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

Years: 2637BCE - 910BCE

West Micronesia (2,637 – 910 BCE): First Colonizations — Marianas Pioneers, Early Palau Settlements, Yap Landfalls

Geographic and Environmental Context

West Micronesia includes the Mariana Islands (Guam, Saipan, Tinian, Rota, and the northern chain), Palau (Babeldaob, Koror, Rock Islands), and Yap (Yap proper and its outer atolls).

  • Anchors: Guam–Saipan–Tinian–Rota (Marianas), Babeldaob–Koror (Palau), Yap proper and nearby atolls.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Holocene stability with ENSO-driven drought/storm interannuals; freshwater lenses critical on limestone islands.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Marianas: among the earliest Remote Oceanic colonizations (c. 1500–1100 BCE). Colonists founded coastal hamlets on leeward flats and embayments; very thin red-slipped pottery (often called “Marianas Red”), shell-tempered, appears alongside shell/bone fishhooks and shell adzes.

  • Palau: initial settlement by late 2nd–early 1st millennium BCE; hamlets on Babeldaob–Koror margins exploited reef–mangrove mosaics and freshwater streams.

  • Yap: first landfalls likely late 2nd–early 1st millennium BCE; small villages near lens-fed wetlands and reef passes.

  • Transported landscapes: coconut, pandanus, breadfruit, and taro took hold; pigs/chickens introduced variably (timing differs by island).

  • Marine focus: lagoon netting and trolling; turtle and pelagic fishing increased; shellfish gleaning ubiquitous.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Outrigger canoes with crab-claw sails; shell/stone adzes; drilled shell fishhooks (including small pelagic forms); fiber cordage from coconut husk; early stone weirs in tidal flats (Palau).

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Marianas chain: inter-island shuttles knit Guam–Saipan–Tinian–Rota;

  • Palau: Rock Islands sheltered canoe routes; Palau exchanged shell adzes and mangrove products with neighbors;

  • Yap: early ties to outer atolls began; voyages westward linked Yap to Caroline pathways.

Belief & Symbolism

  • Ancestral land-tenure embedded in house sites and groves; navigators carried sacred knowledge of stars and swells; shrines at canoe landings marked founding events.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Arboriculture mosaics + lens-managed taro pits buffered drought; distributed islet gardens and reciprocal kin ties hedged cyclones.

Transition

By 910 BCE, Marianas, Palau, and Yap supported permanent settlements linked by canoe circuits — a west Micronesian web of atoll/high-island economies.

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