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Dewil Valley

Dewil Valley, located in the northernmost part of Palawan, an island province of the Philippines that is located in the Mimaropa region, is an archaeological site composed of thousands of artifacts and features. According to the University of the Philippines Archaeological Studies Program, or UP-ASP, the closest settlement can be found in New Ibajay, which is covered by the town capital of El Nido, which is located around 9 km (5.6 mi) south-east of Dewil Valley. Physically it measures around 7 km (4.3 mi) long, and 4 km (2.5 mi) wide. It is in this place which the Ille Cave, one of the main archaeological sites, can be found. It is actually a network of 3 cave mouths located at its base.[1] It has been discovered that this site in particular has been used and occupied by humans over multiple time periods.

Although excavations for this site have been done since 1998,[2] according to UP-ASP, surveys and recordings have been done as early as the 1920s by Carl Guthe, in an attempt to record as many archaeological sites in northern Palawan as possible. This sparked the interest of Robert Fox (1970), but was also limited to recordings rather than excavations. It was only in 1990 that a full archaeological survey was made by the National Museum of the Philippines and it was only in 1998 that the first test excavation was started. In 1999, a full excavation by archaeologists Solheim, De La Torre, and Bautista. Since then, multiple excavations have been made, with one of the most recent ones being in 2012.

Archaeological discoveries

Different archaeological evidences led to different revelations about the area. During the first excavation in 1998, the archaeologists were able to discover shell middens and human burials. Excavations in Ille continued in 2000 and 2002 at the west mouth and east mouth with deeper excavations. Evidence of shell middens, burials and similar artifacts in previous excavations were found. Dating of the cultural deposits below the shell midden placed it at an age of around 10,000 years old.[3] Continued excavations in 2004 resulted to the discovery of more human burials. In 2005, artifacts such as pottery design and nephrite ornaments reinforced the connection of Palawan to Mainland Southeast Asia.[1] Excavations in 2006 resulted to greater understanding of the stratigraphy of the cave and the first cremation burial was first uncovered in the east mouth trench.[1] In the field season in 2007 of Ille cave, approximately eleven complete and incomplete burials were found in the east and west mouth trenches including possibly human cremations and tiger bones in the east mouth trench.[1][2] Further exploration of other cave sites in the valley were explored and evidences of human activity along with archaeological features and burial with grave goods were found near the cave entrance of Pasimbahan cave.[2] In 2008, continuing excavations of the Ille site reconfirmed the practice of cremation with the recovery of two cremation features at the 9000 years deposit.[1]

Ille Cave

Ille Cave is part of a massive Late Eocene Pabellion karst-formation in New Ibajay, El Nido, Palawan. It is about 100 m (330 ft) high and has an overhang about 10 m (33 ft) high that extends from the mouth of the cave. It is located at the base of a 75 m (246 ft) limestone tower. The cave has two main mouths facing the south: the east mouth and the west mouth. Both mouths have large trenches placed on them. Vegetation of mostly secondary growth trees surround and top the cave. The ground of the cave is mostly dry, but some areas are wet due to the water dripping down from the ceiling. Based on radiocarbon dating, the cave was used as a habitation and burial site (Neolithic to Protohistoric). In 1998 alone, 20,000 artifacts were excavated by the National Museum and the Archaeological Studies Program of the University of the Philippines Diliman and the Solheim Foundation. Several artifacts date back to more or less 14,000 years ago. Adze blades and their fragments were used as samples to determine the date of the cave and it was discovered that the cave was used extensively during the Paleolithic and Neolithic. Ongoing excavation has determined the cave to be continuously inhabited from fairly recent times to the Late Pleistocene. So far, excavations have provided a cultural timeline down to the Upper Paleolithic and Pleistocene.[citation needed]

