Ecological Crises or Marginal Disruptions: the Effects of the First Humans on Pacific Islands
- 1 October 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Zealand Geographer
- Vol. 57 (2) , 11-20
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-7939.2001.tb01605.x
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Significance of emerged Holocene corals around Ovalau and Moturiki islands, Fiji, southwest PacificMarine Geology, 2000
- The age of Lapita settlement in FijiArchaeology in Oceania, 1999
- Late Holocene human-induced modifications to a central Polynesian island ecosystem.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- New evidence for episodic post-glacial sea-level rise, central Great Barrier Reef, AustraliaMarine Geology, 1995
- Palynological and Sedimentological Evidence for a Radiocarbon Chronology of Environmental Change and Polynesian Deforestation from Lake Taumatawhana, Northland, New ZealandRadiocarbon, 1995
- Naïve birds and noble savages ‐ a review of man‐caused prehistoric extinctions of island birdsEcography, 1993
- The Late Quaternary vegetational and climatic history of Easter IslandJournal of Quaternary Science, 1991
- A Radiocarbon Chronology for Human-Induced Environmental Change on Mangaia, Southern Cook Islands, PolynesiaRadiocarbon, 1991
- Aranuian vegetation history of the Arrowsmith Range, Canterbury I. Pollen diagrams, plant macrofossils, and buried soils from Prospect HillNew Zealand Journal of Botany, 1990
- Late Quaternary pollen records from Easter IslandNature, 1984