Monday, 2 September 2013

Prehistoric Period in The Indonesian Archipelago

Prehistoric Indonesia

Prehistoric IndonesiaPrehistoric Indonesia is a prehistoric period in the Indonesian archipelago that spanned from the Pleistocene period to about the 4th century CE when the Kutai people produced the earliest known stone inscriptions in Indonesia. Unlike the clear distinction between prehistoric and historical periods in Europe and the Middle East, the division is muddled in Indonesia. This is mostly because Indonesia's geographical conditions as a vast archipelago caused some parts — especially the interiors of distant islands — to be virtually isolated from the rest of the world. West Java and coastal Eastern Borneo, for example, began their historical periods in the early 4th century, but megalithic culture still flourished and script was unknown in the rest of Indonesia, including in Nias, Batak, and Toraja. The Papuans on the Indonesian part of New Guinea island lived virtually in the stone age until their 1st contacts with modern world in early 20th century. Even today living megalithic traditions still can be found on the island of Sumba and Nias.
Prehistoric IndonesiaGeologically the area of modern Indonesia appeared from under the Southeast Asian seas as the result of the Indian and Australian plates collides and slips under Sunda Plate, sometimes in the early Cenozoic era around 63 millions years ago. This tectonic collission creating Sunda volcanic Arc that has produced chains of islands of Sumatra, Java and the Lesser Sunda Islands. The active volcanic arc creating supervolcano that today become Lake Toba in Sumatra. The massive eruption of Toba supervolcano that occurred some time between 69,000 and 77,000 years ago instigated the Toba catastrophe theory, a global volcanic winter that caused a bottleneck in human evolution. Another notable volcanoes in Sunda Arc is Mount Tambora and Krakatau. The region is known for its instability due to volcano formations and other volcanic and tectonic activities; as well as climate changes; resulted in lowlands drowned occasionally under shallow seas, the formation of islands, the connection and disconnection of islands through narrow land-bridges, etc.
The Indonesian archipelago nearly reached its present form in Pleistocene period. For some periods the Sundaland was still linked with Asian mainland creating the landmass extension of Southeast Asia that enabled the migrations of some Asian animals and hominid species. Geologically the New Guinea island and the shallow seas of Arafura is the northern part of Australia tectonic plate and once connected as a landbridge identified as Sahulland. During the end of last ice age earth experienced global climate change; a global warming with the rising of average temperature caused the melting of polar ice caps and contributed to the rising of sea surface. Sundaland was submerged under shallow sea creating Malacca Strait, South China Sea, Karimata Strait and Java Sea. During this period Malay peninsula, Sumatra, Java, Borneo and the islands around them was formed. On the east, New Guinea and Aru Islands was separated from Australia mainland. The rise of sea surface creating isolated areas that separated plants, animals and hominid species causing further evolution and specification.
In 2007 analysis of cut marks on two bovid bones found in Sangiran, showed them to have been made 1.5 to 1.6 million years ago by clamshell tools, and is the oldest evidence for the presence of early man in Indonesia. Fossilised remains of Homo erectus, popularly known as the "Java Man" were 1st discovered by the Dutch anatomist Eugxne Dubois at Trinil in 1891, and are at least 700,000 years old, at that time the oldest human ancestor ever found. Further Homo erectus fossils of a similar age were found at Sangiran in the 1930`s by the anthropologist Gustav Heinrich Ralph von Koenigswald, who in the same time period also uncovered fossils at Ngandong alongside more advanced tools, re-dated in 2011 to between 550,000 and 143,000 years old. In 1977 another Homo erectus skull was discovered at Sambungmacan
