 2.8 × 6.0 (incl. porch of 1.4 m on south side)
Tamaki River R11/1506 3.5 × 4.0 (porch 0.8 m wide on south side)
3.4 × 2.8
3.5 × 3.0
? × 2.8
Westfield R11/898 7.2 × 3.2
Puriri T12/318 4.0 × 4.0 (door to east)
Raupa T13/13 10.5 × 6.25
Whangapoua T11/644 4.0 × 2.75 (door to east)
3.0 × 2.75
One such excavated terrace on Motutapu Island had three separate and different periods of use. In the first occupation there was an open courtyard with a house and two pits around the edge. Some time later when all evidence of the house and pits was covered over, the terrace was a convenient place to sit and make stone adzes. At another time, hangi were dug. Houses were probably on the adjacent terraces (Leahy 1970, 1972).
Few houses have been excavated. They vary from temporary shelters to well constructed houses (see Table 1). Often there has been so much re-building and re-organisation of a settlement the posthole outline of individual houses is difficult to find among many apparently randomly patterned postholes.
Garden sites
Garden sites are difficult to find unless there are stone walls and mounds such as on the volcanic fields of East Tamaki and Otahuhu. In other places shallow parallel channels or ditches running down hillslopes may also indicate garden plots. Excavation may reveal that sand or gravel had been added to the clay soil to make it lighter, for example, at Rocky Bay on Waiheke Island or on Kauri Point pa, Bay of Plenty (Law 1975).
Artefact manufacturing places
Artefact manufacturing places such as stone workshops where adzes were shaped by flaking blocks of stone, and grinding grooves for shaping and sharpening adzes, are not common. Stone workshops are situated on various beaches on the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula, and on Motutapu Island, Rakino Island and the shores of the Tamaki River. A number of the settlement sites from the 13th to 15th centuries have considerable evidence for the making of artefacts such as ornaments, fishhooks and adzes. Sites from later in time with similar evidence are very few and include Oruarangi and some of the other Waihou sites. The lack of flakes from later sites can be attributed to the use of different stone materials which could not be worked by the traditional
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Site Distribution
method of flaking. Greywacke was too hard to flake easily and accurately and so bruising the stone with a hammerstone became the main way by which adzes were shaped. The by-product of bruising is a fine powder which cannot be detected in the ground.
Other sites
Other sites, including some which fall into the categories of art and ritual, are difficult to find and interpret. Symbols and stylistic faces carved into the rock in caves or on large boulders represent another dimension to decoration known more widely from portable artefacts and wood carvings. Rock carvings are known from a number of locations: Ongare Point, Whiritoa, Papa Aroha, Coromandel and Kaihere to the west of the Hauraki Plains. At Flaxmill Bay, Whitianga there is a face carved into the rock on the edge of a pool within a stream bed. Obsidian flakes were found within the pool (Law 1966). There are undoubtedly a number of other sites like this that may have had ritual significance.
A different type of site also considered to have ritual or tapu associations was the swamp at Kauri Point. Here a small wooden enclosure had hundreds of broken hair combs made of wood and thousands of obsidian flakes along with many other wooden objects such as spears, musical instruments, gardening tools, wooden containers, plus cordage and gourds (Shawcross 1976). The site is dated to the early 16th century and later.
FIGURE 7: FISHTRAP AT SANDY BAY
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Other site types which are rarely found because of the limited archaeological evidence are related to the use of the foreshore: canoe landing areas which are only apparent if stones have been cleared away; stone fishtraps of which only four are recorded from Colville Bay and Port Charles on the Coromandel Peninsula (Fig. 7) and Browns Island; and eel weirs.
Burials
Burials have been found in a number of locations, including beach dunes. It was a common East Polynesian practice to bury people near or in the settlement, a custom which was brought to New Zealand. Over time however there was a shift to burying people in hidden places away from the villages, and to secondary internment after appropriate ceremonies had been conducted. Burials have been found during excavations, for example, Raupa at Paeroa and Station Bay on Motutapu Island, but in the majority of cases the burials post-date the time the site was lived on.
Pattern of settlement
Recorded archaeological sites are mainly within one kilometre of the coastline except in major river valleys where sites can be found some distance inland. Although the map distribution is partly a reflection of where archaeologists have been, several extensive site surveys on the Coromandel Peninsula failed to find evidence of occupation more than two kilometres from the coast (Furey 1987). There was undoubtedly use of the inland areas for hunting birds and rats, for extracting stone and for routes between areas, but occupation sites may have been fewer in number, and difficult to detect in the absence of terraces or shell middens.
From the recorded sites the settlement pattern can be broadly reconstructed as it related to the economic cycle. Small middens and terrace sites suggest temporary occupation by whanau on a seasonal basis while gardening, gathering forest foods or other products. Temporary fishing camps are also apparent. This type of site is present throughout history. In the early period (up to 1500 AD) some sites, for example, Sarah's Gully, may have acted as base camps or semi-permanent villages at which a wide range of activities were carried out including gardening, food storage and burial of the dead. Associated with the villages were hunting camps which may have only been occupied for a few weeks and where a limited range of activities were carried out. Later, pa became the focus of settlement, to be identified with, and for protection if needed. However some pa were only used in a very limited way and could not be termed semi-permanent defended villages. People continued to live in semi-permanent villages or in small whanau-based camps, probably on a seasonal basis while tending gardens or using localised resources.
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5.13 24 |
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Site Distribution
Case study—Waihou River
Few areas within the Hauraki region have been studied in sufficient detail to allow description of the settlement pattern over time. One such area is the lower Waihou River where archaeology has been used in conjunction with Land Court records to outline an occupation sequence based on political expansion of Marutuahu tribes and environmental change over time (Phillips 1994).
There is no direct evidence yet for pre-1450 AD settlement in the Waihou area but it is implied by the presence of sites on the east coast Coromandel and islands of the Hauraki Gulf. From about 1450 AD undefended settlements were situated on natural shell banks near the Waihou River mouth, evident from the lower occupation level of Oruarangi and forest clearance at Hurumoimoi (Kirikiri). Between about 1550–1650 AD pa were constructed, the river banks were gardened and undefended settlements were situated on elevated levees beside the river.
The arrival of Matutuahu tribes into the Hauraki area around 1650–1700 AD led to changes in the settlement pattern which coincided with environmental changes in the lower Waihou River, and resulted in adaptations to living sites and an increase in the number of pa. There is evidence for a slight rise in sea level, resulting in settlements being raised up to 700 mm by the addition of shell mined from natural shell banks. Expansion southwards along the river necessitated construction of pa to provide protection. The first occupation of Raupa was around this time. Over the next 50 to loo years more pa were built in the area reflecting warfare and competition both internally and externally. By the end of the 18th century Marutuahu were a powerful political force, with a fearsome reputation in the Far North (Collins 1798). Internal political power may have been controlled by an ariki whose influence extended over an area of the river. In 1801 Oruarangi was the residence of such a chief (Missionaries' Journal ms); in 1820 an unnamed chief at Raupa also controlled a stretch of the river, as did Te Puhi and Te Horeta near the mouth of the Waihou (Elder 1932:255).
The environment in the early 19th century continued to deteriorate, with bush clearance in the hill country to the east of the Waihou River leading to erosion and heavy sedimentation in the tributaries and the main river. The Whakarewa Channel on the eastern side of Tuatahi Island adjacent to Oruarangi became progressively silted up until by the 1870s it was completely dry land.
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6 2: Chronology |
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6.1 25 |
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2. CHRONOLOGY
The age of a site is determined by radiocarbon dating which measures the time at which the sample being analysed died. Radiocarbon dating will not give a calendar date, rather it indicates a range within which there is a high statistical probability that the sample ceased living. By choosing samples which correlate closely with the archaeological activity, for example, shellfish in a midden or twigs from a fireplace, an age range for that activity is obtained. Because of the short time-scale and the lack of distinctive markers in Maori culture, there is little in the greater part of New Zealand's settlement history which can be used to assess the age of sites without resorting to radiocarbon dating techniques. The exception is the presence of distinctive artefact types closely resembling East Polynesian styles and therefore assigned to the early period of settlement of New Zealand. The remains of sea mammals, moa and other extinct birds in a site also contribute to a classification of 'early' (pre-1500 AD).
The settlement of Hauraki, in keeping with dates for other regions in New Zealand, is condensed into a relatively short time-scale of about 500-600 years before European arrival. While there have been previous claims made for occupation of 1000 years, there is no evidence to validate the assertions. Anomalous radiocarbon dates of an early age can be individually discounted on the basis of the type of wood used (often driftwood used in fires, long-lived species or heartwood posts) and in several instances old results on shell suggest that natural beach deposits rather than food remains have been dated. The reliable dates all fit comfortably after 1250-1300 AD (Fig. 8). The Polynesian settlers explored and settled most areas within a century. Although the earliest dates for settlement are found on the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula and islands of the Hauraki Gulf, the Hauraki Plains have evidence of occupation at Oruarangi in the 15th century and the Tamaki area was also well known at that time. No sites of an early age are known from the North Shore and northern coast, but occasional finds of adzes of an early type suggest activity here also.
A model of settlement based on initial rapid exploration of the country has been proposed (Anderson 1991). Thus major stone resources of basalt, argillite, chert and obsidian are found in all known early sites. After initial exploration people may have become more locally focussed and developed territorial rights, for example, the
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6.2 26 |
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Chronology
Coromandel people worked basalt and made adzes for trade to other communities. The size of the founding population is unknown but according to various theories ranged from a few dozen to hundreds of people in a deliberate colonising expedition after an initial reconnaissance voyage. This is not an unlikely scenario—two way voyaging has been documented in the archaeological record in East Polynesia and Mayor Island obsidian has been found in a site dated to the 13th century on Raoul Island in the Kermadec Group (Anderson and McFadgen 1990). This raises the possibility that voyagers did return to the homeland with news of an unoccupied land mass rich in resources. It is also possible there were multiple settlements of New Zealand over several hundred years—a pearl shell trolling lure found in an archaeological excavation at Tairua, dated to at least 100–150 years after initial settlement, was an imported item as pearl shell does not grow here (Green 1967).
Dates for the building of pa, after 1500 AD, are also similar to dates in other regions. Sites at Kauri Point (Bay of Plenty), Sarah's Gully Pa and Castor Bay all have at least one undefended occupation prior to the defences being constructed.
The Tamaki area had an extensive population by the late 16th-early 17th century. Several settlements among the gardens are all dated to around the same time and the initial activity on Maungarei was also probably in the late 16th century (Davidson 1993).
Calibrated radiocarbon dates are presented in Appendix II.
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6.3 27 |
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6.4 28 |
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6.5 29 |
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7 3: Subsistence Economy |
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7.1 30 |
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3. SUBSISTENCE ECONOMY
Marine foods played an important role in the Maori economy. Fish from open sea, rocky shore and estuarine environments are found in middens, along with large quantities of shellfish. Approximately 70% of recorded sites have visible shell midden although this is an under-estimate of the true value of seafood.
Detailed analysis of the food waste in middens allows the economy to be reconstructed at a general level. While lists of bird and fish species found in excavations are produced, exact numbers of individuals or species are not possible for several reasons. These include:
processes of decay. Bones of eel and flounder and the cartilaginous skeleton of ray and sharks are rarely found in sites yet references in historic accounts and Land Court records emphasise their importance. Inanga and fresh water fish have left no trace whatsoever. Food preservation techniques such as potting of birds may have led to softening of bone and subsequent rapid decay. The full range of vegetables and plant foods is also unable to be identified.
the absence of certain bones or parts of the body which are integral to identification of species, particularly relevant where the heads of fish have been removed at another place.
changing techniques in analysis of midden samples. Over time archaeologists have become more aware of the information which can be recovered from middens. In the early years of archaeological investigation, little or no midden material was analysed and certainly not quantified. Detailed examination of several middens has demonstrated the importance of preserved foods and summer and hunting camps.
Fish
A wide range of species of fish was caught by various means—line fishing, trolling, spears, nets and traps. The older sites have a wider variety of species than the more recent sites (Fig. 9 and Table 2). This is partly due to the location of the older sites on the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula. The excavated sites of a more recent age tend to be from the more sheltered waters of the Waitemata Harbour and lower Firth of
23
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7.2 31 |
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Thames. Snapper occurs in all sites regardless of age or location. However blue cod, barracouta, kahawai, leather jacket and labrids are present in over half of the early sites but only kahawai and Elasmobranchs (sharks and rays) are present in more than one third of later sites. Under-represented species include flounder and eel. These species were mentioned repeatedly in Land Court cases at Kauaeranga and in the lower Waihou River area (for example, Hauraki MB 4:217-29 and Hauraki MB 58:123; Hauraki
MB 60:150).
There is little evidence for deep off-shore fishing. The bones of hapuku (one individual) have been recognised only in the Port Jackson site although hapuku holes are traditionally known in Hauraki. Whale meat was probably obtained from beach strandings. Sharks are known to be important historically (for meat and oil from the liver) but there is little evidence archaeologically. Large wooden hooks found in some Waihou sites were probably used to catch shark.
Small fishing camps were established through the Gulf area in summer. One such site at Galatea Bay on Ponui Island had many bones from the heads of snapper but few vertebrae, indicating the dried fish were taken elsewhere (Shawcross 1967). The Sunde site on Motutapu Island had similar evidence but small snapper were eaten on site and fish with an estimated length of more than 6o cm long had the heads cut off and were taken away from the site (Nichol 1988).
FIGURE 9: NUMBER OF SITES WITH EACH FISH SPECIES
24
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7.3 32 |
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25
EARLY SITES |
snapper |
tarakihi |
porae |
blue cod |
red cod |
john dory |
moki |
warehou |
kingfish |
barracouta |
kahawai |
mackerel spp. |
trevally |
leather jacket |
labrids |
gurnard |
dog fish |
Elasmobranch |
ray
|
mullet |
eel |
unidentified |
other |
Sunde, Motutapu Island – pre-ash layer |
390 |
1 |
|
1 |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
8 |
P |
2 |
P |
2 |
|
|
|
1 |
176 |
|
|
|
Sunde, Motutapu Island – post-ash layer |
386 |
2 |
|
1 |
|
P |
P |
|
P |
P |
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
1 |
|
P |
P |
4 |
P |
|
|
Harataonga west |
83 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
8 |
2 |
5 |
92 |
|
|
26 |
|
|
|
|
18 |
|
Port Jackson |
P |
|
P |
P |
|
P |
|
|
|
P |
P |
|
|
P |
P |
p |
|
p |
|
|
|
|
hapuku, parore, butterfish |
Cross Creek |
248 |
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
9 |
4 |
|
167 |
46 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
sea perch |
Sarah's Gully |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Skippers Ridge |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Opito – N40/3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hahei – N44/215 |
19 |
6+ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
1 |
|
|
|
133 |
26 |
2+ |
|
p |
|
|
|
|
blue maomao, butterfish, trumpeter |
Hahei – N44/97 |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
P |
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
Hot Water Beach |
100 |
9 |
|
1 |
|
|
3 |
1 |
|
3 |
|
|
P |
20 |
12 |
|
|
1 |
|
|
1 |
|
|
Tairua |
28 |
9 |
|
1 |
|
2 |
3 |
|
|
7 |
|
|
|
|
12 |
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
|
6 |
|
Slipper Island sites |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
P |
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Whitipirorua |
P |
|
|
P |
|
P |
P |
|
|
P |
P |
P |
|
P |
P |
P |
P |
|
|
P |
|
|
star gazer |
Whangamata |
3 |
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
LATER SITES | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Kauri Pt Birkenhead |
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
Motutapu – N38/37 |
39 |
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
7 |
|
|
|
|
|
3 |
|
4 |
|
|
|
|
|
Motutapu – N38/30 |
8 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki – Fisher Rd |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
P |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
P |
|
P |
|
|
star gazer |
Tamaki –Westfield |
18 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki – ACI |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki – Hamlins Hill |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki – Cryers Road |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ponui Is – Galatea Bay |
96 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Z |
|
|
22 |
|
Kirikiri sites |
P |
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
Puriri sites |
3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oruarangi |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Raupa |
P |
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
P |
P |
P |
|
|
P |
|
|
P |
P |
P |
|
|
Waiwhau |
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
Opita |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
P |
|
P |
|
|
|
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7.4 33 |
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Shellfish
Analysis of middens shows a change in preference for shellfish species over time. For instance at Tairua, the lower layer (early 1400s) had rocky shore shellfish but the upper layer (early 1700s) had sandy beach species with pockets of rocky shore species perhaps suggesting isolated meals. At the Sunde site, rocky shore species dominate the lower midden under the Rangitoto Ash but pipi and cockle account for about 95% of shells in the upper or later midden, possibly explained by changes in the local beach environment as a result of the eruption of Rangitoto. Very detailed examination of the contents of the Sunde midden below the Rangitoto Ash on Motutapu found kina were the most important by meat weight, contributing more than other shellfish combined (Nichol 1988).
