This book is the companion volume to Rainforest Foraging and Farming in
Island Southeast Asia: the Archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak.
Together they present the results of new fieldwork in the caves and new
studies of finds from earlier excavations, a project that has involved a
team of over 70 archaeologists and geographers. Rainforest Foraging and
Farming told the story of human activity in the caves over the past
50,000 years and how that story throws light on the history of our
species in Island Southeast Asia from the time when modern humans first
arrived to recent centuries. Archaeological Investigations in the Niah
Caves describes the very wide range of methodologies used by the project
to collect its evidence, and the key information from those studies
about the changing nature of the rainforest over the past 50,000 years
and how it sustained the lives of the people who used the caves for
shelter or burying their dead. The deep history of rainforest lives
Together, the two volumes affirm the unique importance of the Niah Caves
for world heritage.