3.8 Article

The 'Express Train from Taiwan to Polynesia': on the congruence of proxy lines of evidence

Journal

WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 591-600

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/0043824042000303773

Keywords

Island Southeast Asia; Austronesian; genetics; physical anthropology; historical linguistics; migration

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Renfrew's concept of an Indo-European expansion was carefully hedged with strict caveats to avoid earlier methodological and political pitfalls. His 'farming-language dispersal' hypothesis has inspired others to seek similar examples among other language families. This review argues that the model has gone awry in one of these, the 'Express Train from Taiwan to Polynesia' hypothesis. The persistence of the Austronesian language/rice-farming hypothesis results from a cluster of methodological errors that include an overall failure to heed Renfrew's caveats, over-reliance on a controversial putative linguistic homeland and failure to deal with parallel evidence impartially, resulting in unsupported claims of congruence.

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