The first people in an area gathered the large rocky shore shellfish, probably following similar practices used in the Polynesian homeland on the extensive coastal platforms. The most commonly eaten rocky shore shellfish were mussel, cats eye, cooks turban, white rock shell, oysters and limpet.
Generally speaking there has been a trend over time away from the rocky shore and towards greater exploitation of estuarine and sandy beach environments. While the early sites have mainly rocky shore species with some sandy shore species, late sites are almost all cockle, pipi and tuatua with small numbers of gastropods such as Amphibola and Cominella. This is probably because the soft shore environment was more able to sustain regular harvesting.
Estimates of meat weight from various foods in middens indicate shellfish was a minor component in the diet of the early settlers. Fish and sea mammals such as seals formed the bulk of the protein eaten.
Shellfish commonly represented in middens include cockle, pipi, tuatua, oyster, paua, mussel, scallop, cats eye, Amphibola spp., Cominella spp., dog cockle, cooks turban and white rock shell. In some sites the shells of oyster, dog cockle, paua and cooks turban have been used to make ornaments and fishhooks.
Marine mammals
Evidence of sea mammals occurs only in sites dated 400–700 years ago (see Table 3). The remains of fur seals, sea lions and elephant seals are present in a number of sites. The bones of pups and juveniles indicate there were breeding colonies of seals in the vicinity of some of these sites. Winter hunting is suggested from the juvenile bones at Opito, Sarah's Gully and Tairua. Fur seals contributed enormously to the meat supply in some sites—for instance a minimum of 17 fur seals were eaten at N40/3 at Opito, eight at Sarah's Gully and six at Tairua (Smith 1981). With breeding colonies gone, the importance of seal declined but it is likely opportunistic killings of seals in northern waters continued.
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7.5 34 |
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Subsistence Economy
TABLE 3 : MARINE MAMMALS AND OTHER SPECIES IN SITES
EARLY SITES |
Kuri (dog) |
kiore |
fur seal |
sea lion |
elephant seal |
leopard seal |
seal unident |
cetacean |
other |
Sunde, Motutapu Island – pre-ash layer |
P |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
tuatara | |
Sunde, Motutapu Island – post-ash layer |
|
P |
P |
|
|
|
P |
| |
Harataonga Western |
P |
|
P |
|
|
|
|
| |
Ponui Island |
P |
|
P |
|
|
|
|
| |
Port Jackson |
P |
|
P P |
P |
|
|
P |
tuatara | |
Cross Creek |
P |
P |
P P |
P |
|
P |
P |
| |
Sarah's Gully |
P |
|
P |
P |
|
|
P |
tuatara | |
Skippers Ridge |
P |
|
|
P |
|
|
|
tuatara | |
Opito – N40/3 |
P |
|
P |
P |
|
|
P |
tuatara | |
Hahei – N44/215 |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Hahei – N44/97 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Hot Water Beach |
P |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
tuatara | |
Tairua |
P |
|
P P |
P |
|
|
P |
| |
Slipper Island |
P |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
lizard | |
Whitipirorua |
P |
|
P P |
|
|
|
P |
| |
Whangamata |
P |
|
P |
|
|
|
|
| |
Whiritoa |
P |
|
P |
|
P |
P |
|
| |
LATER SITES |
| ||||||||
Kauri Pt Birkenhead |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Motutapu – R10/38 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Motutapu – R10/31 |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki – Fisher Rd |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki – Westfield |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki – ACI |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki– Hamlins Hill |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tamaki– Cryers Rd |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ponui Island – Galatea Bay |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirikiri sites |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Puriri sites |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oruarangi |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Raupa |
P |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
P |
pig |
Waiwhau |
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
pig |
Opita |
|
P |
|
|
|
|
|
|
pig, sheep, cow |
P = present
Fishhooks made from whalebone are found in several early sites, and later sites in the Waihou area have patu and other large objects made from whalebone. At Oruarangi a number of bone hair combs have been fashioned from dolphin or pilot whale jaw bones. Undoubtedly the bone attributed to large whales came from fortuitous strandings but dolphins and possibly pilot whales may have been hunted for food and for their bones.
Dogs, rats and reptiles
Dog (kuri) bones have been found in many sites. Usually there are the remains of only one dog but at Whangamata Wharf site there were 17 from one occupation, 19 at Sarah's Gully from several occupations and N40/3 at Opito had 19 from one occupation (Smith
27
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7.6 35 |
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EARLY SITES |
moa* |
kiwi |
NZ pigeon |
kaka |
parakeet |
morepork |
tui |
kokako |
piopio* |
bellbird |
NZ quail |
NZ crow |
rifleman |
NZ falcon |
saddleback |
rail |
pipit |
weka |
takahe* |
NZ harrier hawk* |
huia* |
little woodhen |
little spotted kiwi* |
kakapo* |
other |
Sunde, Motutapu Island – pre-ash layer |
p |
|
|
29 |
15 |
|
59 |
|
P |
1 |
|
1 |
P |
|
P |
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
stitchbird |
Sunde, Motutapu Island – post-ash layer |
|
|
p |
2 |
7 |
|
3 |
|
p |
p |
p |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Great Barrier Island – Harataonga western |
P |
|
p |
3 |
|
|
p |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
p |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ponui Island |
P |
P |
P |
|
|
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P |
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p |
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Port Jackson |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
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p |
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p |
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P |
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P |
P |
P |
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P |
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P |
adzebill* |
Cross Creek |
P |
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2 |
5 |
1 |
1 |
6 |
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Sarah's Gully |
P |
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P |
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p |
P |
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p |
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p |
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Opito – N40/2 |
P |
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P |
P |
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p |
P |
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P |
P |
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Opito – N40/3 |
P |
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P |
P |
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P |
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Hahei – N44/215 |
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Hahei – N44/97 |
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P |
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\_ |
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Hot Water Beach |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
P |
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P |
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p |
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p |
P |
P |
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P |
NZ coot* |
Tairua |
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5 |
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P |
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P |
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great crested grebe, red-crowned parakeet |
Slipper Island sites |
P |
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red-crowned parakeet |
Whitipirorua |
P |
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Whangamata |
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P |
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P |
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Whiritoa |
P |
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p |
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P |
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LATER SITES | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kauri Pt Birkenhead |
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Motutapu – N38/37 |
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Motutapu – N38/30 |
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Tamaki – Fisher Rd |
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Tamaki – Westfield |
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Tamaki – ACI |
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Tamaki – Hamlins Hill |
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Tamaki – Cryers Road |
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Ponui Is – Galatea Bay |
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Kirikiri sites |
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Puriri sites |
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fowl turkey, |
Oruarangi |
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Raupa |
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P |
p |
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p |
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\_ |
WaiwhP11 |
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Opita |
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p |
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| |
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![]() |
7.7 36 |
▲back to top |
EARLY SITES |
blue penguin |
petrel spp. |
shearwater spp. |
gannet |
albatross spp. |
mollymawk |
gull spp. |
tem spp. |
prion spp. |
NZ pelican |
oystercatcher |
NZ dotterel |
shag spp. |
spooted shag |
gery duck |
blue duck |
duck spp. |
brown teal |
Aust. shoveller |
white heron |
pukeko |
marsh crake |
other |
Sunde, Motutapu Island – pre-ash layer |
P |
P
|
1 |
1 |
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2 |
1 |
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P |
4 |
P |
2 |
80 |
4 |
P |
p |
1 |
1 |
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wrybill lesser knot |
Sunde, Motutapu Island – post-ash layer |
1 |
P |
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1 |
1 |
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P |
2 |
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P |
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wader |
Great Barrier Island – Harataonga western |
4 |
5 |
2 |
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P |
P |
P |
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P |
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3 |
2 |
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P |
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Ponui Island |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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Port Jackson |
P |
P |
P |
P |
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P |
P |
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P |
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P |
P |
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P |
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NZ scaup, brown teal |
Cross Creek |
4 |
8 |
6 |
1 |
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1 |
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3 |
1 |
3 |
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Sarah's Gully |
P |
P |
P |
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P |
P |
P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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paradise shelduck |
Opito – N40/2 |
P |
P |
P |
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P |
P |
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P |
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P |
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Opito – N40/3 |
P |
P |
P |
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P |
P |
P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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Hahei – N44/215 |
P |
P |
P |
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Hahei – N44/97 |
P |
P |
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P |
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Hot Water Beach |
P |
P |
P |
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P |
P |
P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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Tairua |
2 |
3 |
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1 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
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2 |
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3 |
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2 |
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P |
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paradise shelduck, pied stilt |
Slipper Island sites |
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P |
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P |
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Whitipirorua |
P |
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P |
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Whangamata Wharf |
P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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Whiritoa |
P |
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P |
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LATER SITES |
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Kauri Pt Birkenhead |
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Motutapu – N38/37 |
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Motutapu – N38/30 |
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P |
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Tamaki – Fisher Rd |
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unidentified |
Tamaki – Westfield |
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Tamaki – ACI |
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Tamaki – Hamlins Hill |
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Tamaki – Cryers Road |
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Ponui Is – Galatea Bay |
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Kirikiri sites |
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p |
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P |
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Puriri sites |
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2 |
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Oruarangi |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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P |
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bittern |
Raupa |
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p |
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Waiwhau |
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Opita |
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p |
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![]() |
7.8 37 |
▲back to top |
![]() |
7.9 38 |
▲back to top |
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML> <HEAD> <META HTTP-EQUIV="Generator" CONTENT="OmniPage Pro 15 - http://www.scansoft.com"> <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=UTF-8"></HEAD></HTML>
![]() |
7.10 39 |
▲back to top |
![]() |
7.11 40 |
▲back to top |
Subsistence Economy
Vegetable and forest produce
Kumara and gourd were definitely cultivated. Taro still grows in some stream valleys near the top of the Coromandel Peninsula and is possibly a wild remnant of cultivated food (Diamond 1962, Mathews 1984). Gardening soon exhausted the soil and after five to seven years of cropping the land was left fallow and new garden plots were cleared and burnt. Bracken fern thrived in cleared soil and the rhizome was harvested as a staple food in times when other foods were scarce or unavailable. Several instances of people collecting fern root have been reported, for example, at Mercury Bay and Coromandel Harbour (Salmond 1991:196, Cruise 1824:209).
The role forest foods played in the diet is under-rated as organic matter does not usually survive in archaeological sites. Kernels of hinau berries have been found at T11/644 Whangapoua, Hurumoimoi, Raupa, Waiwhau and Oruarangi. Karaka and tawa or taraire is known from Waiwhau, titoki and karaka from Oruarangi. Land Court records relate flax, karaka, fern fronds, flowers of kiekie, raupo and fruit of kahikatea were all taken from the forest in the lower Waihou River valley (Phillips 1994:192). Timber was used for buildings, carvings, canoes and firewood.
Identification of charcoal from house posts on three sites in the lower Waihou River valley show a variety of species were used. Kauri, totara, kahikatea, matai and tawa were identified at Raupa (Prickett 1992), matai and kauri at Puriri (Bedford and Allen 1993), and a wide range at Oruarangi including tanikaha, rata or pohutukawa, totara, kanuka, kauri, pukatea, puriri, kahikatea, maire, matai and hard beech. Some timbers are likely to be from salvaged driftwood (Best and Allen 1991).
Summary
Over time a change can be seen in the economy of the Maori of Hauraki. The initial settlers had an economy based on a broad range of hunting including sea mammals, fish, birds and, to a lesser extent, shellfish. Hunting camps such as at Tairua and the Sunde site on Motutapu Island were places where food was processed for removal to another settlement. Other sites have only portions of an animal suggesting meat was traded or given as koha to other communities. An indication of the importance of fishing is shown in the large numbers of fishhooks made of moa and whale bone in the early sites. However people also gardened, with root crops being grown for food during the autumn and winter months.
Moa and sea mammals had disappeared from the region by about 1500 AD and fish and shellfish began to provide the bulk of the protein. With the exception of Oruarangi (and to a lesser extent Paterangi, Te Kari and Kopuarahi) few fish-hooks have been found in sites dated after 1500 AD. Netting probably became the main method of catching large numbers of fish and Cook saw a number of net poles in the Waihou River (Beaglehole
33
![]() |
7.12 41 |
▲back to top |
ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
1955:209). The importance of kumara is indicated by the number of storage pit sites in the region, and by pa used to protect the harvested kumara crop, for example, Ongari Point, Station Bay on Motutapu, and Harataonga on Great Barrier Island. Summer fishing camps (for example, Galatea Bay) were a crucial component of the settlement pattern, important for ensuring a supply of preserved food over the leaner winter months. This was observed by Captain Cook in Mercury Bay in 1769, by Richard Cruise in Coromandel Harbour in 1820, by William White in 1826 at Waitakaruru, and on Pakihi Island illustrated by Heaphy (Fig. 11).
34
![]() |
8 4: Stone And Minerals |
▲back to top |
![]() |
8.1 42 |
▲back to top |
4. STONE RESOURCES AND MINERALS
The Hauraki region has a number of stone resources used by Maori (Fig. 12). In this respect, the area was particularly well endowed. Basalt and obsidian sourced to the Coromandel area were important stone types and have been found in sites up to 300 km away, suggesting an extensive trade in both finished tools and unmodified stone.
A variety of tools were made from stone: adzes, weapons (paw onewa), flax beaters (patu muka), scrapers and cutting tools, drill points, sandstone files, grindstones and hammerstones to name a few In addition some types of rock were highly suitable for use as hangi stones.
The rocks have been formed by different processes and vary in chemical composition. Hardness, flaking ability, or the uniform nature of the rock made some stone types particularly desirable. For example, diorite, because of its hardness, was sometimes used as a large hammerstone for splitting softer stones.
Obsidian
Volcanic glass or obsidian (tuhua or mataa tuhua) is found in only a few localities on the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula and on Great Barrier Island (Fig. 12). Obsidian from Mayor Island, the main source, is found throughout New Zealand. Other sources include Northland near Kaeo and the central North Island (Fig. 13). The different sources can be distinguished by chemical analysis and sometimes by colour. For instance, all Mayor Island obsidian is green while the Coromandel sources tend to be grey or greenish grey. However the Northland obsidian is also green and the central North Island material is grey. It is therefore difficult to be certain by colour alone that the obsidian is from a particular place. Other characteristics of the stone (such as the presence of banding or crystals within the glass) narrow down the range of possible sources present within any one site.
On the Coromandel Peninsula obsidian most often occurs as cobbles in stream beds or on beaches and is associated with Minden Rhyolites. Sources which appear to have
35
![]() |
8.2 43 |
▲back to top |
![]() |
8.3 44 |
▲back to top |
![]() |
8.4 45 |
▲back to top |
ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
been used include Waihi-Waimata, Whangamata, Cooks Beach-Purangi, Awana-Te Ahumata on Great Barrier Island, and Fanal Island. Other places where obsidian has been found (for example, Tairua, Maratoto and Hahei) may also have been exploited but no evidence has so far been found in sites.
In the majority of excavated sites where the obsidian assemblage has been analysed, the Mayor Island source is represented. This is not surprising—the stone is consistently of high quality and flakes easily. However the proportion of Mayor Island to Coromandel sources varies considerably depending on the age of the site. All of the early sites (with the exception of Whitipirorua at Onemana) had a predominance of Mayor Island obsidian, while later sites received their obsidian from a wider range of sources. For instance Kauri Point pa at Birkenhead had obsidian from Mayor Island, inland North Island, Fanal Island, Northland and Coromandel (Prickett 1989, Davidson 1990:11–12). Whitipirorua went against the trend, with an estimated 80% from the source found in the clay behind the beach, and exposed in stream beds on the Whangamata peninsula. By contrast, the Whangamata Wharf site, which was also occupied in the early period of settlement, had a predominance of Mayor Island obsidian.
