Abstract

ABSTRACTTeti'aroa, located 28 nautical miles (52 km) north of Tahiti, lies at the periphery of the Windward Society islands. At the end of the eighteenth century, this atoll was presumably controlled by the chiefdom of Porionu'u, which included the districts of Pare and Arue on the north coast of Tahiti. This situation is confirmed by a number of ethnohistorical accounts and oral traditions describing an intense traffic of basic resources between the atoll and Tahiti island as well as the specific function of Teti'aroa for Tahitian social elites visiting the atoll for ceremonial or recreational purposes. However, the prehistory of the atoll remains largely unknown and the time‐depth of dominance by Tahitian elites on the atoll is unclear. In this paper, we investigate potential inter‐island relationships between Teti'aroa and other islands in the archipelago and beyond. We present geochemical analyses (energy dispersive X‐ray fluorescence and inductively coupled plasma‐atomic emission spectrometry) of stone tools and elements of ceremonial architecture (marae), which were necessarily imported given the complete subsidence of the volcanic substratum of the island. Our results confirm the regional origin of a majority of artefacts, but also indicate several later long‐distance relationships maintained by Tahitian chiefs.

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