View - Society for Hawaiian Archaeology
Transcription
View - Society for Hawaiian Archaeology
SOCIETY FOR HAWAIIAN ARCHAEOLOGY The Society for Hawaiian Archaeology is a registered tax-exempt organization established in 1980 to promote and stimulate interest and research in the archaeology of the Hawaiian Islands; to encourage a more rational public appreciation of the aims and limitations of archaeological research; to serve as a bond among those interested in Hawaiian archaeology, both professionals and non-professionals, and to aid in directing their efforts into more scientific channels; to encourage the publication of their results; to advocate and to aid in the conservation of archaeological data; and to discourage unethical commercialism in the archaeological field and work for its elimination. Members of the Society agree to support the principles of the organization. For more information, please see the Constitution and Code of By-Laws of the Society at the SHA Web Page (http://www.hawaiianarchaeology.org/). Board of Directors (FY 2012-2013) Officers Presidents: Kekuewa Kikiloi and Mara Mulrooney Vice-President: Peter Mills Treasurer: Victoria Wichman Recording Secretary: Summer Moore Standing Committee Chairs Education: Kelley Uyeoka Legislative: Sara Collins Public Relations: Arleen Garcia-Herbst Publications: Windy McElroy Standards & Ethics: Holly McEldowney Student Liaison: Brian Lane Webmaster: Nick Belluzzo Acknowledgements SHA is grateful for co-sponsorship provided by both Kamehameha Schools and the Bishop Museum. Mahalo to everyone who has assisted in organizing this conference. Poster and program cover design: Jesse W. Stephen Program/abstracts: Summer Moore, Mara Mulrooney, Jason Jeremiah Registration: Victoria Wichman, Nick Belluzzo Field trip coordination: Windy McElroy, Sean McNamara, Victoria Wichman Facility and catering coordination: Victoria Wichman, Jenny Poloa Tribute to Yosihiko Sinoto: Eric Komori, Muffet Jourdane, Toni Palermo Webpage postings: Nick Belluzzo Student Volunteers: Mara Mulrooney, Victoria Wichman Special Mahalo to: Blair Collis, President and CEO, Bishop Museum Jason Jeremiah, Land Assets Division, Kamehameha Schools 1 HAWAI‘I IN THE CONTEXT OF THE PACIFIC: THE 26TH ANNUAL SOCIETY FOR HAWAIIAN ARCHAEOLOGY CONFERENCE HELD AT THE BERNICE PAUAHI BISHOP MUSEUM Aloha and welcome to the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum! 2013 marks a very significant time in the Bishop Museum’s history. In September, the Museum celebrated the completion of the major renovation of the Hawaiian Hall Complex. Built from 1889-1894, this building has become an iconic landmark of Honolulu. With the recent renovation of Pacific Hall (formerly Polynesian Hall), the Museum has brought new life into all areas of this historic landmark. It is with a great sense of pride that the Museum’s staff members welcome you here to Kapālama to gather together to share the latest research in the field of Hawaiian and Pacific archaeology. Oli Aloha / Oli Ho‘okipa Ka Hale Hō‘ike‘ike The Museum Na Miki‘ala Ayai By Miki‘ala Ayau Unuhi e nā hoa, Kepakamapa 2007 Translated by friends, September 2007 E ala ke aloha ma ka hikina Ka pi‘ina a ka lā i Ha‘eha‘e e. The Beloved awakes at the East The rising of the Sun at Ha‘eha‘e. Ha‘aheo ‘o Ka‘iwi‘ula i ka la‘i La‘ila‘i i ka ho‘okipa malihini. Ka‘iwi‘ula sits proudly in the calm Peacefully welcoming visitors. E walea mai i ka pā o lau niu ‘Oluea mai i ke ‘ala hīnano. Relaxing in the coconut grove Surrendered to the fragrance of the Hīnano blossom. E kipa mai i ka hale ā Pauahi E ola nō kākou ā mau aku e. Welcome to the home of Pauahi We shall live on. 2 SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE ~ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2013 9:00 AM Field Trip Participants meet at Bishop Museum Additional information about each field trip and RSVP information are outlined below 9:00 AM – 4:00 PM North Shore Archaeological Sites Field Trip 9:00 AM – 3:00 PM He‘eia Field Trip Led by Windy McElroy Led by Sean McNamara 10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Bishop Museum Archaeology Collections Tour 1 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM Bishop Museum Archaeology Collections Tour 2 Led by Victoria Wichman Led by Victoria Wichman Welcome Reception 5:00 PM – 8:30 PM Hawaiian Hall Atrium and Courtyard Featuring pupus and drinks, the presentation of the Cultural Stewardship Award, and exclusive access to Hawaiian Hall and Pacific Hall (6:00 – 8:00 pm) for all conference participants North Shore Archaeological Sites Field Trip (led by Windy McElroy) 9:00 AM meet at Bishop Museum, carpool to North Shore 10:00-11:00 visit Pu‘u o Mahuka Heiau, the largest heiau on O‘ahu 11:15-12:15 visit Kupopolo Heiau, site of the Spring 2013 UH Mānoa Archaeological Field School 12:30-1:30 lunch in Haleiwa 1:45-3:15 tour of Loko Ea Fishpond with Chris Monahan 4:00 PM return to Bishop Museum This field trip will involve a moderate amount of walking and a short hike to Kupopolo Heiau. Wear covered shoes and sunscreen and bring water, snacks, and money for lunch. He‘eia Field Trip (led by Sean McNamara) 9:00 AM meet at Bishop Museum, carpool to He‘eia 9:45-11:15 tour of He‘eia Fishpond with Paepae o He‘eia staff 11:30-12:30 lunch in He‘eia (possibly at Windward Mall) 1:00-2:30 visit the ‘ili of Waipao (He‘eia mauka) with Papahana Kuaola staff 3:00 PM return to Bishop Museum This field trip will involve a moderate amount of walking. Wear covered shoes and sunscreen and bring water, snacks, and money for lunch. Bishop Museum Department of Anthropology Collections Tour (led by Victoria Wichman and Carl Christensen) 10:30-11:30 am OR 1:00-2:00 pm This collections tour will highlight the history of the Anthropology Department at Bishop Museum and will showcase some of the Archaeology and Malacology Collections. 3 SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE ~ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2013 8:00 – 9:00 AM 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM 9:00 – 9:15 AM 9:15 – 9:30 AM CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST, Atherton Hālau PAPERS, Atherton Hālau Welcome SHA Board Members Nā Pua No‘eau 2013 Summer Institute, Cultural Resource Management Course for Hawai‘i High School Students Lokelani Brandt and U‘ilani Macabio 9:30 – 9:45 AM 9:45 – 10:00 AM 10:00 – 10:15 AM 10:15 – 10:30 AM Ho‘opakele Heiau: A Community-Based Approach to Heritage Management Kathy Kawelu Wahi Ola: Partnerships for a Vibrant Living Landscape Sean Nāleimaile The Phases of Malama: Transforming Research to Reinvigorating Life Victoria Wichman and Keao NeSmith Panel Presentation: Community and Cultural Resource Planning from a Hawaiian Perspective: Challenges and Opportunities for Hawaiians in the Private Sector Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Matt Sproat, Elmer Kaai, Regina Hilo, Jamaica Osorio, Trisha Kehaulani Watson 10:30 – 10:45 AM 10:45 – 11:00 AM 11:00 – 11:15 AM COFFEE BREAK Traditional Hawaiian Cultural Materials Recovered Beneath 1,500-Year-Old Lava Flow Jeffrey L. Putzi He Kōkō Pu‘upu‘u? (A Chiefly Gourd Net?): An Analysis of Recovered Fiber Arts from Makauwahi Cave, Kauai Damion Sailors 11:15 – 11:30 AM 11:30 – 11:45 AM The Archaeology of Halawa Cave, North Halawa Valley, O‘ahu, Hawai‘i Paul E. Langenwalter II and Liana K. Meeker Continuity and Change at a Pu‘uone Fishpond: New Archaeological Data from Loko Ea, Kawailoa, O‘ahu Chris Monahan and Doug Thurman 11:45 AM – 12:00 PM Open Forum LUNCH BREAK, Bowman Hālau Wa‘a 12:00 – 1:00 PM 1:00 – 1:15 PM 1:15 – 1:30 PM How Structures Become Archaeological Deposits Thomas Dye Spatiotemporal Rainfall Variation on Hawai‘i Island: Implications for Prehistoric Hawaiian Agriculture Robert DiNapoli and Alex Morrison 1:30 – 1:45 PM Features Across Space: A Spatial Analysis of Traditional Hawaiian Archaeological Features at Kalaemanō, Hawai‘i Island Carl E. Sholin 1:45 – 2:00 PM Stars and Stones at Kūkaniloko 2:00 – 2:15 PM Preliminary Thoughts on Lo‘i Agricultural Systems in Miloli‘i Valley, Kaua‘i 2:15 – 2:30 