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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Oliver Pryce is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Oliver Pryce.


Antiquity | 2015

Sembiran and Pacung on the north coast of Bali: a strategic crossroads for early trans-Asiatic exchange

Ambra Calo; Bagyo Prasetyo; Peter Bellwood; James Lankton; Bernard Gratuze; Thomas Oliver Pryce; Andreas Reinecke; Verena Leusch; Heidrun Schenk; Rachel Wood; Rochtri A. Bawono; I Dewa Kompiang Gede; Ni L.K. Citha Yuliati; Jack N. Fenner; Christian Reepmeyer; Cristina Castillo; Alison Carter

Abstract Studies of trade routes across Southeast Asia in prehistory have hitherto focused largely on archaeological evidence from Mainland Southeast Asia, particularly the Thai Peninsula and Vietnam. The role of Indonesia and Island Southeast Asia in these networks has been poorly understood, owing to the paucity of evidence from this region. Recent research has begun to fill this void. New excavations at Sembiran and Pacung on the northern coast of Bali have produced new, direct AMS dates from burials, and analytical data from cultural materials including pottery, glass, bronze, gold andsemi-precious stone, as well as evidence of local bronze-casting. This suggests strong links with the Indian subcontinent and Mainland Southeast Asia from the late first millennium BC, some 200 years earlier than previously thought.


Science | 2018

Ancient genomes document multiple waves of migration in Southeast Asian prehistory

Mark Lipson; Olivia Cheronet; Swapan Mallick; Nadin Rohland; Marc Oxenham; Michael Pietrusewsky; Thomas Oliver Pryce; Anna Willis; Hirofumi Matsumura; Hallie R. Buckley; Kate Domett; Giang Hai Nguyen; Hoang Hiep Trinh; Aung Aung Kyaw; Tin Tin Win; Baptiste Pradier; Nasreen Broomandkhoshbacht; Francesca Candilio; Piya Changmai; Daniel Fernandes; Matthew Ferry; Beatriz Gamarra; Eadaoin Harney; Jatupol Kampuansai; Wibhu Kutanan; Megan Michel; Mario Novak; Jonas Oppenheimer; Kendra Sirak; Kristin Stewardson

Ancient migrations in Southeast Asia The past movements and peopling of Southeast Asia have been poorly represented in ancient DNA studies (see the Perspective by Bellwood). Lipson et al. generated sequences from people inhabiting Southeast Asia from about 1700 to 4100 years ago. Screening of more than a hundred individuals from five sites yielded ancient DNA from 18 individuals. Comparisons with present-day populations suggest two waves of mixing between resident populations. The first mix was between local hunter-gatherers and incoming farmers associated with the Neolithic spreading from South China. A second event resulted in an additional pulse of genetic material from China to Southeast Asia associated with a Bronze Age migration. McColl et al. sequenced 26 ancient genomes from Southeast Asia and Japan spanning from the late Neolithic to the Iron Age. They found that present-day populations are the result of mixing among four ancient populations, including multiple waves of genetic material from more northern East Asian populations. Science, this issue p. 92, p. 88; see also p. 31 Ancient DNA data shed light on the past 4000 years of Southeast Asian genetic history. Southeast Asia is home to rich human genetic and linguistic diversity, but the details of past population movements in the region are not well known. Here, we report genome-wide ancient DNA data from 18 Southeast Asian individuals spanning from the Neolithic period through the Iron Age (4100 to 1700 years ago). Early farmers from Man Bac in Vietnam exhibit a mixture of East Asian (southern Chinese agriculturalist) and deeply diverged eastern Eurasian (hunter-gatherer) ancestry characteristic of Austroasiatic speakers, with similar ancestry as far south as Indonesia providing evidence for an expansive initial spread of Austroasiatic languages. By the Bronze Age, in a parallel pattern to Europe, sites in Vietnam and Myanmar show close connections to present-day majority groups, reflecting substantial additional influxes of migrants.


Asian Perspectives | 2011

Intensive Archaeological Survey in Southeast Asia: Methodological and Metallurgical Insights from Khao Sai On, Central Thailand

Thomas Oliver Pryce; Andrew Bevan; R. Ciarla; F. Rispoli; Cristina Castillo; B. Hassett; J. L. Malakie

Intensive surface surveys are a well-established method in the landscape archaeology of many parts of the world, but have remained relatively rare in Southeast Asian research. This article summarizes the contribution of existing surveys in the latter region and offers results from a short but informative survey of a metal-producing landscape in central Thailand. We argue that there is much to be gained from a fuller integration of systematic landscape reconnaissance into wider Southeast Asian research agendas and consider some of the strengths and weaknesses of such an approach in this cultural and physical environment.


Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2018

Metallurgical traditions and metal exchange networks in late prehistoric central Myanmar, c. 1000 BC to c. AD 500

Thomas Oliver Pryce; Kalayar Myat Myat Htwe; M Georgakopoulou; Tiffany Martin; Enrique Vega; Thilo Rehren; Tin Tin Win; Thu Thu Win; Peter Petchey; Jitlada Innanchai; Baptiste Pradier

Myanmar has been notably underrepresented in recent studies of archaeometallurgy in Southeast Asia, despite its richness in both mineral and cultural resources and its potentially central role in long-distance exchange networks linking India, China and peninsular neighbours. Here, we present original analytical data on copper-base artefacts from several Bronze Age and Iron Age sites in Myanmar. Observed microstructures range from as-cast, worked, to fully annealed; compositions include leaded copper, low-tin to high-tin bronzes, and arsenical copper/bronze. Lead isotope analyses indicate that the metal originates from different geological sources, including several that match the lead isotope signatures of known prehistoric copper mines in Thailand and Laos. These archaeometallurgical data, including evidence for secondary copper-base production, more than double those currently available for Myanmar and document the presence of multiple local alloying and working traditions, perhaps chronologically differentiated, as well as identifying possible links to primary mineral sources across the region. Overall, this adds significant new information to the emerging picture of Southeast Asian prehistoric metallurgy at the crossroads of several major ancient cultures.


Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2013

Prehistoric iron production technologies in the Upper Thai-Malay Peninsula: metallography and slag inclusion analyses of iron artefacts from Khao Sam Kaeo and Phu Khao Thong

Lynn Biggs; Bérénice Bellina; Marcos Martinón-Torres; Thomas Oliver Pryce

This article presents a preliminary attempt to characterise Upper Thai-Malay Peninsula prehistoric iron technologies based on assemblages from two recently excavated coastal sites: Khao Sam Kaeo and Phu Khao Thong. These are the earliest known sites involved in the early trans-Asian exchange that connected the eastern Indian Ocean to the South China Sea from the mid-first millennium bc. It is from this period that iron assemblages start appearing at both continental and insular Southeast Asian sites. Three models have been offered confronting an indigenous vs. Chinese or South Asian impetus for the introduction of iron metallurgy in Southeast Asia. These models are discussed in the light of the metallographic and compositional analyses of iron and slag assemblages from these two sites using optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectrometry, energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence and slag inclusion analysis techniques, together with other production materials from these and other contemporaneous Southeast Asian sites.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2010

Khao Sam Kaeo - an archaeometallurgical crossroads for trans-asiatic technological traditions

Mercedes Murillo-Barroso; Thomas Oliver Pryce; Bérénice Bellina; Marcos Martinón-Torres


Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2010

Prehistoric copper production and technological reproduction in the Khao Wong Prachan Valley of Central Thailand

Thomas Oliver Pryce; Vincent C. Pigott; Marcos Martinón-Torres; Thilo Rehren


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014

More questions than answers: the Southeast Asian Lead Isotope Project 2009–2012

Thomas Oliver Pryce; Sandrine Baron; Bérénice Bellina; Peter Bellwood; Nigel Chang; Pranab Chattopadhyay; Eusebio Z Dizon; Ian Glover; Elizabeth Hamilton; Charles Higham; Aung Aung Kyaw; Vin Laychour; Surapol Natapintu; Viet Nguyen; Jean-Pierre Pautreau; Ernst Pernicka; Vincent C. Pigott; Mark Pollard; Christophe Pottier; Andreas Reinecke; Thongsa Sayavongkhamdy; Viengkeo Souksavatdy; Joyce C. White


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2011

Isotopic and technological variation in prehistoric Southeast Asian primary copper production

Thomas Oliver Pryce; Michael Brauns; Nigel Chang; Ernst Pernicka; A. Mark Pollard; Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Thilo Rehren; Viengkeo Souksavatdy; Thongsa Sayavongkhamdy


Archive | 2010

50 Years of archaeology in Southeast Asia: Essays in Honour of Ian Glover

Bérénice Bellina; Elisabeth Bacus; Thomas Oliver Pryce; Jan Wisseman-Christie

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Bérénice Bellina

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anna Willis

Australian National University

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Peter Bellwood

Australian National University

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Quan Hua

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

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Mitch Hendrickson

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Frédérique Valentin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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