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Otata fish data

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posted on 2025-01-23, 06:11 authored by Matthew CampbellMatthew Campbell, Caitlin Haylock

The stratified midden on Ōtata Island, in New Zealand’s Hauraki Gulf, dates from the 14th century CE, soon after the East Polynesian settlement of New Zealand, to the 18th century, just prior to the arrival of Europeans. Analysis of the fishbone assemblages shows that the main targeted species throughout the sequence was snapper (Chrysophrys auratus), accounting for between 50 and 88% of each assemblage. Cranial bones of snapper significantly outnumbered vertebrae, demonstrating that snapper bodies were being preserved for off-site consumption. This pattern is not apparent for other fish species. An early emphasis on individual fish capture, with benthic or reef species more common than in later assemblages, was superseded by an emphasis on pelagic schooling species, indicating a growing emphasis on netting both in response to demographic pressures and as netting technology developed. Snapper size reconstructions for Occupation 3 were significantly skewed towards smaller fish as the environment recovered from the eruption of the nearby Rangitoto volcano and deposition of tephra on the seabed. Otolith trace element analysis showed that juvenile snapper behaviours remained consistent throughout the sequence, but that there were subtle environmental changes. These are attributed to anthropogenic terrestrial changes, but otherwise there were no measurable anthropogenic changes to marine ecosystems.

Funding

The excavation was funded by the Auckland War Memorial Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira through the Edward Earle Vaile Fund. Analysis was funded by the Green Foundation for Polynesian Anthropology and The Noises Charitable Trust. The LA-ICP-MS analysis was funded by the Faculty of Health and Environmental Sciences, Auckland University of Technology Te Wānaga Aronui o Tāmaki Makau Rau.

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