PM Adze Procurement and Production Strategies on the Eastern Flanks of Mauna Kea 2:30 – 2:45 PM COFFEE BREAK Recent Excavations in the Marquesas: Evidence for the East Polynesian Archaic 2:45 – 3:00 PM Martha H. Noyes Jennifer G. Kahn and Alan Carpenter Peter R. Mills and Stephen P. Lundblad Barry Rolett 3:00 – 3:15 PM Ho‘omaka Hou: A Second Look at the Wai‘ahukini Shelter (H8) Faunal Remains 3:15 – 3:30 PM Before the Fold: Excavations at a Shepherd's Midden on Lāna‘i 3:30 – 3:45 PM Kelley Esh, Scott Belluomini, and Mara Mulrooney Nathan DiVito The Zooarchaeology of Vertebrate Animal Use, Extinction and Extirpation at Halawa Cave, North Halawa Valley, O‘ahu, Hawai‘i Paul E. Langenwalter II and Helen F. James 3:45 – 4:00 PM Remote Sensing Vegetation Classification for Restoration of the Kahaluʻu Dryland Field System Natalie Kurashima 4:00 – 4:15 PM Update on Administrative Rule Changes Affecting Archaeology 4:15 – 4:30 PM Towards a Statewide Cultural Resources GIS for Hawaiʻi 4:30 – 4:45 PM Video Presentation: The Archaeology of Kekaulike, O‘ahu 4:45 – 5:00 PM 5:00 – 6:00 PM Open Forum 6:00 – 9:00 PM Theresa K. Donham Nick Belluzzo Mike Dega ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING LŪ‘AU, Atherton Hālau Featuring a tribute to Dr. Yosihiko Sinoto, lū‘au banquet, and entertainment 4 SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE ~ SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2013 8:00 – 9:00 AM 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM 9:00 – 9:15 AM CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST, Atherton Hālau PAPERS, Atherton Hālau 2013 Wahi Kūpuna Internship Program Introduction Kelley L. Uyeoka 9:15 – 9:30 AM Wahi Kūpuna Internship Program 9:30 – 9:45 AM 2013 Hawai‘i Historical and Archaeological Research Project Introduction 9:45 – 10:00 AM 10:00 – 10:15 AM 10:15 – 10:30 AM 10:30 – 10:45 AM 10:45 – 11:00 AM 11:00 – 11:15 AM Ikaika Kapu, Heather Bailey, Isaac Pang, Aloha Kapono, Makana Tavares Michael Graves and Kekuewa Kikiloi An Irrigated Agricultural System Linking Makanikahio and Pololū Ahupuaʻa, Hawaiʻi Island J. Birkmann, Mark W. Oxley, Michael W. Graves, Kekuewa Kikiloi, and Kelley Uyeoka Inoa ʻĀina o Waiʻāpuka Kau‘ilani Rivera COFFEE BREAK Ho‘opiliwaiola: Water and Relationship in Waiʻāpuka Kamuela Plunkett Challenging Our Understanding of Konohiki: A Case Study for Waiʻāpuka, Kohala Tara Manaea del Fierro An Analysis of Poi Pounders from the Bishop Museum’s Ethnographic Collection: Examining Morphological Variability Across the Hawaiian Archipelago Mark W. Oxley 11:15 – 11:30 AM 11:30 – 11:45 AM What’s in a Name? The Transformation of ‘Polynesian Hall’ to ‘Pacific Hall’ at Bishop Museum Mara Mulrooney New ‘Patterns in Time and Space’: An Update on the Second Edition of Feathered Gods and Fishhooks Mark D. McCoy and Patrick V. Kirch 11:45 AM – 12:00 PM Open Forum / Closing Remarks PAU 12:00 PM Posters are on display in Atherton Hālau on Saturday and Sunday. ADDITIONAL FEATURED EVENT North Kohala: A Cultural Landscape Photographs by Jan Becket and Jesse Stephen Pauahi Tower Lobby, Bishop Square, Bishop Street, Honolulu October 2 through December 27 (Monday-Friday 8-5, Saturday 8-2, Closed on Sundays) Featured in this exhibition are photographs of pre-contact architectural features in North Kohala, Hawaiʻi Island. Although drylaid stone serves as the focal point of each image, the images present not only the foundations of ancient sites but also their presence on the landscape. The selection of locations photographed includes major named heiau as well as smaller, lesser-known structures, cumulatively associated with a variety of ceremonial, habitation and agricultural functions. Three distinct environmental settings are observed: mauka sites on modern ranch land high on the side of Kohala mountain, makai sites of the North Kohala coast, and sites found in the transitional leeward/windward valleys and ridges between Hawi and Pololu. Cumulatively, the body of work presents a wide range of pre-contact architecture and invites further consideration of North Kohala’s deep and extensive cultural landscape. The images were made over a span of six years (year to year) in collaboration with archaeological field schools and research projects held in North Kohala. Jan Becket teaches photography at Kamehameha Schools Kapālama and works with 4X5 black and white film. Jesse Stephen is a Ph.D. Candidate in Anthropology at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and works in both archaeology and photography. Interpretive text has been contributed by Michael Graves and Jesse Stephen. Dr. Graves is a former Chair of the UH Anthropology Department and is currently Professor and Chair of the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico. 5 THE 2013 NĀKI‘IKEAHO CULTURAL STEWARDSHIP AWARD Dr. Charles Pe‘ape‘a Makawalu Burrows By Jason Jeremiah, Kamehameha Schools Dr. Burrows has been an instrumental figure in the Hawaiian conservation, archeology, and stewardship fields for many decades. Dr. Burrows received his B.A. in biology and chemistry from Linfield College in 1958, his M.Ed. in biology in 1962, and an M.S. in the Earth sciences in 1966 from Oregon State University. In 1973, he received his Doctorate in Education, Dr. Burrows at the dedication of the COE ponds project, 2012 majoring in instructional development research (Photo by Rick Kaimi Scudder). and science education from Indiana University. In January 2000, he retired from Kamehameha Schools after serving 35 years as a science educator. As a science educator at Kamehameha Schools, he created the Hui Lama Environmental and Hiking Club for the schools’ students and is one of the founders of the Sierra Club High School Hikers group, which continues to this day. Dr. Burrows is the president of ‘Ahahui Mālama I Ka Lōkahi (AML), a native Hawaiian environmental nonprofit organization, and serves on the boards of various Kailua community organizations that continue to advocate for the protection, conservation, and restoration of the cultural and natural resources in the Kailua Ahupua‘a. AML was formed to develop, promote and practice a native Hawaiian conservation ethic relevant to modern times through research, education and active stewardship. He has also served as a member of the Kaho‘olawe Island Reserve Commission, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs Native Hawaiian Historic Preservation Council and now serves on the boards of the Kawainui Heritage Foundation, the Kailua Hawaiian Civic Club, the Kailua Historic Society, the OHA/Native Hawaiian Historic Preservation Council, the UH EPSCoR Community Advisory Council and Ho‘olaulima i ka Kawainui, a multiple agency conservation consortium. In the 1980s, Dr. Burrows led archaeological projects in Kailua on the Kūkanono slope adjacent to Ulupō Heiau and Kawainui Marsh. He organized the restoration and continued interpretation of the landscapes around cultural resources in Kailua, namely, at Ulupō Heiau, Pahukini Heiau, and Maunawili Valley. He also led archaeological studies on the campus of Kamehameha Schools in Kapālama, O‘ahu while he served as an educator on the campus. In his continuing work with AML, Burrows is well known in the local community for delivering educational tours and providing conservation service projects in and around Kailua’s Kawainui Marsh. As a board member of the Kawainui Heritage Foundation and AML, he collaborated with others to designate the Oahu Kawainui-Hamakua marsh as a Ramsar “Wetlands of International Importance,” one of only 29 in the United States. He now serves on the Ramsar U.S. National Committee. Dr. Burrows also traveled to Alaska to support the Gwitchin people in their fight to protect the caribou herds in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and he also worked with the Alaskan Inupiats to safeguard their marine food resources in the Beaufort Sea. In his travels on the continent, he constantly sought wetland models for an environmental education center at Kawainui Marsh. 