ethnoarchaeology in fiji

 
 

    During June and July of 2009, ten undergraduates, one graduate student, two professors, and an artist carried out anthropological research on a relatively remote island in Fiji’s Lau Island Group. The National Science Foundation's Research Experiences for Undergraduates grant sponsored this program and fellowships through an award to Sharyn Jones and Lori Cormier. Dr. Jones, the project P.I., instructed the fellows on excavation techniques and archaeological methods at prehistoric residential sites on the small island of Nayau.      

    Each day, the fellows rose early in the morning and assisted the Fijian women with breakfast preparation.  After eating and gathering a few supplies, they hiked from Salia village, where they stayed, to one of two dig sites:  Na Masimasi and Wai Turuturu.  The team spent their days mapping, excavating, sifting, collecting data and recording their activities.  When daily archaeological tasks were complete, the group returned to the village to help with laundry, prepare dinner, eat, perhaps tell stories and sing songs, and then get some sleep. Most of their month on Nayau was spent in this way: archaeology was conducted in the day while the group conducted participant observation and ethnography 24/7, making the whole trip a seamless combination of two subfields of anthropology and an enriching ethnoarchaeological experience. Dr. Cormier directed the ethnographic component of the project.    

    When the professors and students returned from Fiji the group continued to work during a final two-week period of post-trip data analysis and project completion.  The students also had the opportunity to share their findings with the public by presenting at the McWane Science Center.     

    Next summer, Dr.s Jones and Cormier will return to Nayau with another group of undergraduates.  Take a moment to explore the site for more information about Fiji, the fieldschool, the NSF REU program and to listen to podcasts by the students regarding their research this summer.  Information for applying for the 2010 field school is available on the “About NSF REU” page.

 

Fiji nsf reu fellowship 2009-2010

Photos clockwise from left:  2009 NSF REU fellows outside the Fiji Museum in Suva, Fiji; Fellow Betsy McGee in her unit at the Na Masimasi excavation site; a traditional Fijian outrigger canoe.

WHO:

Dr. Sharyn Jones and Dr. Lori Cormier of the University of Alabama at Birmingham and 18 undergraduate students from various schools


WHAT:

An NSF REU sponsored ethnoarchaeological fieldschool


WHEN:

Nine weeks during the summers of 2009 and 2010


WHERE:

The remote island of Nayau in the Lau Group of Fiji


WHY:

To enhance the educational experience of undergraduates through hands-on research with a chance to earn school credit

2010 Application Deadline:
March 5, 2010

Click below to download application:
2010 NSF Application.docHome_files/2010%20NSF%20Application.docshapeimage_4_link_0