Burials

A total of 32 burials in various phases have been discovered and recorded from this site. Most burials at the oldest phase have been found to have bivalve shell beddings under the buried individuals (UP-ASP, 2008). Only two burials were found with associated material culture—the first one, with a metal point, and an infant with an Indo-Pacific beaded bracelet. The recovered remains point to its community having early and long-time burial traditions, as well as possibilities of jar burials (from sherds found). There is an evident practice of cremation of remains, as both human and animal remains with evidences of burning were found a pit, making this the only evident "cremation cemetery" of this age, so far. An evidence of a complex burial ritual was also discovered. The ritual involves an elaborate process of defleshing and disarticulation of bones, crushing of (large) bones, and lastly, cremation and burial. As the remains were also found to be tightly concentrated and compact, it was suggested that it might have been placed in a container that decomposed later on.[4] The found remains were suggested to be of a young adult to middle adult female, dated 9000–9400 years old. Currently, this is the best documented burial of this kind in Southeast Asia, and this is the second archaeological burial[clarification needed] in the Philippines.

Ceramics

A variety of earthenware pottery sherds were recovered from the site, amounting to approximately 12,600 pieces. Unfortunately, these finds cannot be confidently associated with any of the surfaces in the site due to turbation (postdepositional disturbance) of the layers where most of the sherds were discovered. However, some of the decorated sherds were traced back to 4000–5000 years ago, mostly red-slipped with impressed circular designs, with some circles filled white with either lime or clay. Other sherds were associated with the "Metal Period" (which was around 2500 to 1500 years ago in Philippine Archaeology) due to its designs with geometric forms (with some painted red), commonly associated with this period. Large pieces of undecorated sherds were also found that may have been fragments from burial jars.

Majority of the pottery decorations are associated with Sa Hyunh-Kalanay pottery. Variations of the designs (in both technical and stylistic aspects) between the pottery from Ille Cave and other sites in Dewil Valley suggests that these may have been adapted from other traded pottery. Evidence of pottery firing have also been found in the Ille cave.[5] While there are no primary jar burials in this site, Ille pottery would have probably played a vital role in burial practices of its communities of practice.

Tradeware, although limited, were also found in Dewil Valley. Tradeware sherds recovered from the Ille platform were mostly brown stoneware, celadon, whiteware and brownware. These brown-glazed shards are determined to be "dusan" jars from the 10th century. On the other hand, shards found on the Ille tower were blue and white and quite a lot in number, making them easy to pick out.

Fossils

Many fossil remains had been dug up in different sites in Dewil Valley. An excavation in the Ille Cave, near the village of New Ibajay, provided the first proof that the tiger (Panthera tigris) once roamed the island of Palawan. A complete basal phalanx of the second digit of the left manus and the distal portion of a sub-terminal phalanx of the second digit of the left manus of a tiger specimen were recovered from the site. Also, a distal end and midshaft of a sub-terminal phalanx of another tiger were obtained.[6] Additionally, the condition of the tiger subfossils, dated to approximately 12,000 to 9,000 years ago, differed from other fossils in the assemblage, dated to the Upper Paleolithic. The tiger subfossils showed longitudinal fracture of the cortical bone due to weathering, which suggests that they had post-mortem been exposed to light and air. Tiger parts were commonly used as amulets in South and Southeast Asia, so it may be that the tiger parts were imported from elsewhere, as is the case with tiger canine teeth, which were found in Ambangan sites dating to the 10th to 12th centuries in Butuan, Mindanao. On the other hand, the proximity of Borneo and Palawan also makes it likely that the tiger had colonized Palawan from Borneo before the Early Holocene.[7][8]

From the late Pleistocene until the early Holocene epoch, there was an abundance of deer in the island. However, deer became rarer while the number of pigs increased during Mid Holocene based on the records from the Ille and Pasimbahan sites.(Ochoa, et al. 2014)[specify] said that "the increased number of pig remains and scarcity of deer in the middle Holocene middens of Pasimbahan also strengthen the observation that there is a clear shift from deer to pig hunting by the middle Holocene".