6 A TRIBUTE TO YOSIHIKO H. SINOTO, D.SC. A Brief Biography of Dr. Sinoto and his Contributions to the Fields of Hawaiian and Pacific Archaeology By Eric Komori Dr. Yosihiko Sinoto, Bishop Museum’s Kenneth Pike Emory Distinguished Chair in Anthropology and Senior Anthropologist, began his remarkable and pioneering career in Polynesian archaeology in 1954, when his steamer ship traveling from Japan to California stopped in Hawai‘i. He was en route to enroll at the University of California, Berkeley and had been issued one of just 115 total US visas given to Japanese citizens that year. During the stopover, he was invited by Dr. Kenneth Emory, Anthropology Chairman at the Bishop Museum to visit one of the first sites archaeologically excavated in Hawai‘i. Extremely well grounded in archaeology, Sinoto’s background included the publishing of the first radiocarbon age estimates in Japan. Emory quickly recognized that his Dr. Sinoto in his office at Bishop Museum, 2013 knowledge would be invaluable to Hawaiian archaeology (Photo by Eric Komori). and told him that he must stay in Hawai‘i. In spite of much uncertainty, Emory was able to persuade him to change his plans and Sinoto enrolled at the University of Hawai‘i. Following his graduation from UH and appointment as a Bishop Museum Fellow, Sinoto began a lifelong association with the museum that was only briefly interrupted when he returned to postwar Japan to complete his dissertation on Polynesian prehistory. In 1962, he was appointed as Bishop Museum Anthropologist and later served as Chairman and Senior Anthropologist from 1970-1989. During his tenure, Anthropology Department staff members were able to advance the museum’s role as one of the core research institutions of the Pacific, and preeminent scholars from around the world came to work in the collegial environment. Museum publication series such as the Bulletin, Pacific Anthropological Records, and Departmental Report Series were expanded greatly to disseminate the results of research throughout the Pacific. Sinoto’s own publications include hundreds of articles and reports written in Japanese and French, as well as English. Renowned for his pioneering research on fishhook typologies, Marquesan prehistory, and ancient waterlogged canoes and village sites, he is also well-known for his efforts to include local communities in the protection and preservation of archaeological sites. His field school on the island of Tetiaroa was the first effort to bring together university students from Hawai‘i and Tahiti to work on archaeological sites. Another program that he organized sent interns from the Marquesas and Tahiti to the Bishop Museum for 3 months of training in archaeology and historic preservation, a particularly rewarding experience for all. For the past 59 years, Dr. Sinoto has made a series of significant contributions to the fields of Hawaiian and Pacific Archaeology. At this year’s Society for Hawaiian Archaeology conference, held at his home institution of the Bishop Museum, we formally recognize his contributions to the understanding of Hawaiian and Polynesian origins and cultural developments. 7 FULL PROGRAM SCHEDULE AND ABSTRACTS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2013 Field Trips (9:00 am – 4:00 pm) Welcome Reception (5:00 – 8:30 pm) Hawaiian Hall Atrium Courtyard, Bishop Museum Conference Registration (5:00 pm) Pupus and Drinks (5:00 pm – 8:30 pm) Welcome Address (5:30 pm) Cultural Stewardship Award Presentation (5:45 pm) Hawaiian Hall and Pacific Hall Open House (6:00 – 8:00 pm) SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2013 Symposia Atherton Hālau, Bishop Museum Continental Breakfast (8:00 – 9:00 am) Morning Session 1 (9:00 am – 10:30 am) Welcome SHA Board Members Nā Pua No‘eau 2013 Summer Institute, Cultural Resource Management Course for Hawai‘i High School Students Lokelani Brandt and U‘ilani Macabio, University of Hawai‘i-Hilo The effort to inspire and train the next generation of Native Hawaiian cultural resource stewards has percolated to the high school level. This past June, ten Native Hawaiian high school students from various islands were selected by the Nā Pua No‘eau Center for Gifted and Talented Native Hawaiian Children program to spend two weeks immersed in a variety of CRM-related activities and projects on Hawai‘i Island. The course, titled ‘Uncovering the Past,’ focused on introducing high school-aged students to the field of CRM from a Hawaiian cultural foundation. The course emphasized cultural preservation through the building of sustainable and meaningful community relations, expanding the students’ academic and professional foundation, and exercising their knowledge of Hawaiian traditions and practices. Ho‘opakele Heiau: A Community-Based Approach to Heritage Management Kathy Kawelu, University of Hawai‘i-Hilo Consultation has been a part of archaeology for nearly a half-century, but in recent decades, a growing number of archaeologists are working toward a more engaged practice, striving for collaboration with descendant communities and other stakeholders. To this end, archaeologists have partnered with descendant communities and other supporters who also seek to care for the cultural landscape in our everdeveloping island home. The mission of Ho‘opakele Heiau, a group formed through the partnership of community members, archaeologists, and college students, is to protect a heiau adjacent to the Hilo Harbor. By raising awareness of the site, the group seeks to limit the impact of the proposed harbor 8 expansion currently in the planning stages. This paper provides an update on the community-based work taking place along the Hilo coast. Wahi Ola: Partnerships for a Vibrant Living Landscape Sean Nāleimaile, Nāki‘ikeaho/State Historic Preservation Division The future of our wahi kūpuna (ancestral landscapes) depends upon a collaborative management approach to ensure that the appropriate stewardship of these places is maintained for future generations. These stewardship efforts need to ensure that there is a respect for the land; that reciprocity is developed with the land, its descendants, and its current and future users; and that these efforts culminate in a relationship that is reinforced and maintained for the benefit of all things related to and connected to the place. The Wahi Ola Project aims to facilitate a process of learning through collaborative relationships between public, private, and governmental agencies to put into action a process to educate, engage, and enable communities to increase the awareness of these places of cultural and spiritual value and how they are impacted by our modern world. The Phases of Malama: Transforming Research to Reinvigorating Life Victoria Wichman, Bishop Museum, and Keao NeSmith, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa Nā Pali Coast ‘Ohana, cultural stewards of Nu‘alolo Kai, Kauai, are continuing with restoration objectives based within the concept of a traditional Hawaiian “Malama” or moon-phased philosophy, combined with “Mālama,” which means ‘to take care of.’ This is reflected by the many schools of knowledge shared throughout this project that support our stewardship’s goals of proactive research, restoration, and cultural heritage revitalization. This paper will examine the cultural and archaeological methodology in restoring the “Mālama Wall.” Panel Presentation: Community and Cultural Resource Planning from a Hawaiian Perspective: Challenges and Opportunities for Hawaiians in the Private Sector Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Matt Sproat, Elmer Kaai, Regina Hilo, Jamaica Osorio, and Trisha Kehaulani Watson, Honua Consulting, Inc. Lawsuit decisions like the Kalekini decision illustrate the on-going challenges with planning and managing cultural resources in Hawai‘i. This panel will discuss the challenges and opportunities of being Hawaiian and working in the private sector. Hawaiian archaeologists and cultural resource specialists have long called for new methods in researching traditional cultural properties and resources. The resurgence of Hawaiian language use and cultural fluency offers Hawai‘i’s private sector an exciting opportunity to evolve research and planning that impacts cultural resources. This opportunity has potential benefits not only for Hawai‘i, but for all indigenous communities who strive to find ways to plan for the future use of their traditional resources in culturally appropriate ways. Yet, this effort is not without its challenges. Hawaiians working in the private sector are constantly challenged by their close relationships and ties to their community, and this panel will also discuss innovative ways of addressing and resolving community conflict. Drawing from their experiences across Hawai‘i and the greater Pacific, this panel will offer an exciting and dynamic discussion on the status of cultural resource planning in Hawai‘i and the amazing potential for its future. BREAK (10:30-10:45) Morning Session 2 (10:45 am – 12:00 pm) Traditional Hawaiian Cultural Materials Recovered Beneath 1,500-Year-Old Lava Flow Jeffrey L. Putzi, T. S. Dye & Colleagues, Archaeologists Renovation of Kona Village Resort following the tsunami of March 11, 2011 required that utilities be placed underground in accordance with Hawai‘i County’s building code. Excavation with a hoe ran through a 9 pahoehoe flow dated by geologists to 1,500-3,000 years ago exposed a poorly sorted beach sand deposit with traditional Hawaiian artifacts, including broken fishhooks, adze fragments, lava and coral abraders, worked mammal bone, and volcanic glass flakes. This paper describes the traditional Hawaiian cultural materials and explores the age of the deposit. He Kōkō Pu‘upu‘u? (A Chiefly Gourd Net?): An Analysis of Recovered Fiber Arts from Makauwahi Cave, Kaua‘i Damion Sailors In the summer of 2011, several well-preserved pieces of a rare Hawaiian carrying net were recovered from Makauwahi Cave during an archaeological field school hosted by the University of Hawai‘i and the National Tropical Botanical Gardens on the south end of Kaua‘i. The complexity and decorative aspects of the type of knot used for this net’s construction suggest that this item may be a kōkō pu‘upu‘u, or chiefly gourd net. Because of the perishable nature of both floral and faunal components used in customary cordage manufacture, Pacific Island rope work generally has poor representation in the archaeological record, making this uncommon find appealing for detailed investigation. This paper addresses what can be learned from examining and comparing the physical characteristics of this antiquated example of Polynesian netting and proposes further research that may show promise regarding Pacific Island fiber arts. A focus on the stylistic analyses of rope construction and knot work as it is demonstrated between and within Pacific Island communities is emphasized in this study. The Archaeology of Halawa Cave, North Halawa Valley, O‘ahu, Hawai‘i Paul E. Langenwalter II and Liana K. Meeker, Biola University Halawa Cave (50-Oa-B01-020) was one of two sites excavated by a University of Hawai‘i Archaeological Field School under the direction of William Wallace during the spring of 1966. The site was selected for excavation based on surface finds which had been recently reported to the Bishop Museum by a local collector. Several attempts to produce a site report for excavations at Halawa Cave were unsuccessful. A recent move to complete the study of the small but diverse vertebrate assemblage facilitated a broader study of the site to provide environmental, cultural, and temporal contexts for the vertebrate analysis. The present study is based on a synthesis of the collections and archival materials from the 1966 excavation held by multiple institutions. The site consists of an approximately 50 cm-deep midden, located inside of a 6x8 m2 rockshelter about 5 km inland of Pearl Harbor in the North Halawa Valley, O‘ahu, Hawai‘i. The prehistoric assemblage includes gourd cups and a fire plough, along with a variety of shell, bone, and stone artifacts. Also present are ecofacts that include shellfish, bone, and plant materials. Features associated with the site are a rock wall, hearths and concentrations of ash, charcoal, and food wastes. The artifacts and ecofacts provide evidence of occasional Native Hawaiian occupation by the fifteenth century that extended into the nineteenth century. Halawa Cave was used for intermittent habitation by individuals apparently engaged in wood cutting and local food procurement. Continuity and Change at a Pu‘uone Fishpond: New Archaeological Data from Loko Ea, Kawailoa, O‘ahu Chris Monahan and Doug Thurman, TCP Hawai‘i, LLC We discuss the results of a recent archaeological survey at Loko Ea Fishpond in the seaward portion of Kawailoa Ahupua‘a. This pu‘uone-type fishpond represents the south end of the “long house” of Laniwahine, the guardian mo‘o of ‘Uko‘a. Excavation into Loko Ea’s oldest, constituent features demonstrates a complex depositional history of construction, modification, and repair. In the deepest portion of Loko Ea’s largest wall, just above the water table, we recovered a carved wooden artifact made of a large piece of Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), from which a conventional (AMS) radiocarbon date of 160 ± 30 BP was obtained. We explore the implications of this and other new findings. LUNCH BREAK (12:00 – 1:00 pm) Bowman Hālau 10 Afternoon Session 1 (1:00 – 2:30 pm) How Structures Become Archaeological Deposits Thomas Dye, T. S. Dye & Colleagues, Archaeologists Cathy Cameron’s work on the abandonment of settlements and regions provides a framework for identifying and describing the different ways that dry stone masonry structures enter the archaeological record in Hawai‘i. Recent excavations at nineteenth century structures at Manele, Lana‘i illustrate two different, but common, ways that structures become archaeological deposits. The excavations document the dynamic nature of the Hawaiian settlement landscape well into the historic era. Spatiotemporal Rainfall Variation on Hawai‘i Island: Implications for Prehistoric Hawaiian Agriculture Robert DiNapoli, University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa, and Alex Morrison, University of Auckland Pacific Island agricultural research has focused predominately on measuring the degree of uncertainty in dryland subsistence practices. Environmental risk and uncertainty have been especially important topics in the Hawaiian Archipelago, specifically in relation to the large dryland agricultural systems of Maui and Hawai‘i Island. Unlike most windward agricultural systems, leeward dryland agriculture was almost completely dependent on rainfall. It is generally assumed that dryland field systems were highly susceptible to droughts, potentially resulting in food shortages with various societal consequences, such as conflict and the emergence of social complexity. The recent publication of the Rainfall Atlas of Hawai‘i enables us to build more fine-grained models of spatiotemporal rainfall variation in the Hawaiian Islands. Using this newly published rainfall archive, we investigate spatiotemporal rainfall patterns on Hawai‘i Island, with particular emphasis on the Leeward Kohala Field System (LKFS). We employ geostatistical modeling techniques and time series analyses to quantify the amplitude and periodicity of droughts in the LKFS, and discuss the implications of our results for Hawaiian agriculture and emerging sociocultural patterns. Features Across Space: A Spatial Analysis of Traditional Hawaiian Archaeological Features at Kalaemanō, Hawai‘i Island Carl E. Sholin, T. S. Dye & Colleagues, Archaeologists Detailed archaeological mapping was conducted for a coastal strip approximately 0.5 km wide and 1 km long at Kalaemanō, Ka‘ūpūlehu Ahupua‘a, North Kona District, Hawai‘i Island during preservation planning for the Ka‘ūpūlehu Interpretive Center. Locations of the identified archaeological features were incorporated into a geographic information system (GIS) and classified based on architectural characteristics. The spatial analysis reported here was aimed toward two research goals: (1) to explore how distance from the coast influenced