Humans were living near West Papua at least 55,000 years ago, study finds

New evidence from West Papua offers fresh clues about how and when humans first moved into the Pacific

Handprints in orange pigment on a rocky wall
Hand stencils of unknown age from the Raja Ampat Islands. Research from these islands sheds light on early human history.
(Image credit: Tristan Russell, CC BY-SA)

In the deep human past, highly skilled seafarers made daring crossings from Asia to the Pacific Islands. It was a migration of global importance that shaped the distribution of our species — Homo sapiens — across the planet.

These mariners became the ancestors of people who live in the region today, from West Papua to Aotearoa New Zealand.

Dylan Gaffney
Associate Professor of Palaeolithic Archaeology, University of Oxford

My research examines long term behavioural changes amongst humans, starting from the last Ice Age through to the last century. The ways that humans responded to a changing climate and environment in the deep past can provide important insights about our species' adaptive abilities and the ways that we might sustainably transform our ecologies in the future.