Basalt
Fine grained basalt used for making adzes is found only at Tahanga, Opito, on the eastern side of the Coromandel Peninsula. It was a very important stone resource and adzes made of the distinctive stone have been found over the upper half of the North Island (Fig. 13). Only the metasomatised argillites from the Nelson-d'Urville Island area had a distribution exceeding that of Tahanga basalt.
The Tahanga source covers an area of approximately 6o hectares, and consists of a number of outcrops of weathered boulder piles on the slopes of the hill (Moore 1982:35). Exposures also occur on the beach. It is possible to determine which locality some finished adzes have come from: for instance the stone from the beach is of a consistently darker colour than that on the hill itself.
In several locations there are depressions in the ground surface adjacent to the stone piles suggesting there may have been some digging or quarrying to obtain less weathered boulders. At T10/166 a large outcrop may have had blocks prised off by taking advantage of natural fracturing planes in the rock (Moore 1982:36, 38).
Dense scatters of flakes of a large size are to be found within the boulder piles, evidence of the splitting open of the boulders and initial shaping of the adze (called a preform), removing the weathered outer surface in the process. The preforms were taken away to be further shaped and there are a number of places on the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula where the final stages of adze making took place. Thousands and thousands of smaller flakes are found at these sites extending as far south as Mt Maunganui (and possibly further but there has been no concerted effort to locate early sites in the eastern Bay of Plenty). One site in Whitianga Estuary must represent the fine trimming and
38
![]() |
8.5 46 |
▲back to top |
Stone Resources and Minerals
FIGURE 14: FLAKED BASALT ADZES FROM WHIRITOA
shaping of many thousands of basalt adzes (Turner and Bonica 1994). Several caches of finished adzes have been found in early coastal sites, and demonstrate the fine flaking technology used to shape these tools (Fig. 14).
The adzes were produced in excess of the use requirements of the people making them and must therefore have been for trade. Collections of artefacts from a site at Houhora in the Far North contain many adzes of Tahanga basalt, but the main spheres of influence, where the majority of Tahanga adzes have been found, are the Auckland, Waikato and Hauraki a eas (Davidson 1981:109).
39
![]() |
8.6 47 |
▲back to top |
ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
The importance of Tahanga basalt declined after about 1600 AD when adzes made of stone such as greywacke began to dominate the scene. This material is geologically of a more widespread nature, present in many areas of New Zealand.
Several reasons have been put forward for the decline of Tahanga basalt including a working out of the high quality stone suitable for adzes, increasing territorial awareness with the development of warfare restricting access to the stone source, and the loss of the skills needed to flake and shape the stone. The answer may be a combination of factors. Another possible explanation is that flaked adzes went out of favour (or fashion) as a trading item and were replaced by other products which have left no archaeological record (perhaps fibre work or food). Trade networks were maintained after warfare and territorial conflict developed as obsidian and chert continued to be moved over long distances. It is interesting to note that a parallel situation occurred with the metasomatised argillites from Nelson, the other important and widely distributed stone in the first few centuries of settlement. Its influence also declined until by about 1600–1700 AD it was only being used in the local area (Challis 1991:120). This suggests the answer lies in a widespread cultural shift in attitude towards the flaked adzes, and a shift in technology from flaking to shaping stone by hammerdressing and grinding, to produce adzes of a quadrangular section known as the Type 2B (Fig. 15). The new technology was less risky in terms of an adze breaking during manufacture compared to flaked adzes which had a high failure rate due to breakage and flakes chipping erratically (Turner and Bonica 1994).
The Tahanga basalt source continued to be used locally. Skippers Ridge 11 (N40/73), a site at Opito occupied during the 18th century, had roughly made adzes and stone flakes and N40/16 at Opito also had flaked adzes but is clearly of a later date to the main use of the quarry on the hill above (Law 1982:58).
Tahanga basalt adzes were not discarded because the quarry ceased to be a major source of new adzes. The stone was valuable. Broken adzes were worked and reshaped (often into irregular shapes), the length reducing over time until they were too small to be used any further. At Oruarangi, occupied from approximately 1500 AD to 1820 AD, the majority of the very small adzes (between 40–100 mm) are of basalt (Furey 1996).
The decline in use of the Tahanga quarry must be looked at in conjunction with the use of Motutapu greywacke. This stone was also flaked and used in the same time period as Tahanga, and may have been in competition with the basalt in the Auckland and inner Hauraki area. The distribution of Motutapu greywacke adzes also seems to have retracted in later times (after 1600 AD), being used mainly on the island and the Tamaki area.
There is reputedly a basalt quarry at Tryphena on Great Barrier Island but it is likely to have been of local importance only. Similarly, an outcrop of basalt at New Chums Beach near Whangapoua on the Coromandel Peninsula may have been only for local use. Other small exposures of the basalt may yet be found but Tahanga will remain the major archaeological source of stone.
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Stone Resources and Minerals
Within the Auckland area, basalt used at Kauri Point pa, Birkenhead, has been sourced to pebbles within the Albany Conglomerates which are present on the shores of the Upper Waitemata Harbour and through to the Kaipara Harbour (Prickett 1989:195). This was undoubtedly a localised occurrence of stone with a very limited area of use.
Greywacke
The densely compacted sandstones and mudstones collectively known as greywacke, are present around the Firth of Thames and on the islands of the inner gulf. There is evidence it was worked on Motutapu and Rakino Islands. The so-called Motutapu greywacke is finer grained than the greywacke present on the lower Firth coastline and was worked by flaking techniques. In contrast the coarse grained greywacke was formed into items such as adzes and weapons by bruising and grinding.
On Motutapu Island, boulder outcrops of greywacke in two places near the coastline were worked before the eruption which formed Rangitoto Island. It continued to be used for several centuries but had a more localised distribution in the last 200-300 years before European contact, and the adzes tend to be of less formal shapes than in the early period of use of the stone. There was also a change over time in where people worked the stone. Evidence from R10/31 at Station Bay indicates boulders were being collected from the outcrops and taken back to the hamlets where they were worked into non-descript adzes.
Adzes made of Motutapu greywacke had a geographic distribution similar to Tahanga basalt, but the main concentration was in the Auckland-western Hauraki area. It was not as important a source of stone as Tahanga basalt.
Coarser greywacke was used for a number of artefacts including adzes, weapons, fishing sinkers, flax beaters, footrests for digging sticks, spinning tops, kokowai grinders and hammerstones. Unmodified stones were often used as anvil stones or for grinding kokowai to powder. Within the collection of artefacts from Oruarangi on the Waihou River, 43% of adzes were made of local Hauraki greywacke while 33% were of basalt (Furey 1996).
FIGURE 15: GROUND GREYWACKE ADZES FROM ORUARANGI
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Chert
Two types of chert are to be found in the Hauraki area. Those of the Coromandel Peninsula are derived from volcanic activity while the sedimentary cherts present on the islands of the Hauraki Gulf are eroding out of the Waipapa and Waiheke Series of geological formations which also produced the greywacke (see Fig. 12).
Known volcanic sources of chert within the Hauraki area include Kaitoke Valley on Great Barrier Island, Rings Beach near Kuaotunu, Black Jack and Otama, Manaia, Kauaeranga Valley, Whitipirorua and Great Mercury Island. Sedimentary sources include the islands of Kawau, Motutapu, Waiheke, Ponui and McCallums, the coast between Maraetai and Orere Point, and the Hunua Range. The material occurs as cobbles in stream beds and on beaches and erodes out from lenses within the sedimentary Waiheke Group (Moore Dm).
Some of the Coromandel chert may have been struck off outcrops (for example, T10/665 behind Otama) or extracted from hydrothermally altered rock at Hot Water Beach. However the high proportion of excavated chert with a weathered cortex indicates it came from streams and beaches.
Chert has been found in the majority of sites excavated, attesting to its importance as an every day multi-purpose material. Hammerstones of chert, present in at least one Tamaki site, and R10/31 on Motutapu Island, were used to make adzes, and chert adzes are not unknown, especially from sites of an early age such as Whitipirorua. It was most commonly used for drill points, used in the manufacture of other tools. Occasionally it was put to other uses—for instance at R11/1506, Tamaki, a chalcedony pebble with a natural hole at one end may have been used as an ear or neck ornament.
In a similar pattern to obsidian, chert was moved out of the Coromandel area possibly as far north as Houhora. However indications are that the sources were mainly of importance locally.
Other stone
Stone materials such as andesite, dacite, argillite, sandstone, diorite and petrified wood were used for a variety of tools. For instance andesite from the Coromandel Ranges and possibly Waiheke was used for adzes, flax beaters, weapons and large grinding slabs; diorite and tonalite used for hammerstones on Tahanga may have come from near Paritu, Stony Bay or possibly Cuvier Island (Moore 1982:40); petrified wood also found on the Coromandel Peninsula was used for fishing lures and abrading tools, and sandstone from various locations was used for hoanga to sharpen adzes and shape bone and stone tools. In addition many minor localised stone materials were also used in an opportunistic way—these include tuff, ignimbrite, rhyolite and various other volcanic and sedimentary stones.
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Stone Resources and Minerals
The people of Hauraki had little need to look outside of the area for the stone material needed for tools. An analysis of several excavated sites from the Auckland, Waihou and eastern Coromandel coast indicates local materials were predominantly used. The exceptions are metasomatised argillite from the Nelson-d'Urville region which appears in several sites as polished adze chips flaked off during reworking of damaged adzes, and pounamu (greenstone) from various South Island sources. Obsidian from Northland and the central North Island indicates there was widespread movement of stone in all directions.
Kokowai
Kokowai is present in a number of excavated sites, particularly at Oruarangi and Raupa in the Waihou area. Haematite-bearing rock, found in the Coromandel Ranges, was burnt to produce the brick-red colour of ochre, which, after being ground to a powder was used as a paint on bodies, clothing, canoes, buildings and other structures.
At Station Bay on Motutapu Island, kokowai was obtained by burning clay (Sullivan 1972).
Non-stone materials
The natural shell banks in the lower Waihou River valley, built up on old shorelines (Fig. 12), were exploited for shell to build up settlement sites on flat land adjacent to both the Waihou and Piako Rivers. Many sites north of Hikutaia have been artificially raised by the addition of shell to lift the living surfaces above the water table. Some named sites with shell fill include Whetakura and Hurumoimoi at Kirikiri, Paterangi and Oruarangi at Matatoki, Te Kari and other sites on or near the Hikutaia Stream, Turua and Puriri (Phillips 1994:419–420). In the case of Oruarangi, the largest site, it has been estimated 20,000 m3 of natural shell may have been added to the site over several periods of occupation (Best and Allen 1991:22).
On the Piako River, sub-fossil shell has been imported to sites to provide a base for the occupation surfaces. The shell fill elevated living surfaces up to 700 mm above the surrounding ground (Crosby and Loughlin 1992:13). The sub-fossil shell could be distinguished from the cultural deposits by the absence of soil or charcoal.
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5. HISTORIC ACCOUNTS
European impact on Hauraki iwi began on 3 November 1769 when Lieutenant James Cook in HMS Endeavour sailed into Te Whanganui-o-Hei or Mercury Bay. In the following 12 days Cook and Joseph Banks described Maori settlement and life in the bay in a way which is unequalled by any other accounts (Salmond 1991:191–211).
People in the bay appeared to be anticipating attack. Cook was told that people came from the north to raid them, taking away their wives and children. On the northern side of the bay was a fortified pa named Wharetaewa and an arched rock, Te Puta-oparetauhinu, which had five or six houses surrounded by a fence. This rock, which collapsed early this century, appealed to Banks who called it "the most beautifuly romantick thing I ever saw" (Beaglehole 19621: 434). Wharetaewa was described as having a strong palisade about ten feet high around the pa; inside the sloping ground was terraced into 20 divisions each containing from one or two to 12–14 houses. The individual terraces also had palisades round them and were linked by lanes. Large quantities of fernroot and dried fish were seen inside the pa while outside the palisades were a few houses, large nets and a small plot (about half an acre) planted with gourds and sweet potatoes. No other gardens were seen in the bay (Beaglehole 19621: 433).
On the south side of the bay at Purangi, a group of people were collecting fernroot and drying shellfish and producing large heaps of shells in the process. They lived on the beach under the barest of shelter and told Cook's party they had houses and a fort elsewhere and were taking the food away (Beaglehole 19621: 427). These people were of Ngati Pou (or Te Uri-o-Pou) from the western side of the Firth of Thames and had kinship ties with Ngati Hei (Salmond 1991:197). At least some Ngati Whanaunga were present as Horeta to Tanewha has left several accounts of his encounter as a small boy with the Europeans.
There was also a small village near the entrance to Whitianga River (called Mangrove River by Cook) and a pa in ruins on the east side of the entrance, apparently attacked by Ngai Te Rangi some 15–20 years before (Salmond 1991:202).
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Pickersgill summed up his impression of the people in Mercury Bay: "The inhabitants of this Part are very much markd on the faces and are very neat carvers and in every other respect as Described before except their canoes which are very bad ..." (Pickersgill quoted in Salmond 1991:207).
The Endeavour then sailed around the Coromandel Peninsula to anchor off Te Puru on 19 November. Cook, Banks, Solander and Tupaia went up the Waihou River about 12-14 miles seeing one large pa (probably Oruarangi at Matatoki) surrounded by mud at low tide. Posts for attaching fishing nets to were stuck in the river. Cook was of the opinion that the population seemed sparse but Pickersgill had the contrary view (Salmond 1991:210). The Europeans were impressed by the large carved canoes of the area, and commented on the way in which the local people painted their bodies with red ochre and oil. They were also very enthusiastic about the size of the trees seen close to the river (Salmond 1991:210). Later European ships were drawn to the Waihou in search of timber for spars and planking.
The next known visitors 24 years later were on the Fancy which spent three months in the Waihou River cutting timber and spinning flax to replace the running rigging of the ship. On board the Fancy were a number of men including a labour force of Sepoys and Lascars. From the partial journal of Captain Dell it appears that in 1794 there was a large population in the Waihou area: villages on both sides of the river and several large pa on the banks. There were few settlements south of Puriri or Hikutaia. On one occasion Dell described 117 canoes surrounding the ship and 1500–2000 people gathered in the vicinity of Kirikiri or Matatoki Stream (Dell ms:20).
For a few years the Waihou was a popular destination. Two ships, coincidentally both called the Hunter, visited in 1798 and 1799 respectively. No firsthand accounts of their visits are known but four men deserted the 1799 ship and were found living there when the Royal Admiral arrived in April 1801. This ship, under the command of William Wilson, anchored off Waiomu and timber was collected from the Hikutaia Stream area. Again large numbers of people were reported. The second largest pa, Kakaramere, at Hikutaia, had 300 people residing there (including Te Haupa), swelling to 700 when there was an altercation with the Europeans felling timber (Smith 1813:232). The largest pa, probably Oruarangi, was where the principal chief resided. Captain Dell of the Fancy also talked of one man having control or power over a number of other chiefs. Smith (1813:233) estimated 4000-5000 people during preparations for war against Waikato tribes (Missionaries' Journal ms:13). Smith (1813:239) reported extensive fields of potatoes. Cultivations were seen along the river and between Tapu and the mouth of the Waihou River. White potatoes and turnips were traded along with traditionally grown vegetables like kumara. Villages were also visited on the eastern shore of the Firth—one had 100 people, an acre of cultivations and the houses were surrounded by a fence five feet high about 20 yards from the water (Missionaries' Journal ms:12). Another village nearby was estimated to have 100–150 residents.
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Two other ships called into the area in 1801: the El Plumier, which spent six months in the Waihou River, and the Betsy, about which little is known. The next recorded visit to the Firth of Thames was in 1815 although several ships reputedly called in to Mercury Bay between 1801 and 1808.