the distribution of feature classes, and (2) to identify and characterize clusters of features. Stars and Stones at Kūkaniloko Martha H. Noyes The piko stone at Kūkaniloko, sometimes called the compass stone or canoe stone, has attracted attention and curiosity. It is clearly about something, but what? Celestial events marked on the landscape to the east and west of Kūkaniloko provide clues. This paper offers some reasoned speculation on the purpose of the piko stone based on the meanings and functions of landscape markers for stars and celestial events. Preliminary Thoughts on Lo‘i Agricultural Systems in Miloli‘i Valley, Kaua‘i Jennifer G. Kahn, College of William and Mary, and Alan Carpenter, Hawai‘i State Parks Site 50-30-01-7179 is an extensive stepped agricultural complex fronting the mouth of Miloli‘i Valley. The complex is just adjacent to the hale pili site (50-30-01-7206) where the Bishop Museum removed the grass 11 house that is now on display in Hawaiian Hall. We discuss data collected during the detailed mapping and inventory survey of the 50-30-01-7179 site, including data on the wetland field system and residential complexes. Surface remains suggest that portions of the lo‘i were segmented through time and/or transformed into house platforms. Other residential sites are found along the cliff faces along the sides of the valley, where dense midden concentrations are found. Test excavations at the Mil-10 complex provide data on the chronology of site construction and subsistence intensification along the Nā Pali Coast. We end with a brief presentation of artistic reconstructions of the site, based on archaeological data, which will be used in developing community educational materials to foster site preservation and local knowledge. Adze Procurement and Production Strategies on the Eastern Flanks of Mauna Kea Peter R. Mills and Stephen P. Lundblad, University of Hawai‘i-Hilo The geochemistry of adze debitage from a range of sites in North Hilo and Hamakua is presented, including sites in Laupahoehoe, lowland Humu‘ula, Niupea/Kealakaha, Ahualoa, Pa‘ako, Waipi‘o, and Laupahoehoe Nui. Much of the debitage is geochemically consistent with the Mauna Kea Adze Quarry, but coarsergrained, locally available post-shield volcanics are also present. Another geochemical group of finegrained shield-building volcanic material is also present that does not match well with Mauna Kea sources or the Pololu Adze Quarry in North Kohala. The nearest documented quarry sources with similar geochemical signatures include Kilauea, Kapohaku, Lana‘i, Waiahole, O‘ahu, and the newly reported Nanakuli, O‘ahu source. Technological and contextual information is presented to suggest that at least some of the shield-building debitage in East Hawai‘i derives from yet another source, most likely from early shield-building stages of the Kohala Mountains, which could be exposed in Waipi‘o Valley and other portions of Hamakua and Kohala. BREAK (2:30 – 2:45 pm) Afternoon Session 2 (2:45 pm – 5:00 pm) Recent Excavations in the Marquesas: Evidence for the East Polynesian Archaic Barry Rolett, University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa The Hanamiai Dune is among a number of Marquesan archaeological sites with cultural deposits representing the East Polynesian Archaic era. These Archaic deposits, dated to the time period AD 10001450, are typically marked by chronologically diagnostic artifacts such as untanged adzes and rotating one-piece pearl shell fishhooks. The currently known Hanamiai Archaic deposits were discovered in the 1980s, but early in the following decade they were inadvertently destroyed by sand mining operations to support road construction. Later excavations at Hanamiai (1997-2010) failed to reveal evidence of the Archaic. A breakthrough occurred during the 2012 and 2013 field seasons when rich Archaic deposits were found at depths of 2-3 m below the modern ground surface. The diagnostic artifacts include rotating pearl shell fishhooks, a whale tooth pendant, and a bone tattooing needle. Our preliminary results are discussed here in the context of other early East Polynesian sites including Hane, Hanatekua, and Fa‘ahia, excavated by Yosihiko Sinoto as part of his pioneering research in French Polynesia. Ho‘omaka Hou: A Second Look at the Wai‘ahukini Shelter (H8) Faunal Remains Kelley Esh, University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa, Scott Belluomini, and Mara Mulrooney, Bishop Museum The Wai‘ahukini Shelter (H8) was excavated from 1954 to 1958 by archaeologists from Bishop Museum and the University of Hawai‘i (Emory, Bonk, and Sinoto 1969), with the lower layer of the cave deposit believed to represent early occupation of the Hawaiian Islands. Unlike many early excavations, the bulk sample collection strategy apparently utilized at Wai‘ahukini Shelter is conducive to a detailed examination of the animal remains. However, outside of a few studies that focused on the South Point area in general, an analysis of the faunal material from this famous site has not been conducted since the initial publication in the 1960s. Almost sixty years after the original excavations, we have initiated 12 comprehensive faunal analysis for this collection. Our paper discusses the preliminary findings and future collaborative projects for this important archaeological collection. Before the Fold: Excavations at a Shepherd’s Midden on Lāna‘i Nathan DiVito, T. S. Dye & Colleagues, Archaeologists Controlled excavation at a nineteenth century shepherd’s midden at Manele, Lana‘i revealed a deeply buried traditional Hawaiian cultural deposit with artifacts and food remains. Two fire-pit features, one stratigraphically superior to the other, were identified in the traditional Hawaiian deposit. Suitable dating materials were collected from each of the features. AMS dates on identified short-lived plant charcoal establish the time depth of the traditional Hawaiian deposit. The Zooarchaeology of Vertebrate Animal Use, Extinction and Extirpation at Halawa Cave, North Halawa Valley, O‘ahu, Hawai‘i Paul E. Langenwalter II, Biola University, and Helen F. James, Smithsonian Institution Halawa Cave (50-Oa-B01-020) is a rockshelter located about 5 km inland of Pearl Harbor in the North Halawa Valley, O‘ahu, Hawai‘i. Evidence of Native Hawaiian occupation is found in an approximately 50 cm-deep midden, inside of the 6x8 m2 shelter. The assemblage includes vegetal, stone, bone and shell artifacts, along with shell, bone and plant ecofacts. The site appears to have been intermittently occupied as a base for local resource procurement. Occupation of the site began by the fifteenth century and continued into the nineteenth century, with the heaviest use of the site during the nineteenth century. The presence of adzes in the assemblage suggests that wood-cutting was an important activity associated with the site. A sample of 68 fish, bird, and mammal specimens was recovered during the excavation. This assemblage provides evidence of limited vertebrate use, butchering practices, resource procurement areas, and information about the local paleoenvironment. Fish species dominate the assemblage. Two of three avian species are indigenous and extinct or extirpated. Remains of the extinct O‘ahu Flightless Goose (Thambetochen xanion) and the Dark-rumped Petrel (Pteroderma phaeopypia) occur in sediments from the terminal occupation of the site. Introduced species of red jungle fowl, dog, and pig were a significant food source consumed at the site. The assemblage reflects a focus on fishing, although the mammals were significant contributors of biomass. Steel tool marks occur on some pig specimens from the terminal occupation. Remote Sensing Vegetation Classification for Restoration of the Kahaluʻu Dryland Field System Natalie Kurashima, Kamehameha Schools/University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa Kamehameha Schools is seeking to restore and revitalize the Kahaluʻu ϐield system in Kahaluʻu Ahupuaʻa, North Kona District, Hawaiʻi Island. At 350 acres, the Kahaluʻu ϐield system is one of the