Aside from faunal remains, plant fossils were also recovered from the different sites. Many plant remains such as seeds, wood fragments and plant tissues were obtained from the Pasimbahan – Magsanib site. After the sampling of archaeobotanical remains, results showed that "six out of the eleven plant tissues, seeds and nuts were found to be consistently transformed, either charred or probably mineralized state".(Ochoa, et al. 2014)[specify] The recovered seeds of Boehmeria, Platanifolia, and Macaranga were also said to be mineralized. Carbonized remains found include all fragments of Canarium hirsutum and another nut, parenchymatous tissues and wood fragments. Archaeobotany evidences from the site also point that the inhabitants practiced arboticulture and the collection of wild nuts.[9]

Stone tools

In total, there are more than 1000 stone tools discovered out of 50,000 artefacts recorded from Ille Cave— a part of Dewil Valley located in Brgy, New Ibajay, El Nido, Palawan— since the start of the excavations in 1998 under the direction of Wilhelm Solheim. These stone tools and other artifacts recovered helped provide estimate timeline for the deposit of the cave for the site.[1] Excavations of both east and west mouth of Ille Cave in 2005 by the UP-ASP also showed presence of other stone materials and stone tools. It was reported that the sequence in the east mouth that was of silty topsoil contained post-Neolithic artifacts which includes stone and shell beads. In the west mouth, some graves were found with stone adze which may date to an early phase. Stone adze was also one of the most significant artifacts found in the excavation in the southern half of the trench of the west mouth.(Lewis, et al., 2006)[specify] Aside from this, stone flakes were also found in Phase E, the habitation and cremation practice phase dated 8,000 to c.a. 10,000, of Pasimbahan site located within the Magsanib district of Dewil.

In addition, the assemblage of artifacts discovered by the UP-ASP and National Museum in the deposit labeled Midden 2, one of the caves in the Dewil Valley which was first investigated for its archaeological material in the year 2007, were composed of mainly of stone tools, together with consumed animal remains and shell fish. Stone tools found in Midden 2 were cobble size stone tools associated with shell food remains, and pig bones. These finds negated the hypothesis that the deposits labeled Midden 2 were not actually an in situ assemblage of stones, bones, and shells.(Ronquillo, et al., 2008)[specify]

Cultural heritage

In the 1960s, Robert Fox (1970) headed a National Museum team that continued Guthe's work in northern Palawan; new sites were added to the list of sites first described by Guthe. A good number of these sites were from small islands located in Bacuit Bay. Of the sites Guthe surveyed, there were a few that National Museum excavated. One such site excavated in the 1960s was Leta-leta cave. Located in Lagen island, in the bay of Bacuit; the conclusion of the 1960s excavation led Fox (1970) to confidently describe the archaeology as a "Metal Age" burial site. The excavation was highlighted by the recovered unique earthenware jar with a mouth fashioned to look like a yawning/shouting person. This unique jar is now considered a national heritage artefact and displayed in the National Museum in Manila.

The research and heritage work at Dewil has accumulated much information throughout its years of existence. In 2005 more artefacts were recovered at Ille in the form of pottery design and nephrite ornaments that reinforced the Mainland Southeast Asian connection of the site. In 2006 the excavation at Ille further expanded to include areas inside the cave itself. There were more artefacts recovered and the understanding of the stratigraphy became clearer.

Excavation on the southern half of the trench continued with the aim of understanding the nature of having Neolithic and Metal Period deposits at deeper levels compared to most of the area of the trench. Further excavation on these contexts yielded more materials such as pottery fragments and human remains. Some of the pottery fragments were found in concentration and belong to one vessel. Some of the most significant artefacts found in this square were a stone adze, a complete pottery pedestal base, and a Melo amphora shell dipper.

