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Home > New data reveals severe impact of introduced diseases on Pacific islands

New data reveals severe impact of introduced diseases on Pacific islands [1]

Nuku'alofa, Tonga

Monday, November 21, 2022 - 05:49.  Updated on Friday, March 3, 2023 - 19:43.

Home of the Tamahā, at the village of Mu’a was constructed on a low mound. Image: part of the engraving titled 'Maison de la Tamaha, au village de Moua', from the collections of the State Library of New South Wales.

Pacific island nations suffered severe depopulation from introduced diseases as a consequence of contact with European vessels, a new study from The Australian National University (ANU) shows.

The research, published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, indicates population declines were a lot larger than previously thought.

According to the study, the main island of Tonga had a population decline of between 70 and 86 per cent once Europeans made contact.

Researchers from the ANU School of Culture, History & Language, PhD candidate Phillip Parton and ARC Future Fellow Professor Geoffrey Clark, found there were between 100,000-120,000 people in Tonga prior to European contact.

Phillip said that he and co-author Prof. Geoffrey Clark used aerial laser scanning data to map residences on the main island of Tonga, “and then used archaeological data I collected as part of my PhD to estimate the population.”

“This improved understanding of the past has allowed us to show a significant population decline from 50,000-60,000 to 10,000 during a 50-year period on the main island of Tongatapu in the Kingdom of Tonga.

“Because this number is so much larger than anything anyone had previously considered, I used shipping and missionary data to check my estimates and found they were plausible.

“Obviously, this shows a big reassessment of the impact of globalisation in the 19th century.

“As in many parts of the world, the population of Pacific islands suffered severe declines after contact when Europeans introduced new pathogens.”

The research has been published in the Journal of Archaeological Science [2].

Research teams from ANU and Lapaha in 2019. From left: Christian Reepmeyer, Kaitlin Allen, 'Atipolo Faka'osi, Naoto Fukuyo, Sarah Binney, Tome Futu, Brian Hukins, Siaosi Saafi, Phillip Parton, Jason Melekiola, Siaosi 'Uhatafe.
Geoffrey Clark and Lapaha team measuring archaeological remains on Tongatapu.
A large mound at Lapaha where people in the past may have lived on. A Canadian team of Travis Freeland and David Burley counted over 10,000 mounds on Tongatapu alone by using advanced mapping technology.
Pacific Islands [3]
Tonga [4]
archaeology [5]
Phillip Parton [6]
ANU [7]
Pacific Islands [8]

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Source URL:https://matangitonga.to/2022/11/21/ANUdata-reveals-severe-impact-introduced-diseases-pacific-islands

Links
[1] https://matangitonga.to/2022/11/21/ANUdata-reveals-severe-impact-introduced-diseases-pacific-islands [2] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2352409X22002735?dgcid=author [3] https://matangitonga.to/tag/pacific-islands?page=1 [4] https://matangitonga.to/tag/tonga?page=1 [5] https://matangitonga.to/tag/archaeology?page=1 [6] https://matangitonga.to/tag/phillip-parton?page=1 [7] https://matangitonga.to/tag/anu?page=1 [8] https://matangitonga.to/topic/pacific-islands?page=1