largest intact remnants of the Kona field system, a complex system of rainfed agricultural fields spanning about 140 km2 across about 30 ahupuaʻa. There are over 3,500 documented archaeological features within the Kahaluʻu field system, which are almost all (98.7%) categorized as pre-contact agricultural features. Though the archaeological features have been thoroughly documented, no botanical or ecological study has been undertaken in the site. Restoration and revitalization activities will include clearing of invasive vegetation for planting of traditional Hawaiian agricultural crops for cultural, community, and commercial uses; thus, an understanding of the current matrix of vegetation is important for restoration planning, as well as for obtaining baseline data before restoration in the area begins. Remote sensing provides an opportunity to analyze the canopy vegetation of the entire 355-acre project area at the species-specific level. Using a Worldview 2 satellite image, I classified the canopy vegetation of the project area into four major classes: ʻōhiʻa lehua (Meterosideros polymorpha), christmas berry (Schinus terebinthifolius), strawberry guava (Psidium catteianum), and a shadow class. I performed a series of supervised classification methods in ENVI 4.8, the most accurate being the Maximum Likelihood Classification (MLC), with an 85.5% overall accuracy. The classification indicated 49% non-native canopy cover and 33% native canopy cover, with the remaining proportion represented as shadow. The resulting classification was also compared with soil and archaeological features within the system in order to reveal trends and variation across the site. The 13 MLC method provides a sufficient basic vegetation map that can be easily utilized in restoration planning and future research within the field system. Update on Administrative Rule Changes Affecting Archaeology Theresa K. Donham, State Historic Preservation Division SHPD announced at last year’s SHA conference that changes were being contemplated in Hawai‘i Administrative Rules (HAR) §13-275 through 284, with a goal of updating requirements to be more in line with today’s technology and scientific standards. The passage of S.B. 1171 has resulted in a need to provide conditions under which phased review of projects would be allowed. The justification of this bill was a need for greater consistency between federal and state historic preservation regulations, which is also considered in the revision process. Proposed changes to HAR §13-275 and 284, which detail the historic preservation review process, will be discussed, along with proposed changes to the regulations addressing inventory survey (§13-276), archaeological site preservation (§13-277), data recovery studies (§13-278) and permits for archaeological work (§13-282). Also discussed are options for input from the professional community and other stakeholders. Towards a Statewide Cultural Resources GIS for Hawaiʻi Nick Belluzzo, State Historic Preservation Division The development of a comprehensive, accessible statewide cultural resources GIS is vital to increasing our understanding of the archaeological record, as well as executing our responsibilities as stewards of these cultural resources. The State Historic Preservation Division (SHPD) has developed a standardized GIS database with the intent of aggregating known and newly generated locational information for cultural resources throughout Hawaiʻi. SHPD has already begun populating the database with legacy data from SHPD’s own data collections. Strategies have been developed for both contending with legacy data and incorporating newly generated geospatial information. Additionally, the Cultural Resources Geodatabase will link to other pertinent datasets still under development, such as tabular site information, library reports, and correspondence history. The intent is an accessible repository of geospatial data which has been tempered with an understanding of the sensitive nature of the data. Video Presentation: The Archaeology of Kekaulike, O‘ahu Mike Dega, SCS, Inc. (on behalf of Dennis Callahan) Between 1992 and 1994, a complex Archaeological Data Recovery program was undertaken in downtown Honolulu, O‘ahu. The Kekaulike Project, occurring on the Ewa Block bordered by Hotel Street and King Street, was a large-scale excavation undertaken by Archaeological Consultants of Hawaii, which was headed by the now-deceased Joseph Kennedy. Recently, one of Kennedy’s longtime friends presented a 1993 video he took of an interview with Mr. Kennedy at the site. The 15-minute video not only encapsulates the complex history of the site but shows the work environment at the site. With his typical flair, Kennedy walks us through the site showing his knowledge and passion for the past in a video suitable for beginning archaeology students, old field hands, long-time scholars of the discipline, and those interested in seeing what a large-scale excavation in downtown Honolulu entails. Annual Business Meeting (5:00 – 6:00 pm) Atherton Hālau Lū ‘au Banquet (6:00 – 9:00 pm) Atherton Hālau and Hālau Bowman, Bishop Museum Welcome Address (6:00 pm) Tribute to Dr. Yosihiko Sinoto (6:15 pm) Lū‘au Banquet (7:00 pm) Musical Entertainment (7:00 – 9:00 pm) 14 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2013 Symposia Atherton Hālau, Bishop Museum Continental Breakfast (8:00 – 9:00 am) Morning Session 1 (9:00 am – 10:15 am) Session I Title: Kohala I Ka Unupa‘a – Kohala of the Solid Stone Session Organizer: Kelley L. Uyeoka, Kumupaʻa Cultural Resource Consultants, LLC 2013 Wahi Kūpuna Internship Program Introduction Kelley L. Uyeoka, Kumupaʻa Cultural Resource Consultants, LLC Kukui ‘ā‘a kū i ka ‘Āpa‘apa‘a Ikaika Kapu, Heather Bailey, Isaac Pang, Aloha Kapono, and Makana Tavares, Wahi Kūpuna Program Internship Program Our presentation focuses on the research we conducted in the ahupuaʻa of Puanui as part of the 2013 Wahi Kūpuna Internship Program. In addition to surveying and mapping portions of the Leeward Kohala Field System within Puanui and Kehena, we also carried out individual research projects that centered on themes such as ahupuaʻa systems, mauka-makai connections, land use and change, and resource sharing and trade. Through our cultural, historical, ethnographic, and archaeological research, we learned that Puanui was a thriving ahupuaʻa and that the resources that are still preserved there today can teach us so much about resource management, self-sufficiency, and sustainability. 2013 Hawai‘i Historical and Archaeological Research Project Introduction Michael Graves, University of New Mexico, and Kekuewa Kikiloi, University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa An Irrigated Agricultural System Linking Makanikahio and Pololū Ahupuaʻa, Hawaiʻi Island Joseph Birkmann, Mark W. Oxley, Michael W. Graves, University of New Mexico, Kekuewa Kikiloi, University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa, and Kelley Uyeoka, Kumupaʻa Cultural Resource Consultants, LLC Field research in windward Kohala since 2011 has allowed us to reconstruct an irrigated agricultural system that originates in Waikalae Stream in upper Makanikahio 1, Windward Kohala. Stream water is diverted first by a ditch that redirects the flow through a cut bedrock and traditional ʻauwai that is more than 250 m long and extended to the north and west into a separate drainage. At the top of this secondary drainage is a small loʻi complex that is located on ridge lands and excess irrigation water would flow into the gully adjacent to the west. This gully is known as Kauhaikulepe and extends down the ridge lands to the north more than 1 km. Pond field and barrage agricultural terraces, as well as a variety of tree crops, once lined its bottom lands throughout. Towards the bottom of the gully, Kauhaikulepe extends eastward across Makanikahio 2 and flows down a ravine into Pololū Valley. There the irrigation water feeds the large marsh loʻi complex about 150 m from its north, upper end. Inoa ʻĀina o Waiʻāpuka Kauʻilani Rivera, Hawai‘i Historical and Archaeological