In total, there are more than 50,000 artefacts recorded from Ille since the start of the excavations in 1998; broken down to around 25,000 ceramics, 23,000 shell and bone artefacts, 1,000 stone tools and 1,000 metal artefacts and other materials.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Paz, V., Ronquillo, W., Lewis, H., Piper, P., Carlos, J., Robles, E. Xhauflair, H. (2008). Palawan Island Paleohistoric Research Project: Report on the 2008 Valley field season. Research Project, Archaeological Studies Program of the Philippines; National Museum of the Philippines, Archaeological Studies Program of the Philippines. Retrieved November 8, 2014, from www.researchgae.net
  2. ^ a b c Balbaligo, Y. (2007). "A Brief Note on the 2007 Excavation at Ille Cave, Palawan, the Philippines". Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. The Institute of Archaeology. 18: 161–166. doi:10.5334/pia.308.
  3. ^ Archaeological Studies Program, University of the Philippines. (n.d.). Dewil Valley, New Ibajay Archaeological Investigations. Retrieved November 8, 2014, from Archaeological Studies Program: http://asp.upd.edu.ph/palawanproject/index.html
  4. ^ Lara, M., Paz, V., & Solheim, W. (2013). Bone Modifications in an Early Holocene Cremation Buriam from Palawan, Philippines. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, Abstract. doi:10.1002/oa.2326
  5. ^ Balbaligo, Y. (2010). Preliminary Report of the Earthenware Pottery from Ille Cave and Rockshelter, Palawan, Philippines. Hukay, 15, 1-20.
  6. ^ Piper, P. J.; Ochoa, J.; Lewis, H.; Paz, V.; Ronquillo, W. P. (2008). "The first evidence for the past presence of the tiger Panthera tigris (L.) on the island of Palawan, Philippines: extinction in an island population". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 264 (1–2): 123–127. Bibcode:2008PPP...264..123P. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2008.04.003.
  7. ^ Van der Geer, A.; Lyras, G.; De Vos, J.; Dermitzakis, M. (2011). "15 (The Philippines); 26 (Carnivores)". Evolution of Island Mammals: Adaptation and Extinction of Placental Mammals on Islands. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 220–347. ISBN 9781444391282.
  8. ^ Ochoa, J.; Piper, P. J. (2017). "Tiger". In Monks, G. (ed.). Climate Change and Human Responses: A Zooarchaeological Perspective. Springer. pp. 79–80. ISBN 978-9-4024-1106-5.
  9. ^ Cayron, J. G. (2011). Archaeology and Exchange in Palawan Island. PhD Thesis, National University of Singapore, Southeast Asian Studies.

Further reading

  • Hara, Y; Cayron, J (2001). "A Preliminary Report on the Excavation of Ille Cave, El Nido, Palawan". Hukay. 3 (1).
  • Pawlik, A (2006). "Analysis of Two Polished Stone Adzes from llle Cave at El Nido, Palawan Island, Philippines". Hukay. 10.
  • Pawlik, Alfred F. (Oct 25, 2014). "Analysis of Two Polished Stone Adzes from Ille Cave at El Nido, Palawan Island, Philippines". Journal of the University of the Philippines Archaelogigal Studies Program. Retrieved 26 December 2015.
  • Pawlik, A (2011). "Have we Overlooked Something? Hafting Traces and Indications of Modern Traits in the Philippine Palaeolithic". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

