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Group: Roman Empire: Constantinian dynasty (Nicomedia)

East Micronesia (2,637 – 910 BCE): First …

Years: 2637BCE - 910BCE

East Micronesia (2,637 – 910 BCE): First Colonizations — Atoll Settlement, Arboriculture, and Canoe Networks

Geographic & Environmental Context

East Melanesia includes Kiribati (Gilbert Islands), the Marshall Islands (Ralik and Ratak chains), Nauru (uplifted phosphatic limestone island), and Kosrae (high, volcanic island on the eastern Caroline arc).

  • Anchors: Ralik–Ratak pairs in the Marshalls, Gilbert line atolls in Kiribati, Nauru’s uplifted limestone island, and Kosrae high island at the Carolinian margin.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Holocene stability with ENSO-driven interannual variability; drought-sensitive atolls alternated with wet years; Kosrae’s high island buffered extremes.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Austronesian voyagers (Carolinian–Micronesian sphere) established permanent atoll settlements by the late 2nd–early 1st millennium BCE; Kosrae received colonists during the latter half of this epoch or just after.

  • Transported landscapes: coconut, pandanus, breadfruit, and swamp taro (Cyrtosperma; babai in Kiribati) planted; taro pits excavated into the freshwater lens on larger islets.

  • Marine focus: lagoon netting, line fishing, trap fisheries; seasonal turtle capture; reef gleaning.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Outrigger sailing canoes with crab-claw sails; shell/stone adzes; drilled shell fishhooks; fiber cordage.

  • Stick-chart precursors: mnemonic mapping of islands and swells foreshadowed later Marshallese rebbelib and meddo chart traditions.

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Ralik ⇄ Ratak shuttle networks tied windward–leeward pairs; Gilbert chain linked north–south islets; Kosrae connected to the eastern Carolines; Nauru functioned as a small provisioning node.

Belief & Symbolism

  • Ancestral land-tenure embedded in house-site stones and tree groves; navigators invoked sea and swell spirits; ritual plantings of first breadfruit honored lineage gods.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Arboriculture mosaics (breadfruit–pandanus–coconut) + taro pits anchored caloric security against drought; islet zoning separated gardens, wells, canoe yards, and burial grounds.

Transition

By 910 BCE, a chain of atoll and high-island settlements spanned East Micronesia, using arboriculture and canoe networks to knit sparse lands into a coherent cultural sea.

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