In 1815 Rev. Samuel Marsden and John Nicholas visited a large village on the western side of the Firth, possibly Whakatiwai, where the wife of 'Shoupah' (Te Haupa) lived. There was a pa on the hill nearby. Te Haupa at the time was living at another settlement to the north. There were few young men in the village as they had gone to join Te Haupa on the taua to East Cape (Nicholas 18171: 394). Marsden and Nicholas commented on the quality of the cloaks and mats offered for trade. Pigs and potatoes were observed and a large quantity of pigs had been housed in the area recently. Round storehouses were seen among the gardens of potatoes (Nicholas 18171: 401). Two other villages were in the vicinity: one mile south, and three miles to the north where Paetae resided. The men from here had not gone with Te Haupa. It was apparent to the Europeans that this area had a large population with three large villages, well maintained gardens and numerous huts scattered "all over in every direction" (Nicholas 18171: 404).
Five years later, in 1820, there was turmoil in the Hauraki area. Marsden reported pa in ruins and Colville Bay deserted (Elder 1932:253). Richard Cruise in the same year observed occupied villages and pa on the north side of Coromandel Harbour while on the south side there were temporary camps in which people collected shellfish and fernroot—a situation very reminiscent of that which Cook observed in Mercury Bay 50 years earlier.
The size, the novelty, and the apparent protection of the Coromandel, brought the people from their more inland habitations, whiether (sic) they had long since been driven; but various circumstances afforded reason to suppose that they anticipated their banishment thither at a future period. They did not cultivate any ground, they dwelt in mere temporary huts, and had laid in an immense quantity of dried muscles (sic) and fish, which at present formed their only sustenance. (Cruise 1824:209)
It is apparent that people moved around, having different residences within the area. Marsden referred to Te Haupa ('Houpa') living in several places on the western side of the Firth of Thames (also at Hikutaia in 1801). Te Horeta also is known from several areas: Mercury Bay in 1769, Kirikiri in June 1820 and also in 1833, and Coromandel Harbour in August 1820. Similarly villages up the Waihou River were occupied at one time, only to be completely empty when another visitor passed through the area (Elder 1932:104, 106, 255, 276; Rogers 1961:344; Salmond 1991:197-98).
There are numerous examples of local skirmishes as well as major periods of warfare with tribes outside the Hauraki area. In 1801, the missionaries on the Royal Admiral observed war canoes going from the Waihou area to the western side of the Firth (Missionaries' Journal ms:25). Marsden in 1820 brokered peace between Te Hinaki of Ngati Paoa from Mokoia and Te Puhi from Kopu (Elder 1932:273-74).
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The raids affecting the Coromandel coast in 1820 did not at that stage affect Ngati Paoa in Tamaki. Mokoia in the Tamaki River was a large pa "about a mile long and half a mile broad, and the houses were larger, and more ornamented with carving, than those we had generally observed" (Cruise 1824:215).
Thousands of baskets of potatoes were in storage and a number of pigs were present (Elder 1932:279). The Tamaki area was heavily populated. Rev. Butler observed 20 villages from the top of Maungarei (Mt Wellington) and estimated a population of about 4000 (Elder 1932:312). About 12 months later the pa was attacked by Nga Puhi and a large number of people killed.
The northern tribe of Nga Puhi appears to have been a persistent threat to both sides of the Coromandel Peninsula between the 1790s and the 1830s. Missionaries in the 1830s also refer to frequent disruptions in the area caused by warfare with Waikato, Tauranga and Rotorua tribes. The political insecurity in the area was far worse in the 1820s and 1830s, exacerbated by the introduction of muskets.
After Nga Puhi attacked Mokoia in 1821, Totara pa several months later, and numerous other smaller pa and villages, the majority of the people from Tamaki, Waiheke Island and the lower Hauraki area retreated inland to reside with Ngati Haua at Matamata, and Horotiu near Cambridge. The widespread depopulation is reported in the Land Court records from Waiheke (Waiheke MB 1:6), lower Waihou valley near Matatoki (Hauraki MB 10:7) and from Te Aroha (Waikato MB 2:215). Events became separated into two periods: before and after Hongi. However it is unlikely there was total abandonment of the area for a decade. Various European visitors had contact with people in the Hauraki area during this time. Movement from the coast to the Waikato and re-occupation of the Hauraki area during quiet times in order to retain possession of the land is the most likely scenario. Small groups would have remained in the Hauraki area, based in the hills as in previous times of political upheaval, and also in the area between the Waihou and Piako Rivers (Vennell and More 1976:21).
European visits to the area were few between 1821-31. In 1825 William White, a Wesleyan missionary, saw the St Patrick at Waiheke using local Maori to load spars, and proceeded to the base of the Firth calling in to a fishing village at Waitakaruru en-route to the Waikato (Gittos 1982:25). The Rosanna was in the vicinity of Ponui in 1826 delivering settlers to a colony to be established on Ponui, but on encountering a group of warriors the settlers panicked and reboarded the ship bound for the Bay of Islands (Monin 1992:38).
In 1827 the Frenchman Dumont d'Urville sailed into the Hauraki Gulf. He specifically wanted to explore the "western islands" (the inner gulf and Waitemata) which Cook had bypassed. Near the mouth of the Weiti River north of Auckland, d'Urville commented We did not see any trace of inhabitants, nothing but one or two fires a long way off in the interior. There can be no doubt that this extreme depopulation is due to the ravages of war" (Wright 1950:152).
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The absence of people was also noted near the central Auckland area where a deserted fishing village was seen. However off the Tamaki River d'Urville met three chiefs "Rangui, Kaiwaka and Tawiti" who he thought were sons of Te Haupa. They made it clear that the majority of their warriors were residing in the "Waikato ... [and] would set out the moment news came that Shongui (Hongi) had reached Shouraki Bay." On the cliffs within the Tamaki River there was a village, Ourouroa, on the left bank where fish was drying on poles and where there were a number of canoes and many people (Wright 1950:217, 219). Although there were tracks through the Otahuhu area, the narrowest part of the isthmus, there were no villages to be seen until the French reached the Manukau Harbour shore. This is in contrast to the situation seven years earlier when Cruise passed through the same area—both banks of the river were thickly populated and gardens planted with potatoes and kumara (Cruise 1824:205).
d'Urville then proceeded into the Firth of Thames, commenting:
During the whole day we only saw one big fire on the Shouraki coast [eastern shore] and not a single canoe came out to us, which showed that the tribe living in this region must be poor and small in number. (Wright 1950:166)
Periodic raids into the area continued through the 1830s. Henry Williams in 1833 commented "Traces of former Towns and settlements were visible as we came along and where'er we turned, but all were either destroyed, taken captive or fled" (Rogers 1961:340). The effect on Ngati Hei is not known. Although Nga Puhi were longstanding aggressors of the tribe, initially the waves of raids into Marutuahu territories did not substantially affect Ngati Hei. However they did not remain immune for long. In 1831 Henry Williams noted that the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula appeared deserted, probably due to the fact that a Nga Puhi war party was in the vicinity, although the coast may have been abandoned for some time as he saw no cultivations and no recent signs of occupation (Rogers 1961:226–28).
Warfare continued to affect the area into the 1840s. Pa were still being built, for example, Opita near Paeroa was re-built in 1842 in expectation of retaliation by Ngai Te Rangi for an attack on Ongare Point by Taraia (Phillips 1994:412).
European influence in the Hauraki area is apparent in many ways. Introduced vegetables such as white potato and corn led to an increase in the area under cultivation. Cook saw little land under cultivation in the Waihou area but by 1801 there were acres of land in crops in several places. Pigs were being raised by 1815, and in some quantities if a large structure seen near Whakatiwai is any indication. Cook traded red cloth, paper, fishhooks and glass for fresh fish, vegetables and 'curios'; after 1794 metal buttons, small knives and looking glasses were also traded. However the local people had realised the advantages of iron and wanted it in any form. Nails and pieces of hoop iron bevelled at each end in addition to the usual clothing and buttons were distributed from the Royal Admiral. By 1820 axes were being given in exchange for labour by Captain Downie of HMSS Coromandel.
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Although there were four Europeans living in the Waihou area between 1799 and 1801, their influence would have been minimal. Having deserted from their ship they were in little position to enter into economic arrangements. The situation was different with the arrival of the flax traders who provided ready access to muskets—a commodity desired above all else. There were few, or no, muskets on the eastern side of the Firth in 1821 which contributed to the overwhelming defeat of Ngati Maru at the hands of Nga Puhi. Over the next decade the balance was redressed, primarily due to the presence of Europeans in the area providing the much coveted weapons. At least four flax traders are reported to have resided in the area in the 1830s—Chapman in 1833 (Rogers 1961:351), plus three to four others from 1831 (Phillips 1994:248). Timber merchants were also establishing themselves in the area. Timber rights were purchased by Ranaulph Dacre in Mercury Bay in 1831 but the venture did not get underway owing to the carpenters and crew of the vessel being driven away by Maori who came over from Thames (Anon. 1980). Dacre, a timber merchant based at Mahurangi, re-established his claim in 1834 by sending Gordon Browne to set up a timber mill at Whitianga. There were 30 Europeans in the bay in 1836 (Ross ms).
The most prominent entrepreneur in the Hauraki area was William Webster who set up a range of activities on Whanganui Island in Coromandel Harbour in 1837, exporting mainly timber, flax, potatoes and salted pork. Although he acquired land in an number of areas throughout Hauraki, his business was relatively short-lived and of limited success.
A mission station was set up at Puriri, a settlement of 150–200 people, in 1833. However in 1837 the mission was moved because the land at Puriri was poorly drained and Maori were now based at Kauaeranga. Mission records indicate items most commonly exchanged for food and pigs were blankets, clothing, tobacco, axes and adzes, hoes, knives, iron pots and razors, food such as flour and sugar, tobacco, combs and slate pencils (Bedford 1994:207–08). The mission influence on the eastern side of the Firth was great and by 1840 an estimated 2000 Maori could read and every village had a school and congregation (Preece reported in Phillips 1994:255).
Adaptation to growing European cultigens occurred relatively quickly. Some authors have attributed their introduction to Cook but there was also potential for other ships to have introduced them into Hauraki or elsewhere. Potatoes were not offered to the Fancy in 1794 but were a regular trading item with the Royal Admiral in 1801. Large acreages of potatoes were seen at that time in the lower Waihou area. Corn, wheat, cabbages and pigs were observed during subsequent visits.
It is apparent from the early historic accounts that the lower Waihou River valley was capable of sustaining a large number of people. Various reports place the population in the thousands (Fig. 16). The Tamaki River area was also very densely populated with estimates of over 4000 people in 1820. Later visitors did not repeat such large figures—estimating instead 150–200 people in a settlement, although in 1840 Kauaeranga Pa was reported as often having nearly 2000 inhabitants (Dieffenbach 1843:274). However as
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Dieffenbach's visit to the area was so brief (one night) he cannot have been reporting a firsthand observation.
Several Maori sites occupied in the post-contact period have been excavated. Little in the way of European introduced material is left in sites until the 1870s when bottle glass appears in large quantities. The pre-1820 sites have a very limited amount—metal was acquired but it was too valuable to be mislaid and thus be incorporated into archaeological deposits. Even the village associated with the Puriri mission station between 1833–37 had little evidence of European influence. People were still using stone tools and eating traditional foods such as shellfish and birds: the only apparent change was in the use of a metal spade to dig square instead of round holes for house posts. Substantial changes in economy and technology did not occur until the latter half of the 19th century, despite evidence of interaction from the early 19th century (Bedford 1994).
Another case study in historic influence is Opita which had four phases of occupation, including two historic occupations dated around 1840 and 1880. Some stone flakes were still in use during the 1840 occupation but nails, clay pipes, pottery, glass bottles and beads are present also, increasing in numbers by 1880. Dog, rat and shellfish were still being eaten in 1840 along with pig and sheep. Cattle appear in 1880 and large drains suggest the beginnings of livestock farming. Like the Puriri sites, Opita shows a shift in diet and technology after 1840 (Phillips 1994:414–16).
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6. CONCLUSION
It is apparent from the archaeological evidence that Hauraki Maori were highly mobile, moving throughout their respective territories and to areas where they had rights to obtain food. Semi-permanent occupation at some places was sustained by seasonal movement of smaller groups over a wide area to obtain food. Preservation of birds and fish was an important summer activity, together with tending of garden crops. Use of seasonal resources such as forest foods, or nesting birds such as shearwaters, is apparent. Various fish species and eels would also have been more prevalent in some seasons than in others.
The distribution of sites within one kilometre of the coast and the prevalence of marine foods in sites indicate how important the sea and the inter-tidal zone was to Maori economic survival. These areas were subject to strict control over who had rights to resources. For instance the Kauaeranga mudflats were available to everyone for shellfish gathering but flounder fishing using set nets and the taking of birds was under the control of a chief who would decide how the catch was to be allocated (Hauraki MB 4:217–29). Similarly on the Waihou River near Tuitahi Island, the pipi were communally accessible but the fishing stations and eel weirs were owned by family groups.
At the time of European contact there was a large population in Hauraki but it was not distributed evenly. The lower Waihou area (including Kauaeranga), the Wharekawa coast near Whakatiwai and the Tamaki area were more densely populated than the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsula. Semi-permanent villages were established, either within fortifications or nearby.
Hauraki iwi displayed their wealth in many ways—ornamentation on houses and canoes, personal ornaments including pounamu, and high quality mats and cloaks which were traded with other Maori groups. European observers also commented on the strong physical stature of some men and their prowess as chiefs and warriors.
European influence was limited and indirect in the first 40–60 years after Cook's visit. It was only after the introduction of muskets that major changes to the settlement pattern and way of life took place. In the 1820–0 period warfare appears to have been a dominant influence with long lasting consequences for population numbers. The Hauraki people continued to use traditional technology up until the 1830–0 period when glass and quantities of metal began to appear. This coincided with Europeans settling in the area as traders and purchasing land.
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11 Bibliography |
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Anderson, A. 1989 Prodigious Birds. Moas and Moas-hunting in Prehistoric New Zealand. Cambridge University Press.
1991 The chronology of colonization in New Zealand. Antiquity 65:767–5.
Anderson, A.J. and B.G. McFadgen
1990 Prehistoric two-way voyaging between New Zealand and East Polynesia: Mayor Island obsidian on Raoul Island and possible Raoul Island obsidian in New Zealand. Archaeology in Oceania 25:37–2.
Anon.
1980 Captain Ranulph Dacre. Auckland-Waikato Historical Journal 37.
Beaglehole, J.C. (ed.)
1955 The Journals of Captain James Cook. The Voyage of the Endeavour 1768–771. Cambridge University Press for the Hakluyt Society.
1962 The Endeavour Journal of Joseph Banks 1768–1771 Sydney, Angus and Robertson. 2 vols.
Bedford, S.
1994 Tenacity of the Traditional: A History and Archaeology of Early European Maori Contact, Puriri, Hauraki Plains. MA thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
Bedford, S. and H. Allen
1993 When is a shell midden not just a shell midden? Excavations on the Puriri River, Hauraki Plains. Archaeology in NZ 36:120–34.
Best, S. and H. Allen
1991 Report on the 1991 Investigations, Oruarangi Pa (N49/28). Auckland Uniservices Ltd.
Challis, A.
1991 The Nelson-Marlborough region: an archaeological synthesis. NZ Journal ofArchaeology 13:101–2.
Coffins, D.
1798 An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales with Remarks on the Disposition, Customs, Manners, etc of the Native Inhabitants, to which are added, Some Particulars of New Zealand. London, Cadell and Davies. 2 vols.
Crosby, A. and S. Loughlin
1992 Site Survey Report East Bank of the Lower Piako River. Report to Historic Places Trust.
Cruise, R.
1824 Journal of Ten Months' Residence in New Zealand (1820). Christchurch, Pegasus Press.
Davidson, J.
1979 Archaic middens of the Coromandel region: a review. In A. Anderson (ed.) Birds of a Feather. Osteological and archaeological papers from the South Pacific in honour of R.J. Scarlett. British Archaeological Reports International Series 62, NZ Archaeological Association Monograph 11:183–202.
1981 The prehistoric exploitation of stone resources in northern New Zealand. In B.F. Leach and J.M. Davidson (eds) Archaeological Studies of Pacific Stone Resources. British Archaeological Reports International Series 104.