dewil, valley, located, northernmost, part, palawan, island, province, philippines, that, located, mimaropa, region, archaeological, site, composed, thousands, artifacts, features, according, university, philippines, archaeological, studies, program, closest, . Dewil Valley located in the northernmost part of Palawan an island province of the Philippines that is located in the Mimaropa region is an archaeological site composed of thousands of artifacts and features According to the University of the Philippines Archaeological Studies Program or UP ASP the closest settlement can be found in New Ibajay which is covered by the town capital of El Nido which is located around 9 km 5 6 mi south east of Dewil Valley Physically it measures around 7 km 4 3 mi long and 4 km 2 5 mi wide It is in this place which the Ille Cave one of the main archaeological sites can be found It is actually a network of 3 cave mouths located at its base 1 It has been discovered that this site in particular has been used and occupied by humans over multiple time periods Although excavations for this site have been done since 1998 2 according to UP ASP surveys and recordings have been done as early as the 1920s by Carl Guthe in an attempt to record as many archaeological sites in northern Palawan as possible This sparked the interest of Robert Fox 1970 but was also limited to recordings rather than excavations It was only in 1990 that a full archaeological survey was made by the National Museum of the Philippines and it was only in 1998 that the first test excavation was started In 1999 a full excavation by archaeologists Solheim De La Torre and Bautista Since then multiple excavations have been made with one of the most recent ones being in 2012 Contents 1 Archaeological discoveries 1 1 Ille Cave 1 2 Burials 1 3 Ceramics 1 4 Fossils 1 5 Stone tools 1 6 Cultural heritage 2 References 3 Further readingArchaeological discoveries EditDifferent archaeological evidences led to different revelations about the area During the first excavation in 1998 the archaeologists were able to discover shell middens and human burials Excavations in Ille continued in 2000 and 2002 at the west mouth and east mouth with deeper excavations Evidence of shell middens burials and similar artifacts in previous excavations were found Dating of the cultural deposits below the shell midden placed it at an age of around 10 000 years old 3 Continued excavations in 2004 resulted to the discovery of more human burials In 2005 artifacts such as pottery design and nephrite ornaments reinforced the connection of Palawan to Mainland Southeast Asia 1 Excavations in 2006 resulted to greater understanding of the stratigraphy of the cave and the first cremation burial was first uncovered in the east mouth trench 1 In the field season in 2007 of Ille cave approximately eleven complete and incomplete burials were found in the east and west mouth trenches including possibly human cremations and tiger bones in the east mouth trench 1 2 Further exploration of other cave sites in the valley were explored and evidences of human activity along with archaeological features and burial with grave goods were found near the cave entrance of Pasimbahan cave 2 In 2008 continuing excavations of the Ille site reconfirmed the practice of cremation with the recovery of two cremation features at the 9000 years deposit 1 Ille Cave Edit Ille Cave is part of a massive Late Eocene Pabellion karst formation in New Ibajay El Nido Palawan It is about 100 m 330 ft high and has an overhang about 10 m 33 ft high that extends from the mouth of the cave It is located at the base of a 75 m 246 ft limestone tower The cave has two main mouths facing the south the east mouth and the west mouth Both mouths have large trenches placed on them Vegetation of mostly secondary growth trees surround and top the cave The ground of the cave is mostly dry but some areas are wet due to the water dripping down from the ceiling Based on radiocarbon dating the cave was used as a habitation and burial site Neolithic to Protohistoric In 1998 alone 20 000 artifacts were excavated by the National Museum and the Archaeological Studies Program of the University of the Philippines Diliman and the Solheim Foundation Several artifacts date back to more or less 14 000 years ago Adze blades and their fragments were used as samples to determine the date of the cave and it was discovered that the cave was used extensively during the Paleolithic and Neolithic Ongoing excavation has determined the cave to be continuously inhabited from fairly recent times to the Late Pleistocene So far excavations have provided a cultural timeline down to the Upper Paleolithic and Pleistocene citation needed Burials Edit A total of 32 burials in various phases have been discovered and recorded from this site Most burials at the oldest phase have been found to have bivalve shell beddings under the buried individuals UP ASP 2008 Only two burials were found with associated material culture the first one with a metal point and an infant with an Indo Pacific beaded bracelet The recovered remains point to its community having early and long time burial traditions as well as possibilities of jar burials from sherds found There is an evident practice of cremation of remains as both human and animal remains with evidences of burning were found a pit making this the only evident cremation cemetery of this age so far An evidence of a complex burial ritual was also discovered The ritual involves an elaborate process of defleshing and disarticulation of bones crushing of