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Geoarchaeology Shell‐Dense Island Off Culasawani, Vanua Levu Island, Fiji: Midden or Muddle?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Geoarchaeology Shell‐Dense Island Off Culasawani, Vanua Levu Island, Fiji: Midden or Muddle?

Patrick Nunn, Frank R Thomas, Mereia Fong Lomavatu, Michelle McKeown, Mereoni Camailakeba, Elia Nakoro, Meli Nanuku, Niko Tokainavatu, Aaron Lomavatu and Roselyn Kumar
Geoarchaeology, Vol.41(2), pp.1-8
2026
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Geoarchaeology - 2026 - Nunn - Shell‐Dense Island Off Culasawani Vanua Levu Island Fiji Midden or Muddle1.82 MBDownloadView
Published VersionCC BY-NC V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Fiji midden island Pacific islands radiocarbon ages shell midden shellfish
Investigations of a 3000 m2 shell-dense island surrounded by mangroves off the coast of Culasawani, a very lightly inhabited part of northern Vanua Levu Island in Fiji, suggest it is likely to be a ‘midden island’ rather than a (tsunami) wave deposit. Building an island that reaches 60 cm above mean high tide, the shell-dense deposit (70%–90% shell) averages 20–40 cm thick and appears unstratified, characteristics that initially suggested that it was a wave deposit. Subsequent investigations included four 1 × 1 m test pits and showed all shellfish remains in the island sediments to be from edible species and associated with pottery fragments. Ten radiocarbon ages cluster around a median age of 1190 cal BP (760 CE/AD) with a range of 1530–910 cal BP (420–1040 CE/AD). The clustering of these ages and the nature of the shellfish remains lead to the preferred interpretation of this shell-dense island as a true ‘midden island’, created either by people living on/above the site or by people who processed shellfish there before transporting its flesh elsewhere for consumption. If the Culasawani island is a midden island, then this is the first to be recorded in the South Pacific west of Papua New Guinea.

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