Southeastern Asia (28,577 – 7,822 BCE): Upper …

Years: 28577BCE - 7822BCE

Southeastern Asia (28,577 – 7,822 BCE): Upper Pleistocene II — Deglaciation, Rock Art Blooms, and Coastal Adaptations

Geographic & Environmental Context

  • Sunda Shelf drowned progressively, shrinking land area and fragmenting populations into true island ecologies.

  • New coastal plains and estuaries formed around retreating shorelines.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Bølling–Allerød warming expanded rainforests and wetlands.

  • Younger Dryas dried conditions briefly; Early Holocene warmth stabilized monsoons.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Cave and shelter occupations proliferated: Niah (Borneo), Lang Rongrien (Thailand), Tabon (Palawan, Philippines).

  • Coastal diets emphasized shellfish, reef fish, dugongs, and sea turtles; inland diets broadened with forest tubers and nuts.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Blade and microlith industries; bone harpoons, shell adzes; ornaments in shell, bone, stone.

  • Ochre cave art in Sulawesi reached new heights (hand stencils, babirusa figures).

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Voyaging routes intensified across Philippines–Sulawesi–Moluccas.

  • Populations adapted to rising seas with maritime networks.

Cultural & Symbolic Expressions

  • Cave art expanded; portable ornaments spread; ritual burial persisted.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Coastal intensification (shellfish–reef fish) mitigated inland drought; island voyaging maintained connections.

Transition

By 7,822 BCE, Southeastern Asia was a landscape of artistic caves, maritime foragers, and increasingly island-focused lifeways.

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