Publication (Type V)
Fishing and Subsistence Strategies in Celebes Sea: Ethno - Archaeological
Approach to Area Studies
Author: ONO, Rintaro, School of Marine Science and Technology, Tokai University
(Term: 2010)
- Outline of Publication
- This publication (in Japanese) investigates the history of marine exploitation
and the development of subsistence strategies in the Celebes Sea as one
of the maritime worlds that exist in Insular Southeast Asia. The Celebes
Sea is a conceptual zone based on a historical and ecological background
which includes Borneo Island in Malaysia, Mindanao Island in Philippines,
and Sulawesi Island in Indonesia, together with two small islands groups
as Sulu Islands in Philippines and Sangihe-Talaud Islands in Indonesia.
The temporal framework of this publication covers a period from the late
Pleistocene to Holocene until present times, but mainly focuses after Neolithic
times corresponding to the history of the Austronesian speaking people
who are currently the major population stretching across Insular Southeast
Asia and Oceania.
- Purpose of Publication
-
The purposes of this publication are; (1) to innovate methodology for
Area Studies by employing an ethno-archaeological and ethnohistorical approach
in Insular Southeast Asia, (2) to provide solid and basic data of prehistoric
and historic marine exploitation and subsistence strategies based on intensive
excavations and analysis of faunal remains, (3) to investigate modern marine
exploitation and subsistence strategies of some groups including Sama (Bajau)
in the Celebes Sea based on intensive ethnological surveys, and (4) to
provide ecological and historical models of past to present subsistence
strategies in the Celebes Sea by combining archaeological, historical,
and ethnological data in Insular Southeast Asia and also Oceania.
- With these purposes in mind, the publication makes clear that the intensive
use of inshore resources has been a major character of fishing and subsistence
strategies from prehistoric to present times in the Celebes Sea, saving
more labour time for exploiting terrestrial and agricultural resources
which have been more unstable than marine resources. The intensive use
of inshore resources has been also observed after trading and colonial
times to the present as in the case of Sama fishing. However, the main
factor of such inshore exploitation in later times is tightly related to
the importance and high value of inshore resources as commercial goods
connected with Chinese trading, and there have been drastic structural
changes in subsistence strategies between early (Neolithic) times and later
times.
- Besides these results, the significance of this publication is; (1) its
attempt to combine Southeast Asian studies and Pacific studies as Area
Studies of the maritime world with a long-time perspective of human history,
and (2) its attempt to employ an ethno-archaeological approach for Area
Studies in Insular Southeast Asia.
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