53
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
1990 Test excavations on the headland pa at Kauri Point, Birkenhead, Auckland, in 1971. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 27:1–18.
1993 The chronology of occupation on Maungarei (Mount Wellington): a large volcanic cone pa in Auckland. NZ Journal of Archaeology 15:39–55.
Diamond, J.
1962 Field survey of the western side of the Coromandel Peninsula near Port Jackson. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 5:38–41.
Dieffenbach, E.
1843 Travels in New Zealand with Contributions to the Geography, Geology, Botany and Natural History of that Country. London, John Murray. 2 vols.
Elder, J.R. (ed.)
1932 The Letters and Journals of Samuel Marsden 1765–1838. Dunedin, Coulls Somerville Wilkie and A.H. Reed.
Furey, L.
1987 Archaeological investigations in the Brier Block, Coromandel Harbour. NZ Journal of Archaeology 9:115–34.
1996 Oruarangi. The archaeology and material culture of a Hauraki pa. Bulletin of the Auckland Institute and Museum 17.
Gittos, M.
1982 Mana at Mangungu. A Biography of William White 1794–1875, Wesleyan Missionary at Whangaroa and Hokianga 1823–1836. Published privately.
Green, R.C.
1967 Sources of New Zealand's East Polynesian culture: the evidence of a pearl shell lure shank. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 2:81–90.
Law, G.
1966 A Maori ritual site. Journal of the Polynesian Society 75:502–03.
1975 A garden soil at Rocky Bay, Waiheke Island, N43/72. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 18:183–190.
1982 Coromandel Peninsula and Great Barrier Island. In N. Prickett (ed.) The First Thousand Years:
Regional Perspectives in New Zealand Archaeology. Palmerston North, Dunmore Press.
Leahy, A.
1970 Excavations at site N38/30, Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 7:61–82.
1972 Further excavations at site N38/30, Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:15–26.
Matthews, P.
1984 Colocasia Esculenta in New Zealand. Nga Taro o Aotearoa. MSc thesis, Botany, University of Auckland.
Monin, P.
1992 Waiheke Island: a History. Palmerston North, Dunmore Press.
Moore, P.R.
1977 The definition, distribution, and sourcing of chert in New Zealand. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 20:51–85.
1982 The prehistoric stone quarries and workshops of Tahanga, Coromandel Peninsula. Historical
Review 30:32–42.
Nichol, R.
1988 Tipping the Feather Against a Scale: Archaeozoology from the Tail of the Fish. PhD thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
Nicholas, J.L.
1817 Narrative of a Voyage to New Zealand Performed in the Years 1814 and 1815 in Company with the Rev. Samuel Marsden. London, James Black and son. 2 vols.
54
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Bibliography
Parkinson, S.
1784 A Journal of a Voyage to the South Seas in His Majesty's Ship The Endeavour. London, Charles Dilly and James Phillips.
Phillips, C:
1994 The Archaeology of Maori Occupation along the Waihou River, Hauraki. PhD thesis, University of Auckland.
Prickett, K.E.
1989 The lithic assemblage from the headland pa at Kauri Point, Birkenhead, Auckland.
In D. Sutton (ed.) Saying So Doesn't Make It So. Papers in Honour of B. Foss Leach. NZ Archaeological Association Monograph 17: 190–98.
Prickett, N.
1992 Archaeological excavations at Raupa: the 1988 season. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 29:25–101.
Rogers, L.M. (ed.)
1961 The Early Journals of Henry Williams 1826–40. Christchurch, Pegasus Press.
Salmond, A.
1991 Two Worlds: First Meetings Between Maori and Europeans 1642–1772. Viking.
Shawcross, W.
1964 Archaeological investigations at Ongari (sic) Point, Katikati. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 7:79–98.
1967 An investigation of prehistoric diet and economy on a coastal site in Galatea Bay, New Zealand. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 33:107–31.
1967 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.
Duckworth.
Smith, I.W.G.
1981 Prehistoric mammalian fauna from the Coromandel Peninsula. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 18:95–105.
Smith, W.
1813 Journal of a Voyage in the Missionary Ship Duff. New York, Collins and Co.
Sullivan, A.
1972 Excavation of a pit at site N38/25, Station Bay, Motutapu Island. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:27–60.
Turner, M. and D. Bonica
1994 Following the flake trail: adze production on the Coromandel east coast, New Zealand. NZ Journal of Archaeology 16:5–32.
Vennell, C.W. and D. More
1976 Land of the Three Rivers. A Centennial History of Piako County. Auckland, Wilson and Horton.
Wade, W.R.
1977 A Journey in the Northern Island of New Zealand. Christchurch, Capper Press.
Wright, O. (ed.)
1950 New Zealand 1826–1827 from the French of Dumont D'Urville. Wingfield Press.
Manuscripts
Dell, E.T.
ms Extracts from the Journal of the Fancy Snow Kept by Mr Edgar Thomas Dell Master. Colonial Office 201/18.
Land Court Records
Hauraki Minute Book
55
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
No. 4, 24 April 1869–10 May 1871.
No. 10, 11 June 1877–20 July 1878.
No. 36, 16 December 1893–11 December 1894.
No. 58, 5 November 1907–24 October 1908.
No. 60, 28 February 1910–27 July 1911.
No. 63, 4 August 1914–21 December 1914.
Waiheke Minute Book
No. 1, 1 August 1865–10 November 1865.
Waikato Minute Book
No. 2, 9 December 1867–9 April 1870.
Missionaries' Journal
ms The Missionaries' Journal in the Royal Admiral from Port Jackson to Matavai, Tahiti, 1801.
Microfilm of typescript copy of original ms, LMS 128, University of Auckland Library.
Ross, R.
ms Miscellaneous papers. Auckland Institute and Museum Library.
Wilson, C.
ms Letter to his cousin. 16 June 1801. Microfilm LMS 128, University of Auckland Library.
56
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12 Appendix I |
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12.1 64 |
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Appendix 1
EXCAVATED HAURAKI SITES
SITE NAME SITE NO. SITE TYPE DATE REFERENCES
Auckland |
|
|
|
|
|
Kauri Pt |
R11/35 |
Pa |
1971 |
|
Davidson 1990, Prickett 1989, Davidson |
|
|
|
|
|
and Wallace 1992 |
Castor Bay |
R11/35 |
Pa |
1964 |
|
Green 1970 |
Parnell |
R11/120 |
Pit |
1968 |
|
Law 1970 |
Queen St |
R11/1559 |
Midden |
1987 |
|
Best 1987 |
Tamaki |
|
|
|
|
|
Hamlin's Hill |
R11/142 |
Kainga |
1969–84 |
|
Davidson 1970, Irwin 1975, Nichol 1980, |
|
|
|
|
|
Pearce 1975, Walton 1979 |
Westfield |
R11/898 |
Kainga |
1982 |
|
Furey 1986 |
|
|
|
1988 |
|
Sewell 1992 |
Fisher Rd |
R11/887–9 |
Kainga |
1985 |
|
Foster and Sewell 1988, 1989 |
ACI site |
R11/1201 |
Kainga |
1988 |
|
Foster and Sewell 1993 |
|
R11/1506 |
Fenced kainga |
|
|
Foster and Sewell 1993 |
Hawkins Hill |
R11/1394 |
Kainga |
1984 |
|
Coates 1986 |
Te Pane o |
R11/94 |
Pa |
1982 |
|
Sewell 1986 |
Horoiwi (St Heliers) |
|
|
|
|
|
Taylors Hill |
R11/96 |
Pa |
1954–6 |
|
Leahy 1991 |
Mokoia |
R11/98 |
Pa |
1978, 80 |
|
— (Bulmer, no report) |
Maungarei |
R11/12 |
Pa |
1960, |
|
Golson 1960 |
|
|
|
1965, |
|
|
|
|
|
1971–72 |
|
Davidson 1993 |
East Tamaki |
|
|
|
|
|
Cryers Rd |
R11/1519 |
Gardens |
1988 |
|
Fredericksen and Visser 1989 |
Harris Rd |
R11/1301 |
Gardens |
1985 |
|
Douglas 1987 |
Shaw Block |
R11/1525 |
Gardens |
1987, 88 |
|
Slocombe and Veart 1989 |
Aliens Rd |
R11/1497 |
Gardens |
1986 |
|
Albert 1986 |
Motutapu Island |
|
|
|
|
|
Station Bay |
R10/26 |
Pa |
1970–71 |
|
Davidson 1972 |
Station Bay |
R10/31 |
Terrace |
1967–68 |
|
Leahy 1970, 1972 |
|
|
|
1970–71 |
|
|
Station Bay |
R10/26 |
Pit |
1970–71 |
|
Sullivan 1972 |
Station Bay |
R10/38 |
Terrace |
1967–68 |
|
Davidson 1970 |
Pig Bay |
R10/22 |
Midden |
1958–59 |
|
Golson and Brothers 1959 |
Sunde Site |
R10/25 |
Midden |
1963 |
|
Scott 1970 |
|
|
|
1981–82 |
|
Nichol 1981, 1988 |
Ponui Island |
|
|
|
|
|
Motunau Bay |
S11/20 |
Midden |
1956, 7, 9 |
|
Nicholls 1964 |
|
|
|
1989 |
|
— (Irwin, no report) |
|
|
|
1992 |
|
— (Irwin, no report) |
Galatea Bay |
S11/51 |
Midden |
1965 |
|
Shawcross 1967, Terrell 1967 |
57
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Excavated Hauraki Sites (cont'd)
SITE NAME |
SITE NO. |
SITE TYPE |
DATE |
REFERENCES |
Great Barrier Island |
|
|
|
|
Harataonga |
T8/3 |
Pa |
1962 |
Law 1972, 1975 |
Harataonga |
T8/4 |
Midden |
1962 |
Law 1972, 1975 |
Harataonga |
T8/5 |
Midden |
1962 |
Law 1972 |
Wairoa |
|
|
|
|
Oue |
S11/53 |
Pa |
1950–53 |
Harsant 1981 |
Clevedon |
S11/108 |
Terrace |
1991 |
Young 1992 |
Waihou |
|
|
|
|
Oruarangi |
T12/192 |
Pa |
1956, 1975 |
Best 1980, Best and Allen 1991, Furey 1996 |
Paterangi |
T12/17 |
Pa |
1965, 75 |
Best 1980, Shawcross and Terrell 1967 |
Hurumoimoi |
T12/346 |
Pa |
1993 |
Doelman 1995 |
Pukehue |
T12/300 |
Pa |
1993 |
Phillips n.d. |
Puriri |
T12/883 |
Midden |
1991–92 |
Bedford 1994 |
|
T12/882 |
Midden |
|
Bedford and Allen 1993 |
|
T12/318 |
Midden |
|
|
Raupa |
T13/13 |
Pa |
1983–88 |
Phillips 1986, Prickett 1990, 1992 |
Waiwhau |
T13/756 |
Pa |
1983–88 |
Phillips 1986, 1988, Phillips and |
|
|
|
|
Green 1991 |
Opita |
T13/324, T13/789 |
Pa |
1991 |
Phillips and Allen in prep. |
Western Bay of Plenty |
|
|
| |
Kauri Pt |
U13/4 |
Pa |
1960,64 |
Golson 1961, Green 1978 |
Kauri Pt |
U13/45 |
Settlement |
1963 |
Green 1963 |
Kauri Pt |
U13/5 |
Swamp |
1962,63 |
Shawcross 1976, Green 1978 |
Ongare Pt |
U13/8 |
Pa |
1963, 64–65Shawcross 1964, 1966 | |
Coromandel Peninsula |
|
|
| |
Whiritoa |
T12/500 |
Midden |
1960's |
Crosby 1963, 1977 |
Whangamata Wharf |
T12/2 |
Midden |
1969 |
Allo 1972 |
Whangamata |
T12/617 |
Midden/Terrace |
1986 |
Furey 1987 |
Whangamata |
T12/654 |
Midden/Terrace |
1987–88 |
Short 1988 |
Whitipirorua |
T12/16 |
Midden |
1988 |
Furey 1990, 1991 |
Slipper Is |
U12/5, 9 |
Midden |
1973 |
Rowland 1978 |
Tairua |
T11/62 |
Midden |
1959, 64 |
Smart and Green 1962, Rowland 1975, Jones 1973, Green 1967 |
Hot Water Be ach |
T11/115 |
Midden |
1969 |
Leahy 1971, 1974 |
Hahei |
T11/326 |
Midden |
1979 |
Harsant 1983, 1984, 1985 |
Hahei |
T11/242 |
Midden |
?1979 |
Nichol 1986 |
Sarah's Gully |
T10/167 |
Kainga |
1957–57 |
Golson 1959, Green 1963, 1972 |
|
|
|
1957–58 |
|
|
|
|
1958–59 |
|
Cross Creek |
T10/399 |
Midden |
1983 |
Sewell 1984 |
Sarah's Gully |
T10/168 |
Pa |
1959–60 |
Birks 1960, Birks and Birks 1970, 1973, Green 1963 |
Sarah's Midden |
T10/172 |
Midden |
1960 |
Birks 1960, Green 1963 |
Skipper's Ridge I |
T10/165 |
Pits |
1959–60 |
Parker 1959, 1960, Davidson 1975, 1976 |
Opito Midden |
T10/161 |
Midden |
1957–58 |
Green 1963, Boileau 1980 |
|
|
|
1958–59 |
|
|
|
|
1962 |
|
Skipper's Ridge II |
T10/226 |
Pits |
1967 |
Bellwood 1969 |
|
T10/174 |
Midden |
1972 |
Calder and Calder 1977, Green 1963, Houghton 1977, Law 1982 |
Port Jackson |
S9/53 |
Midden |
1980 |
Foster 1983 |
Holzgang |
T10/643, 644, 648 |
Midden |
1983 |
Crosby, Sewell and White 1987 |
Brier Block |
T11/210, 226, 219 |
Midden/pit terrace |
1983 |
Furey 1987 |
Great Mercury Island | ||||
Stingray Point |
T10/169 |
Pa |
1955 |
Golson |
Huruhi Harbour |
T10/333 |
Pa |
|
– (Irwin, no report) |
58
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Appendix 1: Excavated sites, Hauraki
General summaries of excavations
Davidson, Janet
1978 The prehistory of Motutapu Island, NZ: five centuries of Polynesian occupation in a changing landscape. Journal of the Polynesian Society 87:327–37.
Davidson, Janet
1979 Archaic middens of the Coromandel region: a review. In A. Anderson (ed.) Birds of a Feather. British Archaeological Reports International Series No. 62.
Furey, Louise
1982 A review of Coromandel Peninsula excavation literature. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 25:30–47.
Law, Garry
1983 Coromandel Peninsula. In N. Prickett (ed.) The First Thousand Years. Dunmore Press. Sewell, Brenda
1990 Opito and Otama sites revisited. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 33:189–202.
Bibliography of excavation reports
General summaries
Auckland
Davidson, J.
1978 Auckland prehistory: a review. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 15:1–14
1982 Auckland. In N. Prickett (ed.) The First Thousand Years: regional perspectives in New Zealand archaeology. NZ Archaeological Association Monograph 13.
Coromandel Peninsula and Waihou
Davidson, J.
1979 Archaic middens of the Coromandel region: a review. In A. Anderson (ed.) Birds of a Feather. Osteological and archaeological papers from the South Pacific in honour of R. J. Scarlett: 183–202. British Archaeological Reports International Series 62, NZ Archaeological Association Monograph II: 183–202.
Furey, L.
1982 A review of Coromandel Peninsula excavation literature. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 25:30–46.
Law, G.
1982 Coromandel Peninsula and Great Barrier Island. In N. Prickett (ed.) The First Thousand Years: regional perspectives in New Zealand archaeology. NZ Archaeological Association Monograph 13.
Tamaki area
Tamaki River (R11/1201, 1506) Foster, R. and B. Sewell
1993 The Tamaki River sites: excavations at sites R11/1201 and R11/1506, Tamaki, Auckland,
New Zealand. Auckland Conservancy Historic Resources Series No. 6. Department of Conservation.
Fisher Road (R11/887, R11/888 and R11/899)
Foster, R.
