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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
fr sane.’ _ 1 1 .‘ THE DISTRIBUTION OF CULTURES 705 there is evidence that in some kava-drinking has been but recently introduced (it had not spread to Santa Maria of the Banks Islands until the last two decades of the nineteenth century) 1 ; and tattooing is still restricted to East Ornba and North Raga. Again, for example, the pcoplc of Sakau peninsula, in North-East Santo, are very dark and tall ; the young men commonly went nude and the women wore only a small leaf ; taro-irrigation was not known, and their dialect is a. very aberrant form oi Melanesian. This shows clearly that in the matrilineal area there is present an earlier culture from which the elements of the mat-skirt culture are absent. In the patrilineal area we have the culture characterized by the penis-sheath, incision, and the fringed pcttiwat. To this also probably belong the musical bow of Ambryrn and the interior of Malekula, and the special type of basketry or bag—making (see Pl. IVB, I) which is found only in the interior of Malckula, in South Raga, and perhaps in Ambrym. We have thus distinguished between three main cultures which we may call the “ Dual Organization Culture ", the " Mat- Skirt Culture ", and the " Fringed-Skirt Culture ". What can we gather as to their timerelation to each other? We have already shown that the dual organization culture probably extended originally throughout all the islands of the North and North»CentraJ New Ilebrirlcs; the evidence supplied by the distribution of cultures in Malekula goes to show further that the fringed-skirt culture was introduced there bctore that of the mat-skirt, for everywhere in this island the latter has occupied the coastal areas surrounding the fringed-skirt culture to the north, east, and south. It is possible, therefore, to reconstruct the history of the New Hebrides somewhat as follows :— (1) In the beginning there was a rnatrilineal society with dual organization and a division into six MARRIAGE sections. Owing to the practice of marrying the maternal uncle's widow, these six sections very generally broke down and persisted only in Ambrym and possibly South~West Raga. (2) Then there arrived an immigrant culture, bringing with it the rite of incision, the use ot the fringed-skirt, and penis- sheath, the musical bow, and a special type of basketry. This established itself in Epi, Paama, Ambrym, South Raga, and Malekula. We may suppose, too, that it was this culture which ‘ R4 H. Codrington, 1891, p. 351. 1 z T i i I
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