Research Project Place names play an important role in understanding how Hawaiians viewed the traditional Hawaiian landscape. This study looks at the wide range of meaning interpretations from place names gathered for the ahupuaʻa of Waiʻāpuka in Windward Kohala. It pulls from historical maps, land commission awards, testimonies, moʻolelo in newspapers, and oral interviews recorded in various sources of information in both English and Hawaiian language. Through careful analysis, I translate, interpret, and cross-reference these names across historical accounts and link them to traditional land units and locations in the overall 15 landscape. Each word’s etymology is broken down and all probable translations and interpretations are looked at to infer Hawaiians’ past relationships to Waiʻāpuka’s landscape and its resources. BREAK (10:15 – 10:30 am) Morning Session 2 (10:30 am – 12:00 pm) Ho‘opiliwaiola: Water and Relationship in Waiʻāpuka Kamuela Plunkett, Hawai‘i Historical and Archaeological Research Project In Wai‘āpuka, Kohala and its adjacent territories we see the inverse of a valley landscape in that gullies bookend table lands. In the case of Wai‘āpuka, its archaeological irrigation record is anomalous not just in comparison to leeward areas where the availability of water was relatively scarce, but also with valley irrigation systems, in that irrigated water does not always return to its source and may not always remain in its own territory. In effect, water movements in these ahupua‘a display regional irrigation practices that diverge from the classical imagery of valley ahupua‘a water and resource management. It is the goal of this paper to discuss the way I have documented the existence of these four agricultural complexes followed with a hypothesis of their connection via irrigational innovation and intentional utilization of “ridge slope” landscape. The connectivity of these individual complexes into an agricultural system could thus provide insight into table/kula land water movement and inter-community cooperation. Challenging Our Understanding of Konohiki: A Case Study for Waiʻāpuka, Kohala Tara Manaea del Fierro, Hawai‘i Historical and Archaeological Research Project This study challenges our current understanding of the role of konohiki in pre-contact times through the analysis of the archaeological records and historical Land Commission Award (LCA) documents gathered for the ahupuaʻa of Waiʻāpuka, in Windward Kohala. Examination of LCA documents (awards, native and foreign registers, and testimonies) within this discrete area of the ahupuaʻa and in the context of its ancient resources suggests that at least five konohiki, or land stewards, shifted roles and enacted different strategies of management within a short period of time in the mid 1800s. Thus, this prompts one to question our current understanding of the traditional concept of Hawaiian konohiki. It also provides insight as to what additional questions might be asked in future research of the ethno-historical and archaeological records in Hawaiʻi. An Analysis of Poi Pounders from the Bishop Museum’s Ethnographic Collection: Examining Morphological Variability Across the Hawaiian Archipelago Mark W. Oxley, University of New Mexico The Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum houses the largest collection of Hawaiian poi pounders in existence, including the approximately 600 specimens in the museum’s ethnographic collection. While the majority of the poi pounders in the ethnographic collection do not have any known provenience, at least 255 artifacts are known or believed to have originated from a specific island. This preliminary research explores the morphological variability of poi pounders across space, utilizing the artifacts with known provenience. While previous work has focused primarily on Kaua‘i Island pounders, this research will examine variability among the main Hawaiian Islands (with the exceptions of Lāna‘i and Kaho‘olawe). This preliminary work will be expanded into a dissertation study that will analyze the variability and change of poi pounder technology through the examination of stylistic transmission and technological/functional innovations. What’s in a Name? The Transformation of ‘Polynesian Hall’ to ‘Pacific Hall’ at Bishop Museum Mara Mulrooney, Bishop Museum Since the pioneering research of archaeologists Kenneth P. Emory and Yosihiko H. Sinoto in the early 1950s, the Bishop Museum’s Anthropology Department has played a central role in the field of Pacific 16 Island archaeology. The department’s prominent role in the field, however, has not typically been showcased in permanent exhibition spaces at the museum. In the newly renovated Pacific Hall, the field of archaeology has taken center stage in the 2nd floor of the exhibition space. In this paper, I present a brief historical outline of the significant transformations that Pacific Hall has undergone since it was built and dubbed ‘Polynesian Hall,’ and assess the ways in which artifacts from the Archaeology Collections are currently incorporated into the exhibition space. New ‘Patterns in Time and Space’: An Update on the Second Edition of Feathered Gods and Fishhooks Mark D. McCoy, University of Otago, and Patrick V. Kirch, University of California-Berkeley As the first book-length treatment of the topic of archaeology across the Hawaiian Islands, Feathered Gods and Fishhooks broke new ground when it was first published in 1985. Now nearly 30 years on, one of the challenges for the planned second edition is to provide the reader with a useful synthesis of advances in regional archaeology. Given the massive body of research that has been produced since the first edition, the chapter titled, ‘Patterns in Time and Space: Regional Archaeology of the Hawaiian Islands,’ will become several expanded and revised chapters focusing on individual islands. The purpose of this presentation is to reflect on how the field has evolved in terms of the spatial and temporal scales that we emphasize in our work, as well as to give members of the Society for Hawaiian Archaeology an opportunity to comment on the format and content of the new island chapters. 17 POSTERS Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, and Cultural Resources in Hawai‘i Denise DeJoseph, Na Moku Consulting Group Sea level rise resulting from climate change is occurring. Rising seas will lead to accelerated erosion in coastal areas and to the likely inundation of some shorelines. Many of Hawai‘i's coastal areas contain preand post-contact cultural sites, landscapes, and features. Recent legislation in Hawai‘i, such as Act 286, compels state agencies to address climate change impacts to natural and cultural resources. There are currently no historic preservation protocols to deal with threats to cultural resources from coastal erosion. A first step must be identifying and ranking those resources that are most at risk. This poster explores how erosion hazard zone mapping developed by University of Hawai‘i researchers can be used to identify cultural resources that are most vulnerable to short-term (i.e., within 50 years or less) erosion threats based on the significance and timing of shoreline change. Using Maui as an example, we combined erosion hazard zone mapping with GIS data provided by the State Historic Preservation Division to demonstrate how a collaborative mapping approach can be useful in developing a strategy for prioritizing the preservation and/or recovery of scientific and cultural values embodied in Hawai‘i’s coastal cultural resources. Applied Archaeology at UH-Mānoa: Building Capacity in Hawai‘i and the Greater Pacific James Bayman, Christian Peterson, Barry Rolett, Miriam Stark, and T. Kawika Tengan, University of Hawai‘iMānoa The MA track in Applied Archaeology at UH-Mānoa is designed to train the next generation of professional non-academic archaeologists who seek to be effective advocates for the study and preservation of historic sites in Hawai‘i and elsewhere in the Greater Pacific and Asia. Although institutions throughout the continental United States offer graduate training in applied archaeology, our program at UH-Mānoa is unique in its geographic and cultural focus. We recognize the increasing importance of archaeological employment opportunities in our state through public and private sectors of cultural resource management (CRM) and historic preservation. In fact, compliance with state and federal legislation that pertain to archaeology and historic preservation underlies most public and private funding for professional archaeology today. Consequently, many private firms, governmental agencies, and non-profit institutions employ MA level archaeologists to conduct CRM investigations, manage archaeological collections, and/or engage in community outreach and public education. These growing areas of professional archaeology now far surpass the demand for academic archaeologists. This poster features various dimensions of the Applied Archaeology Program at UH-Mānoa. The Nu‘alolo Kai Kapa: A Preliminary Look at Chronology and Context Summer Moore, College of William and Mary Of the extremely broad and diverse collection of perishable artifacts recovered from the cliffside habitation terraces excavated at Nu‘alolo Kai, the kapa collection is one of the most unique. Although Hawaiian kapa specimens are present in museum ethnographic collections worldwide, such specimens often lack specific contextual information, i.e., information about chronology and location of collection. With over 20 fragments represented, the assemblage of archaeological kapa curated by Bishop Museum’s Anthropology Department provides a unique opportunity to anchor an examination of kapa use in time and space. On this poster, information from Bishop Museum’s artifact catalogs, unpublished excavation report manuscripts, and recent radiocarbon dating analysis by other researchers is summarized to provide an introductory view of kapa use at Nu‘alolo Kai. Because the majority of this kapa appears to be roughly associated with the late pre-contact and early post-contact periods, it is hoped that this study will provide a springboard for a more comprehensive examination of the subject, in which the role played by kapa in household life and beyond during the 18th and 19th centuries can be considered. 18 SOCIETY FOR HAWAIIAN ARCHAEOLOGY ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING AGENDA October 12, 2013, 5pm Bishop Museum, Atherton Hālau I. President’s Remarks: Mara Mulrooney II. Secretary’s Report: Mara Mulrooney on behalf of Summer Moore - Approval of Minutes from 2012 Annual Business Meeting III. Treasurer’s Report: Victoria Wichman IV. Standing Committee Reports: - Education: Kelly Uyeoka - Standards & Ethics: Holly McEldowney - Legislative: Sara Collins - Publishing: Windy McElroy - Student: Brian Lane - Webmaster: Nick Belluzzo - Public Relations: Arleen Garcia-Herbst V. Old Business: - Discussion on rising costs of mailing hard copies of the journal and the alternatives including raising dues, allowing members a choice of a hard copy or electronic version, or moving to an electronic-only version of the journal. - Suggestion to live-stream annual SHA conference via the internet for members who are unable to attend in person. VI. New Business: - Suggestions to publish a volume of Hawaiian Archaeology that is solely devoted to obituaries & to establish a section of the website for obituaries, memorials & personal recollections. - Assessment of annual membership dues. - Resolution regarding implementation of phased project reviews under Chapter 6E-2, 6E-8, and 6E-42, Hawai‘i Revised Statutes. 19 SOCIETY FOR HAWAIIAN ARCHAEOLOGY ANNUAL CONFERENCE HISTORY (adapted and updated from Jo Lynn Gunness and Paul Cleghorn 2009) 1 2 Date 19-20 March 1988 Location Kilauea Military Camp, Volcanoes National Park, Hawai‘i Island Maui Community College, Kahului, Maui Bishop Museum, Honolulu, O‘ahu University of Hawai‘i Mānoa, Honolulu, O‘ahu Kauai Community College, Puhi, Kauai Organizers Gary Somers, Bio Griffin Keynote Speaker None Attendance c. 50 Agnes Griffin Leslie Bruce Tom Dye None c. 60 None c. 100 Terry Hunt Dr. Janet Davidson, Archaeology View from Aotearoa/New Zealand Dr. Timothy Earle, Significance of Hawaiian Archaeology Dr. Patrick V. Kirch, Lapita Archaeology in the Western Pacific Dr. Rebecca Cann, Ancient DNA in the Pacific Dr. Roger C. Green, Hawaiian Origins Dr. Ben Finney, Polynesian Voyaging Dr. Patrick V. Kirch, Hawaiian Archaeology: Past, Present, Future Dr. Adrienne Kaeppler Mea Makamae and the Evolution of the Representation of the Other Ray Soon, DHHL, Hawaiian Culture and Preservation Law Dr. (Sir) Yosihiko H. Sinoto Huahine Island: Its Position in the Prehistory of the Society Islands Dr. P. Bion Griffin, The Hawaiians Own Their Past and the Past is Not Dead, It’s Not Even Past Dr. Robert J. Hommon, The ECS Files: Culture Biology, and Complexity Dr. Michael Graves, The Future of Archaeology in Hawai‘i: Challenging Ourselves H. David Tuggle, IARII Senses and Places: The Historical Parks of West Hawai'i c. 100 3 31 March – 2 April 1989 25 March 1990 4 25 May 1991 5 27-29 March 1992 6 2-4 April 1993 7 1-3 April 1994 8 8-9 April 1995 9 26-28 April 1996 10 11-13 April 1997 11 3-5 April 1998 12 9-11 April 1999 13 6-8 October 2000 14 5-7 October 2001 15 11-13 October 2002 Kauai Community College, Puhi, Kauai 16 24-26 October 2003 Windward Community College, Kāne‘ohe, O‘ahu 17 12-14 November 2004 King Kamehameha Hotel, Kailua-Kona, Hawai'i Island 18 6-9 October 2005 Radisson Kauai Beach Resort, Lihu‘e, Kauai 19 6-8 October 2006 Maui Community College, Kahului, Maui 20 19-21 October 2007 21 17-19 October 2008 Outrigger Keauhou Beach Hotel, Hawai'i Island University of Hawai‘i Hilo, Hawai‘i Island Alan Carpenter, MaryAnne Maigret, Carol Kawachi Peter Mills 22 23-26 October 2009 University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu, O‘ahu Paul L. Cleghorn, James Bayman 23 15-17 October 2010 30 September 302 October 2011 19-21 October 2012 Aston Aloha Beach Resort, Wailua, Kauai University of Hawai‘i Maui, Kahului, Maui Outrigger Keauhou Beach Hotel, Keauhou-Kona, Hawai‘i Island Victoria Wichman, Jennifer Kahn Janet Six 11-13 October 2013 Bishop Museum, Honolulu, O‘ahu Mara Mulrooney, Summer Moore, Victoria Wichman, Nick Belluzzo, Jason Jeremiah, Kekuewa Kikiloi 24 25 26 Kaluako‘i Hotel, Kaluako‘i, Moloka‘i University of Hawai‘i Hilo, Hawai‘i Island Kapiolani Community College, Honolulu, O‘ahu Aston Wailea Resort, Wailea, Maui Kauai Community College, Puhi, Kauai King Kamehameha Hotel, Kailua-Kona, Hawai‘i Island Kapiolani Community College, Honolulu, O‘ahu Kilauea Military Camp, Volcanoes National Park, Hawai‘i Island Maui Community College, Kahului, Maui William Kikuchi Nancy McMahon Martha Yent Paul Cleghorn, Agnes Griffin, Martha Yent Boyd Dixon, Agnes Griffin, Martha Yent Scott Williams Bion Griffin, Agnes Griffin William Kikuchi, Nancy McMahon, Martha Yent Laura Schuster, Carol Kawachi, Mara Durst Maurice Major, Muffet Jourdane,Toni Palermo Laura Schuster,Peter Mills, Jadelyn Moniz, Tom Wolforth Theresa Donham, Melissa Kirkendall, Hal Hammatt William Kikuchi, Nancy McMahon, Martha Yent Paul L. Cleghorn, Jim Bayman Stanley Bond, Tom Wolforth, Rick Gmirkin, Maria Orr, John Peterson, Carol Kawachi Alan Carpenter, Tim DelaVega, Mike T. Carson Janet Six Sean Nāleimaile, Kathy Kawelu 20 184 159 151 c. 150 c. 120 160 150 c. 150 c. 100-150 c. 100-150 E. Kalani Flores ...Cultural Treasures... c. 100-150 Dr. Patrick V. Kirch Hawaiian Archaeology: Nine years later… Kekuhi Keali‘kanaka‘oleoheililani The Beauty of the Forest c. 100-150 Sean Naleimaile, Defining Hawaiian Archaeology: A Hawaiian's Perspective Dr. Terry L. Jones, Polynesian Diaspora: The Chumash Connection and Beyond Dr. Patrick V. Kirch, When Did the Polynesians Settle Hawai‘i? Kewewehi Pundyke Lo‘iloa Restoration in ‘Iao Dr. Michael Wilcox, Writing Indigenous Peoples Back Into the Present: Indigenous Archaeology and the Narratives of History In Honor of Dr. (Sir) Yosihiko Sinoto c. 100-150 c. 100-150 c. 165 c. 120-140 c. 100 c. 100-120 NOTES 21 NOTES 22 MAHALO TO OUR SPONSORS: