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Dive into the research topics where Andrew McAlister is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew McAlister.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Basalt geochemistry reveals high frequency of prehistoric tool exchange in low hierarchy Marquesas Islands (Polynesia)

Andrew McAlister; Melinda S. Allen

Exchange activities, formal or otherwise, serve a variety of purposes and were prominent in many Pacific Island societies, both during island settlement and in late prehistory. Recent Polynesian studies highlight the role of exchange in the region’s most hierarchical polities where it contributed to wealth economies, emergent leadership, and status rivalry in late prehistory. Building on this research, we hypothesized that exchange in low hierarchy chiefdoms (kin-based polities where there are distinctions between commoners and elites but ranking within the latter is lacking, weak, or ephemeral) would differ in frequency and function from that associated with strongly hierarchical polities. We address this hypothesis through geochemical, morphological, and distributional analyses of stone tools on Nuku Hiva, Marquesas Islands. Non-destructive Energy-Dispersive X-ray Fluorescence (EDXRF) and destructive Wavelength-Dispersive X-ray Fluorescence (WDXRF) analyses of 278 complete and broken tools (adzes, chisels, preforms) from four valleys identify use of stone from at least seven sources on three islands: five on Nuku Hiva and one each on Eiao and Ua Pou. A functional analysis demonstrates that no tool form is limited to a particular source, while inter-valley distributions reveal that the proportions of non-local or extra-valley tools (43 to 94%, mean = 77%) approximate or exceed results from other archipelagoes, including those from elite and ritual sites of Polynesian archaic states. Intra-valley patterns also are unexpected, with non-local stone tools being recovered from both elite and commoner residential areas in near-equal proportions. Our findings unambiguously demonstrate the importance of exchange in late prehistoric Marquesan society, at varied social and geographic scales. We propose the observed patterns are the result of elites using non-local tools as political currency, aimed at reinforcing status, cementing client-patron relations, and building extra-valley alliances, consistent with prestige societies elsewhere and early historic accounts from the Marquesan Islands.


Archaeology in Oceania | 2010

The Hakaea Beach site, Marquesan colonisation, and models of East Polynesian settlement

Melinda S. Allen; Andrew McAlister


Journal of Pacific archaeology | 2013

Early Marquesan Settlement and Patterns of Interaction: New Insights from Hatiheu Valley, Nuku Hiva Island

Melinda S. Allen; Andrew McAlister


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014

Measuring stone artefact transport: the experimental demonstration and pilot application of a new method to a prehistoric adze workshop, southern Cook Islands

Kane Ditchfield; Simon Holdaway; Melinda S. Allen; Andrew McAlister


Journal of The Polynesian Society | 2013

The identification of a Marquesan Adze in the Cook Islands

Andrew McAlister; Peter Sheppard; Melinda S. Allen


Journal of Pacific archaeology | 2014

Non-destructive XRF Analyses of Fine-grained Basalts from Eiao, Marquesas Islands

Michel Charleux; Andrew McAlister; Peter R. Mills; Steven P. Lundblad


Journal of Pacific archaeology | 2010

Re-interpreting old dates: Radiocarbon determinations from the Tokelau Islands (South Pacific)

Fiona Petchey; David J. Addison; Andrew McAlister


Journal of The Polynesian Society | 2014

Sourcing Rapa Nui Mata‘a from the Collections of Bishop Museum Using Non-Destructive pXRF

Mara A. Mulrooney; Andrew McAlister; Christopher M. Stevenson; Alex E. Morrison; Lissa Gendreau


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2018

Sourcing without sources: Measuring ceramic variability with pXRF

Joshua Emmitt; Andrew McAlister; Rebecca Phillipps; Simon Holdaway


Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | 2016

Occupation duration and mobility in New Zealand prehistory: Insights from geochemical and technological analyses of an early Māori stone artefact assemblage

Rebecca Phillipps; Andrew McAlister; Melinda S. Allen

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Christopher M. Stevenson

Virginia Commonwealth University

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