1986 Radiocarbon dates from the Fisher Road (R11/887, 888, 899) and Hawkins Hill sites (R11/1394). NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 29:248–50.
Foster, R. and B. Sewell
1988 An open settlement in Tamaki, Auckland, New Zealand: excavation of sites 1u11887, R11/888
and R11/899. Science and Research Series 5:1–71. Wellington, Department of Conservation. 1989 The excavation of sites R11/887, R11/888 and R11/899, Tamaki, Auckland. Records Auckland
Institute and Museum 26:1–24.
59
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Westfield (R11/898)
Furey, L.
1986 The excavation of Westfield (R11/898), South Auckland. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 23:1–24.
Sewell, B.
1992 Further excavations at the Westfield site (R11/898), Tamaki, Auckland. Auckland Conservancy Historic Resource Series No. 1. Department of Conservation.
Hawkins Hill (R11/1394)
Coates, J.
1986 Excavations at R11/1394, "Hawkins Hill", South Auckland: an interim report. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 29:244–47.
Foster, R.
1986 Radiocarbon dates from the Fisher Road (R11/887,888,899) and Hawkins Hill sites (R11/1394). NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 29:248–50.
Hamlin's Hill (R11/142)
Davidson, J.
1970 Salvage excavations at Hamlin's Hill (N42/137), Auckland, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 7:105–22.
Irwin, G.J.
1975 Further salvage excavation on Hamlin's Hill (N42/137), Auckland, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 12:49–55.
Nichol, R.
1980 Hamlin's Hill (N42/137), excavations: fourth season. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 23:208–25.
Pearce, P.
1975 Additional excavation on the main upper terrace, Hamlin's Hill (N42/137). NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 18:191–99.
Walton, A.
1979 The 1976 excavations on Hamlin's Hill (N42/137). NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 22:105–16.
Te Pane o Horoiwi (R11/94)
Sewell, B.
1986 Excavations at Te Pane o Horoiwi (N42/365), St Heliers, Auckland. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 23:25–44.
Taylor's Hill (R11/96)
Leahy, Anne
1991 Excavations at Taylor's Hill (R11/96), Auckland. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 28:33–68.
Maungarei
Davidson, J.
1993 The chronology of occupation on Maungarei (Mount Wellington): a large volcanic cone pa in Auckland. NZ Journal of Archaeology 15:39–55.
Golson, J.
1960 Excavations at Mt. Wellington. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 3:31–4.
1961 A radiocarbon date from Mt. Wellington. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 4:51.
East Tamaki
Harris Road (R11/1301)
Douglas, P.
1987 Radiocarbon dates from the Harris Road site (N42/1203), East Tamaki, Auckland. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 30:49–53.
Shaw Block (R11/1525)
Slocombe, A. and D. Veart
1989 Archaeological investigation at the Shaw Block (R11/1525), East Tamaki. Science and Research Internal Report No. 45. Department of Conservation.
60
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Appendix I: Excavated sites, Hauraki
Cryers Road (R11/1519)
Fredericksen, C. and E. Visser
1988 Excavations at the Cryers Road site (R11/1519), East Tamaki, Auckland. Archaeology in New
Zealand 31:233–50.
1989 Excavations at Cryers Road site (R11/1519), East Tamaki, Auckland. Science and Research series
No. 21. Department of Conservation.
1991 Calibrated radiocarbon dates from Cryers Road (R11/1519): a correction. Archaeology in
New Zealand 34:161–62.
Brothers, R.N. and J. Golson
1959 Geological and archaeological interpretation of a section in Rangitoto ash on Motutapu Island, Auckland. NZ Journal of Geology 2(3):569–77.
Golson, J. and R.N. Brothers
1959 Excavations at Motutapu. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 2:5–8.
Station Bay (R10/38)
Davidson, J.
1970 Excavation of an 'undefended' site (N38/37), on Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 7:31–60.
1972 Archaeological investigations on Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Introduction to recent
fieldwork and some further results. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:1–14.
Station Bay (R10/31)
Leahy, A.
1970 Excavations at site N38/30, Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 7:61–82.
1972 Further excavations at site N38/30, Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:15–26.
Sunde Site (R10/25)
Nichol, R.
1981 Preliminary report on excavations at the Sunde Site (N38/24), Motutapu Island. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 24:237–56.
1988 Tipping the Feather Against a Scale: Archaeozoology from the Tail of the Fish. Unpublished PhD thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
Scott, S.D.
1970 Excavations at the Sunde site, Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 7:13–30.
Station Bay pa (R10/26)
Davidson, J.
1972 Archaeological investigtions on Motutapu Island, New Zealand. Introduction to recent fieldwork and some further results. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:1–14. Sullivan, A.
1972 Excavation of a pit at Station Bay, Motutapu Island. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:27–60.
Auckland and North Shore
Castor Bay (R11/35)
Davidson, J.
1974 A radiocarbon date for Rahopara Pa (N38/20) at Castor Bay, Auckland. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 17:144–45.
Green, R.
1970 Investigations at Castor Bay Point Pa, Takapuna, New Zealand. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 13:2–22.
Kauri Point (R11/35)
Davidson, J.
1990 Text excavations on the headland pa at Kauri Point, Birkenhead, Auckland, in 1971. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 27:1–18.
6i
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Davidson, J. and R. Wallace
1992 Additional information about the pa at Kauri Point, Birkenhead, Auckland. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 29:1–5.
Prickett, K.E.
1989 The lithic assemblage from the headland pa at Kauri Point, Birkenhead, Auckland. In D. Sutton (ed.) Saying So Doesn't. Make it So. NZ Archaeological Association Monograph 17:190–98.
Parnell (R11/120)
Law, R.G.
1970 A Maori pit site in Parnell, New Zealand. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 7:93–102.
Firth of Thames (Wharekawa)
Oue Pa
Harsant, W.
1981 Excavations at Oue Pa, N43/35, South Auckland. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 18:63–93.
Clevedon (S11/108)
Young, A.
1993 The Excavation of an Undefended Settlement at S11/108, Clevedon. Unpublished research essay, MA, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
Tapapakanga (S11/245)
Sewell, B.
1994 Excavation of two stone heaps at site S11/245 in the Tapapakanga Regional Park, South Auckland. Auckland Conservancy Historic Resources Series No. 8. Department of Conservation.
Ponui Island
Motunau Bay (S11/20)
Nichol, M.
1964 Excavations on Ponui Island. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 6:23–38.
Galatea Bay (S11/51)
Shawcross, W.
1967 An investigation of prehistoric diet and economy on a coastal site at Galatea Bay, New Zealand. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 33:107–33.
Terrell, J.
1967 Galatea Bay – the excavation of a beach-stream midden site on Ponui Island in the Hauraki
Gulf, New Zealand. Transactions of the Royal Society of NZ (General Series) 2(3):31–70.
Waihou River Valley
Hurumoimoi (T12/346)
Doelman, T.
1995 Te Awa a Korako: the archaeology and ethnohistory of Te Kirikiri. MA thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
Puriri
Bedford, S.
1994 Tenacity of the Traditional: A History and Archaeology of Early European Maori Contact, Puriri, Hauraki Plains. MA thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
Bedford, S. and H. Allen
1993 When is a shell midden not just a shell midden? Excavations on the Puriri River, Hauraki Plains. Archaeology in NZ 36:120–34.
Oruarangi (T12/192)
Best, S.
1980 Oruarangi pa: past and present investigations. NZ Journal of Archaeology 2:65–91.
62
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Appendix I: Excavated sites, Hauraki
Best, S. and H. Allen
1991 Report on the 1991 investigations Oruarangi pa (site N49/28). Auckland Uniservices, Auckland. Furey, L.
1996 Oruarangi. The archaeology and material culture of a Hauraki pa. Bulletin Auckland Institute and Museum 17.
Paterangi (T12/17)
Best, S.
1980 Oruarangi pa: past and present investigations. NZ Journal of Archaeology 2:65–91. Shawcross, W. and J. Terrell
1966 Paterangi and Oruarangi swamp pas. Journal of the Polynesian Society 75:404–30.
Raupa (T13/13)
Phillips, C.
1986 Excavations at Raupa Pa (N53/37) and Waiwhau Village (N53/198), Paeroa, New Zealand in 1984. NZ Journal of Archaeology 8:89–113.
Prickett, N.
1990 Archaeological excavations at Raupa: the 1987 season. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 27:73–153.
1992 Archaeological excavations at Raupa: the 1988 season. Records Auckland Institute and Museum
29:25–101.
Waiwhau (T13/756)
Phillips, C.
1986 Excavations at Raupa Pa (N53/37) and Waiwhau Village (N53/198), Paeroa, New Zealand in 1984. NZ Journal of Archaeology 8:89–113.
1988 University of Auckland Field School excavations at Waiwhau, 1987. NZ Journal of Archaeology 10:53–72.
Phillips, CA. and R.C. Green
1991 Further archaeological investigations at the settlement of Waiwhau, Hauraki Plains. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 28:147–83.
Great Barrier Island
Harataonga (T8/3,4,5)
Law, R.G.
1972 Archaeology at Harataonga Bay, Great Barrier Island. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:81–123.
1975 C14 dates from Harataonga Bay, Great Barrier Island. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 18:48–52.
Coromandel Peninsula
Whiritoa (T12/500)
Crosby, E.V.
1963 Preliminary report on Whiritoa. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 6:46–8.
1977 Whiritoa: A post-settlement dune midden site on the Coromandel Peninsula. Oceanic Prehistory Records No. 2. University of Auckland Archaeological Society, Auckland.
Whangamata Wharf (T12/2)
Allo, J.
1972 The Whangamata wharf site (N4912): excavations on a Coromandel coastal midden. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 9:61–79.
Whangamata (T12/617)
Furey, L.
1987 Excavation of an open settlement site near Whangamata. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 30:215–26.
63
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Whangamata (T12/654)
Short, S.
1988 Excavation of T12/654, Whangamata. Unpublished report.
Whitipirorua (T12/16)
Furey, L.
1990 The artefact collection from Whitipirorua (T12/16), Coromandel Peninsula. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 27:19–60.
1991 Excavations at Whitipirorua, T12/16, Coromandel Peninsula. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 28:1–32.
Tairua (T11/62)
Green, R.C.
1967 Sources of New Zealand's East Polynesian culture: the evidence of a pearl shell lure shank. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 2:81–90.
Rowland, M.J.
1975 Tairua and the Off–shore Islands in Early New Zealand Prehistory. Unpublished MA thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
I977a Seasonality and the interpretation of the Tairua site, Coromandel Peninsula, New Zealand. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 12:135–50.
1977b Tairua – results of midden analysis. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 20:223–43. Smart, C.D. and R.C. Green
1962 A stratified dune site at Tairua, Coromandel. Dominion Museum Records in Ethnology 1:243–66.
Smith, I.W.G.
1978 Seasonal sea mammal exploitation and butchering patterns in an Archaic site (Tairua N44/2) on
the Coromandel Peninsula. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 15:17–26.
Slipper Island (U12/5, 9)
Rowland, M.J.
1978 Investigations of two sites on Slipper Island. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 21:31–52.
Hot Water Beach (T11/115)
Leahy, A.
1971 Preliminary report and carbon 14 datings on site N44/69, Hot Water Beach, Coromandel. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 14:62–3.
1974 Excavations at Hot Water Beach (N44/69), Coromandel Peninsula. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 17:23–76.
Hahei (T11/326)
Edson, S.C.
1979 A radiocarbon date for the Archaic burial context (N44/97) at Hahei. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 16:41–3.
Edson, S.C. and D. Brown
1977 Salvage excavation of an Archaic burial context (N44/97) at Hahei. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 14:25–36.
Harsant, W.
1983 Radiocarbon dates from N44/97, Hahei, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 26:59–61.
1984 Archaic storage pits at N44/97, Hahei, Coromandel Peninsula, New Zealand. NZ Journal of Archaeology 6:23–35.
1985 The Hahei (N44/97) assemblage of Archaic artefacts. NZ Journal of Archaeology 7:5–37.
Hahei (T11/242)
Nichol, R.
1986 Analysis of midden from N44/215: hard times at Hahei? In A. Anderson (ed.) Traditional Fishing in the Pacific: Ethnographical and Archaeological Papers from the 15th Pacific Science Congress. Pacific Anthropological Records No. 37:179–98.
64
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Appendix I: Excavated sites, Hauraki
Sarah's Gully (T10/167)
Davidson, J.
1986 The poor man's rei puta: a shell pendant from Sarah's Gully. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 29:224–27.
Golson, J.
1959 Excavations on the Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 2:13–8.
Green, R.C.
1963 Summaries of sites at Opito, Sarah's Gully, and Great Mercury Island. NZ Archaeological
Association Newsletter 6:57–68.
1972 Additional evidence for the age of settlements at Sarah's Gully, Coromandel Peninsula.
NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 15:89–93.
Sarah's Gully Pa (T10/168)
Birks, L.
196o Pa site at Sarah's Gully, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 3:16–20.
Birks, L. and H.
1970 Radiocarbon dates for a pa site at Sarah's Gully, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 13:63.
1973 Additional dates for Sarah's Gully pa site. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 16:73. Green, R.C.
1963 Summaries of sites at Opito, Sarah's Gully, and Great Mercury Island. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 6:57–68.
1972 Additional evidence for the age of settlements at Sarah's Gully, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 15:89–93.
Sarah's Midden (T10/172)
Birks, L.
1960 Pa site at Sarah's Gully, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 3:16–20.
Green, R.C.
1963 Summaries of sites at Opito, Sarah's Gully, and Great Mercury Island. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 6:57–68.
1972 Additional evidence for the age of settlements at Sarah's Gully, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 15:89–93.
Cross Creek Midden (T10/399)
Sewell, B.
1984 The Cross Creek Site (N40/260) Coromandel Peninsula. Unpublished MA thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
1986 Radiocarbon dates from the Cross Creek site (N40/260), Sarah's Gully, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 29:228–29.
Skippers Ridge I, Opito (T10/165)
Davidson, J.
1974 A radiocarbon date from Skippers Ridge (N40/7), Opito, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 17:50–2.
1975 The excavation of Skippers Ridge (N40/7), Opito, Coromandel Peninsula, in 1959 and 1960. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 12:1–42.
1976 Additional evidence from the excavations at Skippers Ridge, (N40/7), Opito, Coromandel Peninsula. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 13:1–7.
Davidson, J.M. and R.C. Green
1975 A locality map for Skippers Ridge (N40/7), Opito. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 12:43–6.
Parker, R.H.
1959 A new site at Opito. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 2:18–20.
1960 Reconnaissance at Skippers Ridge. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 3:39–40.
1962 Aspect and phase on Skippers Ridge (Opito) and Kumara-Kaiamo (Urenui). NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 5:222–32.
65
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Opito Midden (T10/161)
Boileau, J.
1980 The artefact assemblage from the Opito beach midden, N40/3, Coromandel Peninsula. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 17:65–95.
Green, R.C.
1963 Summaries of sites at Opito, Sarah's Gully, and Great Mercury Island. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 6:57–68.
Skippers Ridge II (T10/226)
Bellwood, P.
1969 Excavations of Skippers Ridge, Opito Bay, Coromandel Peninsula, North Island of New Zealand. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 4:198–221.
Burial (T10/174)
Calder, A. and J. Calder
1977 A headache or a pain in the neck? A small scale salvage excavation of a midden/burial at Opito Bay, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 20:39–40. Houghton, P.
1977 Human skeletal material from excavations in Eastern Coromandel. Records Auckland Institute and Museum 14:45–56.
Law, R.G.
1983 Coromandel Peninsula. In N. Prickett (ed.) The First Thousand Years. Dunmore Press.
Stingray Pt Pa, Great Mercury Island (T10/169)
Golson, J.
1955 New Zealand Archaeological Association. Journal of the Polynesian Society 64:349–51. Green, R.C.
1963 Summaries of sites at Opito, Sarah's Gully, and Great Mercury Island. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 6:57–68.
Whangapoua Harbour, Holzgang Block (T10/643, 644, 648)
Crosby, A., B. Sewell and M. White
1987 Interim report on excavations in the Holzgang Block, Whangapoua Forest, Coromandel Peninsula. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 30:79–93.
n.d. Untitled manuscript on results of excavations. Held by Louise Furey.
Port Jackson (s9/53)
Foster, R.
1983 Investigations at Site N35/88 Port Jackson, Coromandel. Unpublished MA thesis, Anthropology, University of Auckland.
Brier Block, Coromandel Harbour (T11/210, 226, 219)
Furey, L.
1987 Archaeological Investigations in the Brier Block, Coromandel Harbour. NZ Journal of Archaeology 9:115–34.
Kauri Point, Bay of Plenty
Kauri Point Pa (U13/4)
Ambrose, W.
1962 Further investigations at Kauri Point, Katikati. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 5:56–67.
Golson, J.
1961 Investigations at Kauri Point, Katikati, western Bay of Plenty: introduction. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 4:13–5.
1961 Investigations at Kauri Point, Katikati, western Bay of Plenty: the excavations.
NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 4:17–29.
1961 Investigations at Kauri Point, Katikati, western Bay of Plenty: conclusions and hypotheses.
NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 4:38–41.
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Appendix I: Excavated sites, Hauraki
Green, R.C.
1978 Dating the Kauri Point sequence. Historical Review 26(I):32–45.
Kauri Point Open Settlement (U13/45)
Green, R.
1963 An undefended settlement at Kauri Point, Tauranga district. Historical Review 11(3):143–56.
1964 An undefended settlement at Kauri Point, Tauranga district. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 7:11–7.
Kauri Point Swamp (U13/5)
Green, R.C.
1978 Dating the Kauri Point sequence. Historical Review 26(1):32–45.
Shawcross, W.
1964 An archaeological assemblage of Maori combs. Journal of the Polynesian Society 73:7–25.
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 277–305.
Ongare Point (U13/8)
Shawcross, W.
1964 Archaeological investigations at Ongari (sic) Point, Katikati, Bay of Plenty. A report on the first season of excavations. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 7:79–98.
1966 Ongari (sic) Point – second season. NZ Archaeological Association Newsletter 9:53–71.
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Appendix II
RADIOCARBON DATES FOR HAURAKI SITES
Material: s = shell, c = charcoal, br = bracken fern, gr = grease, be = bone collagen
SITE NAME |
RC LAB. NO. |
CRA (YEARS BP) |
CALENDAR YEARS BP |
AD RANGE |
CONTEXT |
REFERENCE | |
Hurumoimoi |
WK 2854 |
c |
380±50 |
505-314 |
1445-1636 |
Layer 5 |
Doelman 1995 |
|
WK 2852 |
s |
670±50 |
441-257 |
1509-1693 |
Layer 3 |
|
Whetakura |
WK 2873 |
s |
770±50 |
501-315 |
1449-1635 |
Base of ditch |
Doelman 1995 |
|
WK 2874 |
s |
710±50 |
463-282 |
1487-1668 |
Below clay fill |
|
|
WK 2950 |
c |
320±50 |
487-287 |
1463-1663 |
Below clay fill |
|
|
WK 2951 |
c |
320±50 |
487-287 |
1463-1663 |
Base of ditch |
|
Oruarangi |
NZ 4177 |
c |
230±56 |
434-359 (10%), 328-67 (71 %), 37-44 (14%) |
1516-1591 1662-1880 |
Square 3, base of deposits, edge of site |
Best 1980 |
|
NZ 4176 |
c |
450±83 |
633-604 (3%), 558-303 (92%) |
1317-1346 |
Square 2, lower shell midden |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1392-1647 |
|
|
|
NZ 4178 |
s |
241±40 |
|
modern |
Too young to calibrate |
|
|
NZ 4179 |
br |
277±40 |
|
modern |
Too young to calibrate |
|
Paterangi |
NZ 4181 |
c |
271±92 |
501-4 |
1449— |
Square 1 defences |
Best 1980 |
|
NZ 4180 |
s |
182±40 |
|
modern |
Too young to calibrate |
|
Raupa |
WK 2039 |
s |
510±50 |
264-0 |
1686— |
Level 1 occupation |
Prickett 1992 |
|
WK 2040 |
s |
620±50 |
408-150 |
1542-1800 |
Level 1 occupation |
|
|
WK 2041 |
c |
modern |
|
|
Post ditch |
|
Turua |
WK 2875 |
s |
550±50 |
299-63 |
1651-1887 |
|
|
Pukehue |
WK 3038 |
c |
160±45 |
283-4 |
1667— |
|
|
Orurukumatua |
WK 2872 |
s |
690±50 |
450-271 |
1500-1679 |
|
|
|
WK 2949 |
c |
170±90 |
320-4 (92%) |
|
|
|
Puriri T12/340 |
WK 2644 |
s |
610±50 |
399-138 |
1551-1812 |
|
Bedford and Allen |
1993 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WK 2641 |
c |
modern |
|
|
|
|
Puriri 112/882 |
WK 2643 |
s |
590±50 |
378-112 |
1572-1838 |
Midden F, sample 4 |
|
|
WK 2640 |
c |
modern |
|
|
|
|
Puriri 112/883 |
WK 2646 |
s |
550±45 |
295-76 |
1655-1874 |
|
|
Puriri T12/885 |
WK 2645 |
s |
610±45 |
388-145 |
1562-1805 |
|
|
|
WK 2642 |
c |
modern |
|
|
|
|
Coromandel T11/188 |
NZ 6161 |
s |
540±54 |
292-49 |
1658-1900 |
|
Furey 1987 |
68
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Appendix II:Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites
Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites (coned) SITE NAME RC LAB. NO. CRA (YEARS BP) |
CALENDAR YEARS BP AD RANGE |
CONTEXT |
REFERENCE | |||
Coromandel T11/200 NZ 6162 |
s |
652±55 |
453-216 |
1497-1734 |
|
|
Coromandel T11/208 NZ 6157 |
s |
649±55 |
450-204 |
1500-1746 |
|
|
Coromandel T11/210 NZ 6159 |
s |
385±54 |
190-0 |
modern |
|
|
Coromandel T11/219 NZ 6158 |
s |
728±55 |
479-288 |
1471-1662 |
|
|
NZ 7044 |
s |
561±24 |
277-143 |
1673-1807 |
|
|
NZ 5982 |
s |
modern |
|
|
|
|
NZ 7025 |
s |
728±36 |
462-304 |
1488-1646 |
|
|
Coromandel T11/226 NZ 7219 |
s |
730±56 |
481-288 |
1469-1662 |
|
|
Coromandel T11/230 NZ 6160 |
s |
560±51 |
312-66 |
1638-1884 |
|
|
Port Jackson NZ 4883 |
bc |
606±56 |
656-527 |
1294-1423 |
|
|
Whangapoua T11/643 WK 970 |
s |
840±45 |
545-415 |
1405-1535 |
|
Unpublished report |
Whangapoua T11/644 WK 968 |
c |
940±45 |
930-744 |
1020-1206 |
|
|
WK 973 |
c |
720±45 |
721-632 (75%), |
606-558 (20%) 1229-1318, 1344-1392 |
|
|
Whangapoua T11/648 WK 975 |
s |
770±45 |
497-320 |
1453-1630 |
|
|
Whangapoua T11/636 WK 969 |
s |
780±45 |
505-328 |
1445-1622 |
|
|
Whangapoua T11/679 WK 971 |
s |
850±45 |
550-423 |
1400-1527 |
|
|
Whangapoua T11/661 WK 972 |
s |
790±45 |
512-336 |
1438-1614 |
|
|
Whangapoua T11/635 WK 974 |
s |
840±45 |
545-415 |
1405-1535 |
|
|
Sarah's Gully NZ 355 |
c |
656±40 |
661-553 |
1289-1397 |
Area D upper |
Green 1963 |
Settlement NZ 356 |
c |
216±39 |
312-249 (29%), 32-4 (18%) |
230-131 (48%),1638-1701, 1720-1819 |
Area D top layer |
|
NZ 357 |
c |
702±40 |
699-627 (62%), |
611-556 (33%) 1251-1323, 1339-1394 |
Area B firepit |
|
NZ 358 |
c |
873±40 |
907-693 |
1043-1257 |
Square HH base of pit |
|
NZ 359 |
c |
1700±45 |
1707-1515 |
243-435 |
Square HH Layer 9 |
|
Sarah's Gully Pa NZ 1080 |
c |
711±48 |
717-626 (66%), |
613-656 (29%) 1233-1324, 1337-1394 |
Pit Phase 1 |
Birks and Birks 1970 |
NZ 1082 |
c |
398±58 |
515-312 |
1435-1638 |
Pit Phase 2 |
|
NZ 1081 |
c |
341±58 |
500-294 |
1450-1656 |
Bank Phase 3 |
|
NZ 698 |
s |
567±58 |
338-50 |
1612-1900 |
Phase 3 defended |
Birks and Birks 1973 |
NZ 699 |
s |
601±48 |
384-130 |
1566-1820 |
Phase 3 defended |
|
Cross Creek NZ 6798 |
s |
841±33 |
528-440 |
1422-1510 |
Layer 3 |
Sewell 1986 |
NZ 6825 |
s |
881±51 |
602-442 |
1348-1508 |
Layer 5 |
|
NZ 6800 |
s |
1035±28 |
665-557 |
1285-1393 |
Layer 7 |
|
NZA 576 |
bc |
751±57 |
778-634 (86%), |
604-559 (9%) 1172-1316, |
Layer 7/8 moa bone |
McFadgen pers. comm. |
continued/...
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites (cont'd) SITE NAME RC LAB. NO. CRA (YEARS BP) |
CALENDAR YEARS BP |
AD RANGE |
CONTEXT REFERENCE | ||
Cross Creek (cont'd) |
|
|
|
1346-1391 |
|
Skippers Ridge NZ 1740 |
c |
814±70 |
907-652 |
1043-1298 |
1st phase pit building Davidson 1974 |
Skippers Ridge II NZ 904 |
c |
83±58 |
148-9 (64%), 271-178 (31%) |
1800— |
|
|
|
|
|
1679-1772 |
|
NZ 905 |
c |
121±89 |
287-4 |
1663— |
|
Opito Midden T11/161 NZ 354 |
c |
689±40 |
679-623 (51%), 616-554 (44%) |
1271-1327 |
Layer 4 Green 1963 |
|
|
|
|
1334-1396 |
|
NZA 575 |
bc |
417±56 |
527-315 |
1423-1635 |
Layer 4C McFadgen pers. comm. |
Hahei T11/326 NZ 4950 |
c |
300±45 |
472-281 |
1478-1669 |
Firepit, top Layer 4 Harsant 1983 |
NZ 4951 |
c |
556±61 |
649-504 |
1301-1446 |
Firepit, top Layer 4 |
NZ 4952 |
c |
548±59 |
648-502 |
1302-1448 |
Firepit, top Layer 4 |
NZ 4953 |
c |
700±59 |
714-551 |
1236-1399 |
Firepit, base Layer 3 |
Hahei T11/242 NZ 6642 |
s |
932±64 |
643-467 |
1307-1483 |
Upper layer Nichol 1986 |
NZ 6646 |
s |
952±51 |
639-495 |
1311-1515 |
Lower layer |
Hot Water Beach NZ 1169 |
c |
437±44 |
538-429 (80%), 380-323 (15%) |
1412-1521 |
Square M11, Layer 4 hangi Leahy 1971 |
|
|
|
|
1570-1627 |
|
NZ 1170 |
c |
492±87 |
647-422 (80%), 398-316 (15%) |
1303-1528 |
Square M11, Layer 4 soil |
|
|
|
|
1552-1634 |
|
NZ 1171 |
g |
185±86 |
430-379(5%), 323-4 (90%) |
1627— |
Square M11, Layer 4 grease |
NZ 1296 |
s |
761±44 |
490-316 |
1460-1634 |
Square M11, Layer 4 Leahy 1974 |
NZ 1297 |
s |
832±44 |
539-409 |
1411-1541 |
Square M11, Layer 4 |
NZ 1299 |
s |
647±92 |
485-94 |
1465-1856 |
Square M11, Layer 4 |
NZA 583 |
bc |
549±74 |
659-471 |
1291-1479 |
Layer 6 McFadgen pers. comm. |
Tairua NZ 594 |
c |
885±52 |
917-696 |
1033-1254 |
Square A, Layer 2 firepit Green 1967 |
NZ 595 |
c |
449±44 |
543-432 (86%), 368-326 (9%) |
1407-1518 |
Square A, Layer 2 firepit same as NZ 574" |
NZ 1875 |
s |
885±58 |
617-437 |
1333-1513 |
Layer 2 Rowland 1975 |
NZ 1876 |
s |
466±57 |
333-53 |
1617-1900 |
Layer 6 |
NZA 558 |
bc |
460±55 |
552-425 (81%), 390-319 (14%) |
1398-1525 |
Occup. 2 moa bone McFadgen pers. comm. |
|
|
|
|
1560-1631 |
|
Whitipirorua WK 1515 |
s |
990±50 |
656-514 |
1294-1436 |
Square 8, Layer 8, occup I Furey 1991 |
WK 1169 |
s |
870±45 |
570-436 |
1380-1514 |
Square 4, Layer 2, occup Ill |
Whangamata T12/617 NZ 7218 |
s |
648±35 |
404-259 |
1546-1691 |
Terrace 3 Furey 1987b |
Whangamata T12/654 WK 1153 |
s |
670±50 |
441-257 |
1509-1693 |
Area 1 terrace Short 1988 |
WK 1154 |
s |
700±50 |
457-277 |
1493-1673 |
Area 1 terrace |
WK 1156 |
s |
730±50 |
476-292 |
1474-1658 |
Area 3 |
WK 1157 |
s |
580±50 |
357-90 |
1593-1860 |
Area 4 |
continued/...
70
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13.4 78 |
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Apendix II: Radiocarbon dates Hauraki sites
Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites (coned) SITE NAME RC LAB. NO. CRA (YEARS BP) |
CALENDAR YEARS BP |
|
AD RANGE |
CONTEXT |
REFERENCE | |||||
Kauri Point Pa, |
ANU 26 |
c |
230±70 |
441-4 |
|
|
|
1478-1669 |
Pit use predating final defence Green 1978 | |
Bay of Plenty |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ANU 46B |
c |
395±53 |
512-315 |
|
|
|
1438-1632 |
Defence |
|
Kauri Point Swamp |
ANU 25 NZ 809A |
c c |
495±78 285±59 |
646-427 485-267 |
(84%), |
387-320 |
(11%) |
1304-1523 1465-1683 |
1st terrace construction Level I |
Green 1978 |
|
NZ 813 |
c |
553±82 |
667-454 |
|
|
|
1283-1496 |
Level ll |
|
|
NZ 812A |
c |
435±59 |
542-421 |
(68%), |
405-315 |
(27%) |
1408-1529 1545-1635 |
Level Ill |
|
|
NZ 810A |
c |
616±60 |
660-528 |
|
|
|
1290-1422 |
Level IV |
|
|
NZ 810A |
c |
597±49 |
650-529 |
|
|
|
1300-1421 |
|
|
|
NZ 811A |
c |
417±59 |
527-315 |
|
|
|
1423-1635 |
Mean of 2 dates for NZ 812A |
|
Kauri Point undefended |
NZ 1897 |
c |
469±57 |
556-426 |
(82%), |
389-319 |
(12%) |
1394-1524; 1561-1631 |
|
Green 1978 |
Motutapu — Sunde |
NZ 6954 |
s |
781±28 |
498-381 |
|
|
|
1452-1569 |
Shell midden below ash |
Nichol 1988 |
|
NZ 6955 |
s |
661±36 |
413-267 |
|
|
|
1537-1683 |
Shell midden above ash |
|
|
NZ 6956 |
s |
1015±32 |
654-544 |
|
|
|
1296-1406 |
Shell below ash (natural) |
|
|
NZ 1898 |
c |
613±58 |
658-529 |
|
|
|
1292-1421 |
Oven below Rangitoto ash |
Davidson 1974 |
|
NZ 1899 |
c |
624±85 |
693-507 |
|
|
|
1257-1443 |
Level 4, square Al |
|
Motutapu — Pig Bay |
NZ 221 |
c |
322±39 |
468-267 |
|
|
|
1482-1683 |
Cultural layer above ash |
Brothers & Golson 1959 |
|
NZ 222 |
c |
823±40 |
789-663 |
|
|
|
1161-1287 |
Beneath Rangitoto ash |
|
|
NZ 220 |
s |
1153±40 |
794-645 |
|
|
|
1156-1305 |
Shell from beach |
|
Motutapu — |
NZ 4346 |
bc |
451±45 |
544-432 |
(86%), |
368-326 |
(9%) |
1406-1518 |
Burial |
Davidson 1978 |
Station Bay (R10/26) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NZ 1164 |
c |
610±44 |
652-538 |
|
|
|
1298-1412 |
Charcoal base pit 5 |
Davidson 1972 |
|
NZ 1165 |
c |
608±44 |
651-538 |
|
|
|
1299-1412 |
Beneath Rangitoto ash (M8) |
|
|
NZ 1166 |
c |
510±86 |
654-427 |
(86%), |
387-320 |
(9%) |
1296-1523, 1563-1630 |
Beneath Rangitoto ash (M8) |
|
|
NZ 1167 |
c |
410±86 |
553-285 |
|
|
|
1397-1665 |
Beneath Rangitoto ash (M11) |
|
|
NZ 1168 |
c |
188±56 |
301-4 |
|
|
|
1649— |
Hangi, fill of pit 1 |
|
Motutapu — Station |
NZ 4348 |
bc |
367±61 |
507-302 |
|
|
|
1443-1648 |
Burial |
Davidson 1978 |
Bay pa (R10/26) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NZ 4349 |
c |
35±66 |
|
|
|
|
modern |
Bracken from pit fill |
|
Motutapu — Station Bay R10/31 |
NZ 4347 |
bc |
562±41 |
643-586 |
(40%), |
573-514 |
(55%) |
1307-1364, 1377-1436 |
Burial |
Davidson 1978 |
Great Barrier — |
NZ 1891 |
c |
205±57 |
315-4 |
|
|
|
1635— |
|
Law 1975 |
Harataonga Eastern midden |
NZ 1892 |
c |
236±57 |
438-350 |
(13%), |
333-69 (68%) |
1512-1600, 1617-1881 |
|
|
continued/...
