- 【Updated on May 12, 2025】 Integration of CiNii Dissertations and CiNii Books into CiNii Research
- Trial version of CiNii Research Knowledge Graph Search feature is available on CiNii Labs
- 【Updated on June 30, 2025】Suspension and deletion of data provided by Nikkei BP
- Regarding the recording of “Research Data” and “Evidence Data”
Cook islands populations today, in relation to European mixtures and inter-island crossbreedings.
-
- KATAYAMA Kazumichi
- Kazumichi KATAYAMA Laboratory of Physical Anthropology Faculty of Science, Kyoto University
-
- TAGAYA Akira
- Department of Anatomy, Osaka City University Medical School
-
- YAMADA Hiroyuki
- First Department of Anatomy, School of Dentistry, Aichi-Gakuin University
-
- KAWAMOTO Keiichi
- First Department of Anatomy, School of Dentistry, Aichi-Gakuin University
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
-
- クック諸島集団の現状一特にヨーロッパ人との混血と諸島内の通婚について
Search this article
Description
As a preliminary study for analysing human biology data, recently collected from Cook Islanders, the reliability of the data in representing the indigenous population of the pre-European period has been assessed in three islands of the Cook group, Rarotonga, Mangaia, and Pukapuka, in terms of the population changes since European contacts and the ongoing process of mixture with foreign strains and of inter-island crossbreeding among the residents. All the islands surveyed suffered a decline in population after European contacts to a moderate extent, but the degree was far slighter than many islands in Eastern Polynesia, suggesting that random genetic drift did not so seriously affect these island populations as to change the genetic compositions significantly. Concerning gene flow from outside through European admixtre and inter-island crossbreeding, the effect appeared to have advanced profoundly on Rarotonga, slightly on Mangaia, but rather negligibly on Pukapuka. It has been concluded that the present-day populations of Pukapuka and probably of Mangaia are still qualified enough to represent the prehistoric indigenous populations, but that on Rarotonga, even living pure-blood Polynesians cannot be considered as representative of the pre-European Rarotongan population.
Journal
-
- Journal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon
-
Journal of the Anthropological Society of Nippon 96 (1), 47-59, 1988
The Anthropological Society of Nippon
- Tweet
Details 詳細情報について
-
- CRID
- 1390001204310720384
-
- NII Article ID
- 130003727086
-
- ISSN
- 1884765X
- 00035505
-
- Text Lang
- en
-
- Data Source
-
- JaLC
- Crossref
- CiNii Articles
- OpenAIRE
-
- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed