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Abstract
This chapter considers whether human responses can be charted across oceans. It starts in New Zealand and unpicks the archaeology from a site called Waitore where an entire village was spread across the landscape by a 15th century tsunami. It then moves into the Pacific to look at the effects on early Polynesian settlers as they moved across the ocean. A minor aside diverts to Israel, fieldwork experiences there, and the discovery of a tsunami deposit made up almost entirely of pottery and what that tells us about the waves. Returning to the Pacific archipelago of Wallis and Futuna the chapter reviews regional archaeology that shows the after-effects of a large 15th century tsunami involving war-like invasion from other islands, and a retreat from Wallis westward in the direction that the Polynesians came from, a unique example of a region-wide response to a tsunami, with warfare ensuing between islands.
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