large bones and lastly cremation and burial As the remains were also found to be tightly concentrated and compact it was suggested that it might have been placed in a container that decomposed later on 4 The found remains were suggested to be of a young adult to middle adult female dated 9000 9400 years old Currently this is the best documented burial of this kind in Southeast Asia and this is the second archaeological burial clarification needed in the Philippines Ceramics Edit A variety of earthenware pottery sherds were recovered from the site amounting to approximately 12 600 pieces Unfortunately these finds cannot be confidently associated with any of the surfaces in the site due to turbation postdepositional disturbance of the layers where most of the sherds were discovered However some of the decorated sherds were traced back to 4000 5000 years ago mostly red slipped with impressed circular designs with some circles filled white with either lime or clay Other sherds were associated with the Metal Period which was around 2500 to 1500 years ago in Philippine Archaeology due to its designs with geometric forms with some painted red commonly associated with this period Large pieces of undecorated sherds were also found that may have been fragments from burial jars Majority of the pottery decorations are associated with Sa Hyunh Kalanay pottery Variations of the designs in both technical and stylistic aspects between the pottery from Ille Cave and other sites in Dewil Valley suggests that these may have been adapted from other traded pottery Evidence of pottery firing have also been found in the Ille cave 5 While there are no primary jar burials in this site Ille pottery would have probably played a vital role in burial practices of its communities of practice Tradeware although limited were also found in Dewil Valley Tradeware sherds recovered from the Ille platform were mostly brown stoneware celadon whiteware and brownware These brown glazed shards are determined to be dusan jars from the 10th century On the other hand shards found on the Ille tower were blue and white and quite a lot in number making them easy to pick out Fossils Edit Many fossil remains had been dug up in different sites in Dewil Valley An excavation in the Ille Cave near the village of New Ibajay provided the first proof that the tiger Panthera tigris once roamed the island of Palawan A complete basal phalanx of the second digit of the left manus and the distal portion of a sub terminal phalanx of the second digit of the left manus of a tiger specimen were recovered from the site Also a distal end and midshaft of a sub terminal phalanx of another tiger were obtained 6 Additionally the condition of the tiger subfossils dated to approximately 12 000 to 9 000 years ago differed from other fossils in the assemblage dated to the Upper Paleolithic The tiger subfossils showed longitudinal fracture of the cortical bone due to weathering which suggests that they had post mortem been exposed to light and air Tiger parts were commonly used as amulets in South and Southeast Asia so it may be that the tiger parts were imported from elsewhere as is the case with tiger canine teeth which were found in Ambangan sites dating to the 10th to 12th centuries in Butuan Mindanao On the other hand the proximity of Borneo and Palawan also makes it likely that the tiger had colonized Palawan from Borneo before the Early Holocene 7 8 From the late Pleistocene until the early Holocene epoch there was an abundance of deer in the island However deer became rarer while the number of pigs increased during Mid Holocene based on the records from the Ille and Pasimbahan sites Ochoa et al 2014 specify said that the increased number of pig remains and scarcity of deer in the middle Holocene middens of Pasimbahan also strengthen the observation that there is a clear shift from deer to pig hunting by the middle Holocene Aside from faunal remains plant fossils were also recovered from the different sites Many plant remains such as seeds wood fragments and plant tissues were obtained from the Pasimbahan Magsanib site After the sampling of archaeobotanical remains results showed that six out of the eleven plant tissues seeds and nuts were found to be consistently transformed either charred or probably mineralized state Ochoa et al 2014 specify The recovered seeds of Boehmeria Platanifolia and Macaranga were also said to be mineralized Carbonized remains found include all fragments of Canarium hirsutum and another nut parenchymatous tissues and wood fragments Archaeobotany evidences from the site also point that the inhabitants practiced arboticulture and the collection of wild nuts 9 Stone tools Edit In total there are more than 1000 stone tools discovered out of 50 000 artefacts recorded from Ille Cave a part of Dewil Valley located in Brgy New Ibajay El Nido Palawan since the start of the excavations in 1998 under the direction of Wilhelm Solheim These stone tools and other artifacts recovered helped provide estimate timeline for the deposit of the cave for the site 1 Excavations of both east and west mouth of Ille Cave in 2005 by the UP ASP also showed presence of other stone materials and stone tools It was reported that the sequence in the east mouth that was of silty topsoil contained post Neolithic artifacts which includes stone and shell beads In the west mouth some graves were found with stone adze which may date to an early phase Stone adze was also one of the most significant artifacts found in the excavation in the southern half of the trench of the west mouth