Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-qs9v7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T06:11:58.089Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Prehistoric Discoveries in Siam, 1943–44

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

Extract

It is probably well known that the Japanese compelled Allied prisoners of war to work on the Bangkok-Moulmein railway, which was constructed during the war through the jungles of Siam and Burma. The author, who was captured in Java, arrived at the base camp of Nom-Pladuk on the 9th of February, 1943, and was sent at once to Taroewa, a village situated some 8 miles up-country. Being a member of the so-called ‘nail-shift,’ I started from this camp whenever opportunities presented themselves to study the entire region of the railway and the immediate surroundings as far north as the ‘Three Pagodas Pass’ on the Siam-Burma frontier, where the connection with the Burma section of the railway was accomplished. The total distance involved is somewhat over 140 miles, and the course of the river, the Mei Fingnoi, or Meklong, was always followed. Since all my discoveries were made along the first 75 miles of the railway, the remaining part need hardly be mentioned.

From the outset, I was constantly on the alert for prehistoric remains, this being possible since much ground was removed during the construction of the railway, but methodical investigations were naturally out of the question, while much of the material collected was subsequently lost again. All my scientific notes were taken from me by the Japanese.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1948

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Colani, Madeleine. 1927. L'Age de la pierre dans la province de Hoa-Binh (Tonkin). Mém. Serv. Géol. de l'Indochine, XIV (1927), 1126.Google Scholar
Collings, H. D. 1937. Notes on a Recent Paper, The Melanesoid Civilizations of Eastern Asia. Bull. Raffles Mus., Series B, 1 (1937), 122–3.Google Scholar
de Terra, Hellmut. 1941. Pleistocene Formations and Stone Age Man in China. Inst. de Géo-Biologie Pékin, Publ. no. 6 (1941), 154.Google Scholar
de Terra, Hellmut. 1943. The Pleistocene of Burma. Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., XXXII (1943), 271339.Google Scholar
de Terra, Hellmut. 1943a. Pleistocene Geology and Early Man in Java. Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., XXXII (1943), 437–64Google Scholar
de Terra, H. and Paterson, T. T. 1939. Studies on the Ice Age in India and Associated Human Cultures. Carnegie Inst. of Washington, Publ. no. 493. Washington, D.C., 1939, pp. 1354.Google Scholar
Heine-Geldern, R. 1932. Urheimat und früheste Wanderungen der Austronesier. Anthropos, XXVII (1932), 543619.Google Scholar
Hooton, E.A. 1940. Why men Behave Like Apes and Vice Versa. Princeton, N.J., 1940.Google Scholar
Le Gros Clark, W. E. 1945. Pithecanthropus in Peking. Antiquity, XIX, no. 73 (1945), 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Gros Clark, W. E. 1946. Pleistocene Chronology in the Far East. Antiquity, XX, no. 77 (1946), 912.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCarthy, F. D. 1938. A Comparison of the Prehistory of Australia with that of Indo-China, the Malay Peninsula and the Netherlands East Indies. Proc. Third Cong. of Prehistorians of the Far East, 1938, pp. 3050. (Publ. in Singapore, 1940).Google Scholar
Movius, H. L. (Jr.) 1943. The Stone Age of Burma. Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., XXXII (1943), 341–93.Google Scholar
Movius, H. L. 1944. Early Man and Pleistocene Stratigraphy in Southern and Eastern Asia. Papers Peab. Mus. Arch, and Eth., Harvard Univ., XIX (1944), 1125.Google Scholar
Mysberg, W. A. 1938. On a Neolithic Palae-Melanesian Lower Jaw found at Guak Kepah, Province Wellesley, Straits Settlements. Proc. Third Cong. of Prehistorians of the Far East, 1938, pp. 100–18 (Publ. in Singapore, 1940)Google Scholar
Pei, Wen C. 1939. An Attempted Correlation of Quaternary Geology, Palaeontology and Prehistory in Europe and China. Inst. of Arch. Univ. of London, Occ. Paper no. 2, Geochronological Table no. 1, London, 1939, pp. 316.Google Scholar
Teilhard de Chardin, P. 1941. Early Man in China. Inst. de Géo-Biologie, Pékin, Publ. no. 7 (1941), 199.Google Scholar
Tweedie, M. A. 1942. Prehistory in Malaya. Jour. Royal Asiatic Soc., January, 1942.Google Scholar
Sarasin, Fritz. 1933. Recherches préhistoriques au Siam. L'Anthropologie, XLIII (1933), 140.Google Scholar
van Heekeren, H. R. 1947. Stone Axes from the ‘Railroad of Death’. Ill. London News, vol. 210, no. 5633, April 5, 1947, p. 359.Google Scholar
van Heekeren, H. R. 1947a. Stone Age Discoveries in Siam. Ckronica Naturae, Deel 103, Afl. 1/2 (1947); 12.Google Scholar
van Stein Callenfels, P.V. 1936. The Melanesoid Civilizations of Eastern Asia. Bull. Raffles Mus., Series B, 1 (1936), 4151.Google Scholar
van Stein Callenfels, P. V. and Noone, H. D. 1938. Report on an Excavation in the Rock-Shelter Gol Ba'it, near Sungai Siput (Perak). Proc. Third Cong. of Prehistorians of the Far East, 1938, p. 119–25. (Publ. in Singapore, 1940).Google Scholar
von Koenigswald, G. H. R. 1936. Early Palaeolithic Stone Implements from Java. Bull. Raffles Mus., Series B, 1 (1936), 5260.Google Scholar
von Koenigswald, G. H. R. 1940. Neue Pithecanthropus-Funde, 1936–38: Ein Beitrag zur Kenntnis der Praehominiden. Wetensch. Mededeel. Dienst v. d. Mijnbouw in Nederl.-Indië, no. 28 (1940), 1232.Google Scholar
Weidenreich, Franz. 1945. Giant Early Man from Java and South China. Anth. Papers Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XL (1945), 1134.Google Scholar
Zeuner, F. E. 1945. The Pleistocene Period: Its Climate, Chronology and Faunal Succession. The Ray Society, London, 1945.Google Scholar
Zeuner, F. E. 1946. Dating the Past: An Introduction to Geochronology, London, 1946.Google Scholar