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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
CHAPTER VII ECONOMIC LIFE As we have already mentioned, the Malekulans derive the bulk of their food from three sources; the tilling of the soil, ï¬Åshing, and hunting. Of these the ï¬Årst is from an economic standpoint by far the most important, and it will be well, therefore, to consider it ï¬Årst. Unfortunately, very little had been recorded of the technique of agriculture, of the ways in which the land is owned or held, and of the organization of work in the process of preparing the ground, sowing, raising, and harvesting the crops. It seems, however, that these matters are rather differently arranged in South-West Bay and in the north-West districts. LAND TENURE AND Tl-IE CULTIVATION or LAND Seniang In Seniang it is said that no piece of land is unowned, The territory of the whole district is divided up among the different local clans. Each one of these has a clearly deï¬Åned tract, some of which is under cultivation, while some remains unreclairned bush. Inland every such tract is marked off from neighbouring tracts by lines of trees known as mzai oi, which word may be translated “prohibition tree There is no particular species of tree used for this purpose ; the mulamlr, which is prominent in many Malekulan rituals, is very commonly planted, but coco-nuts, bread-fruit trees, and others are also frequent. Indeed, any line of trees all of the same species may be recognized as a Mai ai. In the coastal districts a wall of coral blocks is set up for a boundary. This clan land is subdivided into, or consists of, smaller plots each of which " belongs to â€ù a certain kinship group. The exact nature of this kinship group is not deï¬Åned, but it is a subdivision of a clan, perhaps a number of people having a common patrilineal great-grandfather. We are told that these plots, which include both cultivated and uncultivated ground, appear to be in a constant state of subdivision, repartition, and 172 Z"! 1 » ‘|. gumlasvwaiea _
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