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Universitas Hasanuddin
Research output:Contribution to journal›Article›peer-review
The barkcloth beater of Sulawesi and its changes over time
Nur M.
Antiquity
Q1Published: 2025
Abstract
The tradition of beating bark to produce cloth probably emerged in South China before spreading to Island Southeast Asia with the Austronesian cultural expansion (5000–3500 BP). Type IV barkcloth beaters found on the island of Sulawesi mark a technological leap from mainland examples and the discovery of 16 such beaters at Buttu Batu pushes the local adoption of this type back to c. 2111–1933 BP. Combining archaeological examples with extensive ethnographic research, the authors document an early-twentieth-century diversification in the patterning of grooves on type IV beaters, revealing a unique innovation aimed at improving barkcloth quality in response to increasing competition.
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10.15184/aqy.2025.56Other files and links
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