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Ngā Tohuwhenua Mai Te Rangi: A New Zealand Archeology in Aerial Photographs

Chapter 2: Settlement Patterns

Chapter 2: Settlement Patterns

1 Kawharu (1977: 34-40).

2 Anderson (1980) for southern Ngāi Tahu case.

3 De l'Horme (in de Surville, 1982:127; see quotation in chapter 7); Banks (1958: 58-60).

4 Biggs (1990: 18).

5 Archaeologists for various reasons are more interested in the oldest settlements than they are in recent settlements. Despite this, the general pattern of dates has persistently remained late in the pre-European period, i.e., closer to the time of European arrival, especially in the north.

6 Golson (1959); Davidson (1984: 219-225).

7 There is no single reference work on New Zealand landforms that stresses terrace formations of alluvial or marine origin. The standard text on landforms was edited by Soons and Selby (1982).

8 O'Keeffe (1991: 82-88).

9 Pullar (1962).

10 Soils vary in a subtle fashion over the full extent of an alluvial plain, and the changes are not always marked by distinct changes in the level of terraces.

11 K. Jones (1988a).

12 K. Jones (1988a; 1989a).

13 K. Jones (1989b: 245-249).

14 Steep' is used in an intuitive sense.

15 McGlone (1983).

16 Guthrie-Smith (1970).