71
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13.5 79 |
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ARCHAELOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites (cont'd) SITE NAME RC LAB. NO. CRA (YEARS BP) |
CALENDAR YEARS BP AD RANGE |
CONTEXT |
REFERENCE | |||
Great Barrier — |
NZ 1893 |
c |
443±58 |
546-421 (72%), 399-316 (23%) 1404-1529 |
|
Law 1975 |
Harataonga pa |
|
|
|
1551-1634 |
|
|
Ponui — Galatea Bay |
NZ 912 |
c |
235±59 |
333-68 (68%), 438-350 (13%) 1617-1882 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1512-1600 |
|
|
|
NZ 913 |
c |
251±59 |
469-130 (84%) 1481-1820 |
|
|
Kauri Pt Pa, Birkenhead |
NZ 881 |
s |
839±115 |
644-279 (95%) 1306-1621 |
Shell from fill of drain |
Davidson & Wallace 1992 |
|
NZA1070 |
s |
632±75 |
457-115 1493-1835 |
Shell from fill of drain |
„ |
|
NZA1735 |
s |
519±60 |
273-0 1677— |
Shell from fill of drain |
„ |
Castor Bay Pa |
NZ 1762 |
c |
378±58 |
508-308 1442-1642 |
|
Davidson 1974 |
Taylor's Hill |
NZA7753 |
s |
670±50 |
441-257 1509-1693 |
Pit V, lowest fill layer |
Leahy 1991 |
|
NZ 7770 |
c |
396±46 |
512-315 1438-1635 |
Predates construction Pit T, platform |
|
Maungarei |
NZ 404 |
c |
509±40 |
1395-1476 |
First activity crater slope |
Davidson 1993 |
|
NZ 8127 |
c |
391±44 |
1461-1644 |
First activity crater slope |
|
|
NZA 827 |
c |
230±110 |
1503— |
|
|
|
NZ 1618 |
c |
403±49 |
1443-1634 |
|
|
|
NZ 1619 |
c |
383±54 |
1447-1641 |
|
|
|
NZ 7747 |
s |
526±50 |
1702— |
Late use of NE crater rim |
|
|
NZ 7748 |
s |
668±50 |
1521-1799 |
Early use of crater rim |
|
|
NZ 7749 |
s |
655±50 |
1530-1813 |
Midden on scarp above upper terrace |
|
|
NZ 7750 |
s |
685±50 |
1501-1727 |
Initial fill of large pit |
|
|
NZ 7751 |
s |
674±50 |
1516-1793 |
Upper midden lower tce |
|
|
NZ 7752 |
s |
732±50 |
1484-1679 |
First midden outer slope |
|
|
NZA 827 |
c |
230±110 |
1503-1955 |
|
|
|
NZA 1618 |
c |
403±49 |
1443-1634 |
Clearance/use of garden |
|
|
NZA 1619 |
c |
383±54 |
1447-1641 |
Clearance/use of garden |
|
Westfield |
WK 2030 |
c |
340±45 |
484-300 1466-1650 |
Base Pit 4 |
Sewell 1992 |
|
WK 1720 |
s |
630±45 |
346-251 1529-1749 |
Area B |
|
|
WK 1721 |
s |
540±45 |
287-68 |
Area C |
|
|
NZ 6163 |
s |
660±55 |
454-236 1496-1714 |
Midden layer |
Furey 1986 |
|
NZ 6164 |
s |
746±55 |
489-296 1461-1654 |
Midden layer |
|
|
NZ 6164 |
s |
637±52 |
432-157 1518-1793 |
Midden layer |
|
72
continued/...
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13.6 80 |
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Appendix II: Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites
Radiocarbon dates for Hauraki sites (coned)
SITE NAME RC LAB. NO. |
|
CRA (YEARS BP) |
CALENDAR YEARS BP |
AD RANGE |
CONTEXT |
REFERENCE |
Fisher Road NZ 7048 |
s |
770±23 |
487-376 |
1463-1574 |
|
Foster & Sewell 1989 |
NZ 7049 |
s |
749±48 |
486-304 |
1464-1646 |
|
|
NZ 7064 |
s |
730±36 |
462-306 |
1488-1644 |
|
|
NZ 7065 |
s |
721±36 |
455-299 |
1495-1651 |
|
|
Hawkins Hill NZ 6972 |
c |
410±55 |
520-315 |
1430-1635 |
|
Bulmer 1994 |
NZ 6971 |
s |
716±52 |
468-284 |
1482-1666 |
|
|
NZ 7011 |
s |
714±28 |
441-302 |
1509-1648 |
|
|
ACI Tamaki R11/1506 WK 1940 |
s |
730±35 |
|
1483-1651 |
Earth oven |
Foster & Sewell 1993 |
WK 1941 |
s |
720±35 |
|
1489-1656 |
Midden in s.w. corner |
|
WK 1942 |
s |
670±45 |
|
1503-1698 |
Midden in centre of site |
|
WK 1943 |
s |
750±45 |
|
1461-1649 |
Posthole house 1 |
|
WK 1944 |
s |
680±50 |
|
1491-1695 |
Posthole palisade |
|
WK 1945 |
s |
690±50 |
|
1488-1687 |
Midden east side site |
|
ACI Tamaki R11/1201 WK 1946 |
s |
690±35 |
|
1510-1674 |
Midden A |
|
Hamlins Hill NZ 6156 |
s |
667±40 |
423-267 |
1527-1683 |
Later occupation |
Pearce & Walton 1983 |
NZ 5962 |
c |
411±76 |
539-304 |
1411-1646 |
Floor of pit |
|
Harris Rd — East Tamaki NZ 7098 |
c |
762±36 |
726-654 |
1224-1296 |
Stone and earth mound |
Douglas 1987 |
Cryers Rd — WK 1127 |
s |
750±45 |
485-308 |
1465-1642 |
|
Frederickson & |
East Tamaki |
|
|
|
|
|
Visser 1991 |
WK 1128 |
s |
700±40 |
444-285 |
1506-1665 |
|
|
WK 1129 |
s |
670±40 |
424-268 |
1526-1682 |
|
|
WK 1130 |
s |
590±40 |
326-128 |
1624-1822 |
|
|
WK 1131 |
s |
510±40 |
242-116 |
1708-1834 |
|
|
WK 1132 |
s |
680±45 |
437-270 |
1513-1680 |
|
|
WK 1133 |
s |
690±45 |
443-275 |
1507-1675 |
|
|
WK 1134 |
s |
520±45 |
272-51 |
1678-1899 |
|
|
Radiocarbon dates presented here may differ to the original reported date.
CRA = conventional radiocarbon age BP = before present
73
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13.7 81 |
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
Information in this appendix has been provided by Bruce McFadgen, Science and Research Directorate, Department of Conservation, Wellington. The following statement has been provided by McFadgen to explain the radiocarbon dates.
In the past, inconsistencies in nomenclature and the reporting of calibration standards have led to some confusion about the interpretation of radiocarbon dates measured at the DSIR radiocarbon laboratory. To resolve such questions and ensure that all radiocarbon ages are reported in a consistent manner, measurements made prior to 1988 have been recalculated in accordance with the recommendations of Stuiver and Polach (1977) and stored on a database. From 1988, all results since BZ7543 have been reported in strict accordance with the Stuiver and Polach conventions. All accelerator mass spectrometry ages, identified by NZA numbers, follow the Stuiver and Polach conventions.
Terrestrial calibrations are based on a compilation by M. Stuiver and P. J. Reimer (1986) of 20 year ring data for the period 7210 BC to 1950 AD, with no hemispherical offset. New Zealand marine calibrations are based on the carbon cycle model calibration curve of Stuiver, Pearson and Braziunas (1986) with geographic offset Delta-R set to –30 as recommended by McFadgen and Manning (1990).
REFERENCES:
McFadgen, B. and M. Manning. 1990. Calibrating New Zealand radiocarbon dates of marine shells. Radiocarbon 32 (2):229–232.
Stuiver, M. and G. Pearson. 1986. High precision calibration of the radiocarbon time scale, AD 1950–500 BC. Radiocarbon 28 (2B):805–838.
Stuiver, M., G. Pearson and T. Barziunas. 1986. Radiocarbon age calibration of marine samples back to 900 cal yr BP. Radiocarbon 28 (2B):980–1021.
Stuiver, M. and H. Polach. 1977. Discussion: reporting of I4C data. Radiocarbon 19:355–363.
Stuiver, M. and P. Reimer. 1986. A computer program for radiocarbon age calibration. Radiocarbon 28 (2B)1022–1030.
74
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14 Appendix III |
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14.1 82 |
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Appendix III
SCIENTIFIC NAMES
OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS
Plants |
|
bracken fern |
Pteridium esculentum |
flax |
Phormium tenax |
hard beech |
Nothofagus solandri |
hinau |
Elaeocarpus dentatus |
kahikatea |
Dacrycarpus dacrydioides |
kanuka |
Kunzea ericoides |
karaka |
Corynocarpus laevigatus |
kauri |
Agathus australis |
kiekie |
Freycinetia banksii |
matai |
Prumnopitys taxifolia |
pohutukawa |
Metrosideros excelsa |
pukatea |
Laurelia novae-zelandiae |
puriri |
Vitex lucens |
rata |
Metrosideros robusta |
raupo |
Typha orientalis |
tanikaha |
Phyllocladus trichomanoides |
taraire |
Beilschmiedia tarairi |
tawa |
Beilschmiedia tawa |
titoki |
Alectryon excelsus |
totara |
Podocarpus totara |
Fish barracouta |
Thyrsites atun |
blue cod |
Parapercis colias |
blue maomao |
Scorpis violaceus |
butterfish |
Odax pullus |
eel |
Anguilla spp. |
gurnard |
Chelidonichthys kumu |
hapuku |
Polyprion oxygeneios |
john dory |
Zeus faber |
kahawai |
Arripis trutta |
kingfish |
Seriola lalandi |
labrids |
Notolabrus spp. |
leatherjacket |
Parika scaber |
75 |
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14.2 83 |
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ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE HAURAKI REGION
mackerel |
Trachurus declivis (jack mackerel) |
moki |
Cheilodactylus spectabilis |
mullet |
Aldrichetta forsteri |
parore |
Girella tricuspidata |
porae |
Nemadactylus douglasi |
ray |
Elasmobranch |
red cod |
Pseudophycis bachus |
sea perch |
Helicolenus percoides (john stewart) |
shark |
Elasmobranch |
snapper |
Pagrus auratus |
stargazer |
Genyagnus monopterygius |
tarakihi |
Nemadactylus macropterus |
trevally |
Pseudocaranx dentex |
trumpeter |
Latris lineata |
warehou |
Seriolella brama |
Birds |
|
Coastal |
|
Australasian shoveller |
Anas rhynchotis |
blue duck |
Hymenolaimus malacorhynchos |
brown teal |
Anas aucklandica |
grey duck |
Anas superciliosa |
grey teal |
Anas gracilis |
lesser knot |
Calidris canutus |
marsh crake |
Porzana pusilla |
NZ dotterel |
Charadrius obscures |
NZ scaup |
Aythya novaeseelandiae |
paradise shel duck |
Tadorna variegata |
pied stilt |
Himantopus himantopus |
pipit |
Anthus novaeseelandiae |
pukeko |
Porphyrio porphyrio |
shag spp. |
Phalacrocoracidae |
spotted shag |
Stictocarbo punctatus |
white heron |
Egretta alba |
wrybill |
Anarhynchus frontalis |
Marine albatross |
Diomedea spp. |
Australasian gannet |
Morus serrator |
blue penguin |
Eudyptula minor |
gull |
Larus spp. |
mollymawk |
Diomedea spp. |
NZ pelican |
Pelecanus novaezealandiae |
oystercatcher |
Haematopus spp. |
petrel |
Procellariidae |
prion |
Procellariidae |
shearwater |
Puffinus spp. |
tern |
Sternidae |
Bush/forest adzebill* |
Aptornis otidiformis |
bellbird |
Anthornis melanura |
great crested grebe |
Podiceps cristatus |
NZ harrier hawk* |
Circus eylesi |
huia* |
Heteralocha acutirostris |
76
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14.3 84 |
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Appendix III: Scientific Names of Plants and Animals
kaka |
Nestor meridionalis |
kakapo |
Strigops habroptilus |
kiwi |
Apteryx spp. |
kokako |
Callaeas cinerea |
little spotted kiwi |
Apteryx owenii |
moa* |
Dinomithiformes |
morepork |
Ninox novaeseelandiae |
NZ coot* |
Fulica prisca |
NZ crow* |
Palaeocorax moriorum |
NZ falcon |
Falco novaeseelandiae |
NZ pigeon |
Hemiphaga novaeseelandiae |
NZ quail* |
Coturnix novaezelandiae |
parakeet |
Cyanoramphus spp. |
piopio* |
Turnagra capensis |
rail |
Rallidae |
red-crowned parakeet |
Cyanoramphus novaezelandiae |
rifleman |
Acanthisitta chloris |
saddleback |
Philesturnus carunculatus |
stitchbird |
Notiomystis cincta |
takahe |
Porphyrio mantelli |
tui |
Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae |
weka |
Gallirallus australis |
little woodhen* |
Gallirallus minor |
Marine mammals fur seal |
Arctocephalus forsterii |
sea lion |
Phocarctos hookeri |
elephant seal |
Mirounga leonina |
leopard seal |
Hydrurga leptonyx |
pilot whale |
Globicephala melaena |
sperm whale |
Physeter catodon |
dolphin |
Delphinidae |
Other tuatara |
Sphenodon punctatus |
kuri |
Canis familiaris |
kiore |
Rattus exulans |
Shellfish cats eye |
Lunella smaragda |
cockle |
A ustrovenus stutchburyi |
cooks turban |
Cookia sulcata |
dog cockle |
Glycymeris laticostata |
kina |
Evechinus chloroticus |
mussel |
Perna canaliculus |
oyster |
Crassostrea glomerata |
paua |
Haliotis spp. |
pipi |
Paphies australis |
scallop |
Pecten novaezelandiae |
tuatua |
Paphies subtriangulata |
white rock shell |
Thais orbita |
* = extinct |
|
77