In 2003, on the island of Flores, fossils of a new small hominid dated between 74,000 and 13,000 years old and named "Flores Man" were discovered much to the surprise of the scientific community. This 3 foot tall hominid is thought to be a species descended from Homo Erectus and reduced in size over thousands of years by a well known process called island dwarfism. Flores Man seems to have shared the island with modern Homo sapiens until only 12,000 years ago, when they became extinct. In 2010 stone tools were discovered on Flores dating from 1 million years ago, which is the oldest evidence anywhere in the world that early man had the technology to make sea crossings at this very early time.
The archipelago was
the latest ice age. Early
spread from mainland Asia
Australia. Homo sapiens reached
years ago. In 2011 evidence
neighbouring East Timor, showing
early settlers had
implication the technology needed
reach Australia and other
and consuming large
as tuna.
formed during the thaw after
humans to travelled by sea and
eastward to New Guinea and
the region by around 45,000
was uncovered in
that 42,000 years ago these
high-level maritime skills, and by
to make ocean crossings to
islands, as they were catching
numbers of big deep sea fish such
-
Homo erectus were known
paleolithic stone tools and also
Sangiran and Ngandong. Cut mark
mammalian fossils documents 18
tools of thick clamshell
created during butchery at the
between 1.6 and 1.5 million
document the use of the 1st tools
evidence of shell tool use in the
to utilize simple coarse
shell tools, discovered in
analysis of Pleistocene
cut marks inflicted by
flakes on two bovid bones
Pucangan Formation in Sangiran
years ago. These cut marks
in Sangiran and the oldest
world.
The polished stone
such as polished stone axe
developed by Austronesian people
archipelago. Also during this
the large stone structures
also flourished in
tools of neolithic culture,
and stone hoe, are
in Indonesian
neolithic period in Indonesia,
of megalithic culture
archipelago.
The Indonesian
Austronesian megalith cultures both
megalith sites and structures
Indonesia. Menhirs, dolmens,
stone statues, and step
Punden Berundak were
Java, Sumatra, Sulawesi, and
archipelago is the host of
past and present. Several
are also found across
stone tables, ancestral
pyramid structure called
discovered in various sites in
the Lesser Sunda Islands.
Punden step pyramid and
Pagguyangan Cisolok and Gunung
megalith site also in West Java
terraces, and sarcophagus. The
believed to be the predecessor
Hindu-Buddhist temples structure in
Hinduism and Buddhism by native
Borobudur and 15th-century Candi
step-pyramid structure.
menhir can be found in
Padang, West Java. Cipari
displayed monolith, stone
Punden step pyramid is
and basic design of later
Java after the adoption of
population. The 8th century
Sukuh featured the
-
Living megalith
isolated island off the western
Batak people in the interior
island in East Nusa Tenggara
the interior of South
cultures remained preserved,
into the late 19th century.
cultures can be found on Nias, an
coast of North Sumatra, the
of North Sumatra, on Sumba
and also Toraja people from
Sulawesi. These megalith
isolated and undisturbed well
-
Early Indonesians were animists who honoured the spirits of nature as well as the ancestral spirits of the dead, as their souls or life force could still help the living. The reverence for ancestral spirits is still widespread among Indonesian native ethnicities; such as among Nias people, Batak, Dayak, Toraja, and Papuans. These reverence among others are evident through the harvest festivals that often invoked the nature spirits and agriculture deities, to the elaborate burial rituals and processions of the deceased elders in order to preparing and sending them to the realm of ancestors. The prehistoric spirit of ancestors or nature that possess supernatural abilities is identified as hyang in Java and Bali, and still revered in Balinese Hinduism.
The human livelihood of
simple forest
tools to elaborated
cultivation, domesticated animals,
industry.
prehistoric Indonesia ranges from
hunter-gatherer equipped with stone
agriculture society with grain
with weaving and pottery
-
Ideal agricultural
wet-field rice cultivation as
allowed villages, towns, and
the 1st century CE. These
ethnic and tribal religions.
temperature, abundant rain and
wet rice cultivation. Such
well-organised society in contrast to
simpler form of cultivation
elaborate social structure to
conditions, and the mastering of
early as the 8th century BCE,
small kingdoms to flourish by
kingdoms evolved with their own
Java's hot and even
volcanic soil, was perfect for
agriculture required a
dry-field rice, which is a much
that doesn't require an
support it.

Related Sites for Prehistoric Indonesia