Long Island, Papua New Guinea: People, resources and culture
Date
Authors
Ball, Eldon E.
Hughes, I. M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Australian Museum
Access Statement
Abstract
Long Island provides, in microcosm and on a compressed time scale, an example of
the sort of interaction between humans and their environment common to many Pacific
islands. The current period of human occupancy of Long Island began sometime during
the nineteenth century but until World War 11 the island remained isolated and
population growth remained low. Since that time population growth has accelerated,
contacts with the outside world have increased and the islanders are now beginning to
enter a cash economy. The effects of these processes on the human society and its
interactions with the environment are summarized. Major areas covered include human
settlement and population growth, aspects of social organisation, wild resources and
their use, outside influences affecting island society, the current status of the Long Island
economy and possible future development options.
Description
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Citation
Collections
Source
Records of the Australian Museum
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Publication
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31