In:Language Dispersal Beyond Farming
Edited by Martine Robbeets and Alexander Savelyev
[Not in series 215] 2017
► pp. 155–181
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Chapter 7Farming and the Trans-New Guinea family
A consideration
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Published online: 21 December 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.215.07sch
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.215.07sch
Abstract
The island of New Guinea, located to the north of Australia, is one of the world’s major centres of early agriculture and plant domestication. At the same time, a large number of the languages of New Guinea and adjacent areas share a common origin and are believed to belong to a single language family, the Trans-New Guinea family. This paper presents a first attempt to apply the farming-language dispersal hypothesis to the New Guinea case. While the archaeological literature on early agriculture in New Guinea has focused mainly on taro, there is reason to doubt that taro was associated with the Trans-New Guinea expansion. In this paper, I instead consider the role of banana and sugarcane. The occurrence in many Trans-New Guinea languages of related terms for these two crops suggests that these were part of the “farming package” which fuelled the expansion of the family and its speakers.
Keywords: New Guinea, Papuan languages, Trans-New Guinea family, vegeculture
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Trans-New Guinea languages
- 3.Agriculture and its emergence in New Guinea
- 4.Beyond taro
- 5.Proto-Trans-New Guinea sugarcane and banana reconstructed
- 6.History of sugarcane and banana and their exploitation in New Guinea
- 7.An agricultural package for Trans-New Guinea
Acknowledgements Notes References
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