@article{oai:ir.kagoshima-u.ac.jp:00002522, author = {新田, 栄治}, issue = {2}, journal = {南海研紀要}, month = {2016-10-27}, note = {There are many sites on Takaroa Atoll, Western Tuamotus, French Polynesia. There are marae, maite (taro cultivation ditches), habitation sites, and fishhook ateliers. The author undertook the archaeological survey from July 2 to 17, 1980. This investigation is made fifty years after K.P.Emory's first survey on Takaroa. The study focused on marae and maite. The marae on Takaroa can be classified into three types., (1) Composed of a main platform surrounded by small ones, and a chair in the court., (2) Composed of a main platform surrounded by small ones, boxes and uprights, and a chair in the court., (3) Enclosed by the low stone walls or low platforms., Although the construction of marae on Takaroa resembles that of Emory's inland type in the Society Islands and one of the Western Tuamotu types, it is peculiar to Takaroa and are not seen on any islands in Polynesia. Someone says that there can be found the resemblence between the marae on Takaroa and those of Necker Island, but it is not able to determine the interrelation between these two isolated islands. The maite, which are common on the atolls in Polynesia, are widely distributed on almost the whole of Takaroa. This leads us to the hypothesis that the people were depended on cultivated taro as well as marine resources.}, pages = {144--162}, title = {タカロア島の遺跡とその諸問題}, volume = {4}, year = {} }