Lewis et al 2006 specify Aside from this stone flakes were also found in Phase E the habitation and cremation practice phase dated 8 000 to c a 10 000 of Pasimbahan site located within the Magsanib district of Dewil In addition the assemblage of artifacts discovered by the UP ASP and National Museum in the deposit labeled Midden 2 one of the caves in the Dewil Valley which was first investigated for its archaeological material in the year 2007 were composed of mainly of stone tools together with consumed animal remains and shell fish Stone tools found in Midden 2 were cobble size stone tools associated with shell food remains and pig bones These finds negated the hypothesis that the deposits labeled Midden 2 were not actually an in situ assemblage of stones bones and shells Ronquillo et al 2008 specify Cultural heritage Edit In the 1960s Robert Fox 1970 headed a National Museum team that continued Guthe s work in northern Palawan new sites were added to the list of sites first described by Guthe A good number of these sites were from small islands located in Bacuit Bay Of the sites Guthe surveyed there were a few that National Museum excavated One such site excavated in the 1960s was Leta leta cave Located in Lagen island in the bay of Bacuit the conclusion of the 1960s excavation led Fox 1970 to confidently describe the archaeology as a Metal Age burial site The excavation was highlighted by the recovered unique earthenware jar with a mouth fashioned to look like a yawning shouting person This unique jar is now considered a national heritage artefact and displayed in the National Museum in Manila The research and heritage work at Dewil has accumulated much information throughout its years of existence In 2005 more artefacts were recovered at Ille in the form of pottery design and nephrite ornaments that reinforced the Mainland Southeast Asian connection of the site In 2006 the excavation at Ille further expanded to include areas inside the cave itself There were more artefacts recovered and the understanding of the stratigraphy became clearer Excavation on the southern half of the trench continued with the aim of understanding the nature of having Neolithic and Metal Period deposits at deeper levels compared to most of the area of the trench Further excavation on these contexts yielded more materials such as pottery fragments and human remains Some of the pottery fragments were found in concentration and belong to one vessel Some of the most significant artefacts found in this square were a stone adze a complete pottery pedestal base and a Melo amphora shell dipper In total there are more than 50 000 artefacts recorded from Ille since the start of the excavations in 1998 broken down to around 25 000 ceramics 23 000 shell and bone artefacts 1 000 stone tools and 1 000 metal artefacts and other materials References Edit a b c d e f Paz V Ronquillo W Lewis H Piper P Carlos J Robles E Xhauflair H 2008 Palawan Island Paleohistoric Research Project Report on the 2008 Valley field season Research Project Archaeological Studies Program of the Philippines National Museum of the Philippines Archaeological Studies Program of the Philippines Retrieved November 8 2014 from www researchgae net a b c Balbaligo Y 2007 A Brief Note on the 2007 Excavation at Ille Cave Palawan the Philippines Papers from the Institute of Archaeology The Institute of Archaeology 18 161 166 doi 10 5334 pia 308 Archaeological Studies Program University of the Philippines n d Dewil Valley New Ibajay Archaeological Investigations Retrieved November 8 2014 from Archaeological Studies Program http asp upd edu ph palawanproject index html Lara M Paz V amp Solheim W 2013 Bone Modifications in an Early Holocene Cremation Buriam from Palawan Philippines International Journal of Osteoarchaeology Abstract doi 10 1002 oa 2326 Balbaligo Y 2010 Preliminary Report of the Earthenware Pottery from Ille Cave and Rockshelter Palawan Philippines Hukay 15 1 20 Piper P J Ochoa J Lewis H Paz V Ronquillo W P 2008 The first evidence for the past presence of the tiger Panthera tigris L on the island of Palawan Philippines extinction in an island population Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 264 1 2 123 127 Bibcode 2008PPP 264 123P doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2008 04 003 Van der Geer A Lyras G De Vos J Dermitzakis M 2011 15 The Philippines 26 Carnivores Evolution of Island Mammals Adaptation and Extinction of Placental Mammals on Islands John Wiley amp Sons pp 220 347 ISBN 9781444391282 Ochoa J Piper P J 2017 Tiger In Monks G ed Climate Change and Human Responses A Zooarchaeological Perspective Springer pp 79 80 ISBN 978 9 4024 1106 5 Cayron J G 2011 Archaeology and Exchange in Palawan Island PhD Thesis National University of Singapore Southeast Asian Studies Further reading EditHara Y Cayron J 2001 A Preliminary Report on the Excavation of Ille Cave El Nido Palawan Hukay 3 1 Pawlik A 2006 Analysis of Two Polished Stone Adzes from llle Cave at El Nido Palawan Island Philippines Hukay 10 Pawlik Alfred F Oct 25 2014 Analysis of Two Polished Stone Adzes from Ille Cave at El Nido Palawan Island Philippines Journal of the University of the Philippines Archaelogigal Studies Program Retrieved 26 December 2015 Pawlik A 2011 Have we Overlooked Something Hafting Traces and Indications of Modern Traits in the Philippine Palaeolithic a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dewil Valley amp oldid 1143593645 Ille Cave, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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