Mw. Graves et Dj. Addison, THE POLYNESIAN SETTLEMENT OF THE HAWAIIAN ARCHIPELAGO - INTEGRATING MODELS AND METHODS IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION, World archaeology, 26(3), 1995, pp. 380-399
Archaeological investigations of the prehistoric colonization of East
Polynesia have focused on the question: when did this event occur? A r
elatively late date for the colonization of Hawai'i is held by some ar
chaeologists; an alternative view suggests that there is considerably
more antiquity to the settlement of Hawai'i. This paper separates the
settlement process into three components: discovery, colonization and
establishment. Four settlement models are developed, each of which dif
fers in terms of the time duration separating the three components. Di
stinctive patterns of radiocarbon dates and environmental change are a
ssociated with the different settlement models. When analyzed in refer
ence to the four models, radiocarbon dates from two islands in Hawai'i
show evidence of a possibly early colonization phase, followed a few
centuries later by the establishment of prehistoric populations in a n
umber of locations in the islands.