Skip to main content
Main Secondary Navigation
  • About Ateneo de Manila
  • Schools
  • Research
  • Global
  • Alumni
  • Giving
  • News
  • Events
Main navigation
  • Learn & Grow
  • Discover & Create
  • Make an Impact
  • Campus & Community
  • Apply
  • Home >
  • News >
  • Philippine islands had technologically advanced maritime culture 35,000 years ago

Philippine islands had technologically advanced maritime culture 35,000 years ago

05 Jun 2025 | Timothy James M Dimacali

Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure
Sustainable Cities and Communities
Life Below Water
Life on Land
Partnerships for the Goals

In 15 years of groundbreaking archaeological research, scientists from Ateneo de Manila University, working with international experts and institutions, have established compelling evidence of the pivotal role of the Philippine archipelago in ancient maritime Southeast Asia. They uncovered a story of effective human migration, advanced technological innovation, and long-distance intercultural relations dating back over 35,000 years.

""
A map of Island Southeast Asia (ISEA) and the Sunda region as it appeared roughly 25,000 years ago at the height of the last Ice Age, with locations of archaeological sites surveyed by the Mindoro Archaeology Project. The sites yielded artifacts with remarkably similar characteristics despite separation by thousands of kilometers and deep waters that are almost impossible to cross without sufficiently advanced seafaring knowledge and technology. (Base Map: www.gebco.net, 2014)

The Ateneo researchers' latest publication presents a wealth of data and materials from the Mindoro Archaeology Project, including some of the oldest evidence of the presence of anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) in the Philippine archipelago, in Occidental Mindoro—particularly on Ilin Island; San Jose; and Sta Teresa, Magsaysay.

Mindoro, like most of the main Philippine islands except for Palawan, was never connected to mainland Southeast Asia, neither by land bridges nor by ice sheets, and sea-crossings were always necessary to reach it. This likely spurred the development of sophisticated technologies for traversing and surviving this environment.

Evidence of sophisticated ancient technology on Philippine islands

A variety of finds such as human remains, animal bones, shells, and tools made from stone, bone and shell show that Mindoro’s early inhabitants successfully harnessed both terrestrial and marine resources such that, over 30,000 years ago, they already possessed seafaring capabilities and specific fishing skills that enabled them to catch predatory open-sea fish species, such as bonito and shark, and to establish connections with distant islands and populations in the vast maritime region of Wallacea.

Particularly noteworthy is the innovative use of shells as raw material for tools since more than 30,000 years ago. This culminated in the manufacture of adzes from giant clam shells (Tridacna species), dating back 7,000-9,000 years ago. These bear a striking similarity to shell adzes found across the region of Island Southeast Asia and as far as Manus Island in Papua New Guinea, over 3,000 kilometers away.

""
Samples of ancient technology discovered in and around Mindoro. Clockwise, from upper left: a bone fishing gorge (A) and a possible gorge fragment (B); hammer stones (A-F), pebble tools (G-L), and net sinkers (M, N); obsidian cutting tools from Mindoro (top) and Palawan (bottom), exhibiting similar chemical composition; and Tridacna giant clam shell adzes (A,B) and a shell tool (C). (CREDIT: Photos and figures by A. Pawlik; after Pawlik et al. 2025; Pawlik & Piper 2019; Neri et al., 2015) 

The researchers also found on Ilin Island a human grave dating to around 5,000 years ago, with the body laid to rest in a fetal position and bedded and covered with limestone slabs. The manner of burial was similar to other flexed burials found across Southeast Asia, suggesting shared ideological and social influences and an emerging social complexity across a vast area from the mainland to distant islands.

Mindoro hints at vast, advanced maritime network

Mindoro’s archaeological sites have yielded evidence of culturally sophisticated inhabitants who were behaviorally and technologically adapted to coastal and marine environments. Collectively, these discoveries suggest that Mindoro and nearby Philippine islands were part of an extensive maritime network that existed already during the Stone Age and facilitated cultural and technological exchange between early human populations across Island Southeast Asia for many millennia.

By documenting human habitation over a long period of time, with the emergence of advanced subsistence strategies and maritime technologies, the Mindoro Archaeology Project not only fills critical gaps in the prehistoric record of the Philippines but also redefines the region’s significance in the broader narrative of human migration and adaptation in Island Southeast Asia.

The latest publication of the Mindoro Archeology Project is authored by the Ateneo de Manila University Department of Sociology and Anthropology’s Dr Alfred F Pawlik, Dr Riczar B. Fuentes, and Dr Tanya Uldin; together with Dr Marie Grace Pamela G Faylona of the University of the Philippines - Diliman Department of Anthropology, De La Salle University Department of Sociology and Behavioral Sciences, and Philippine Normal University College of Advanced Studies; and Trishia Gayle R Palconit, PhD student at the University of Ferrara, Italy.

SOURCE:

https://archium.ateneo.edu/sa-faculty-pubs/160/ 

For interview requests and other inquiries, please email media.research@ateneo.edu. Visit archium.ateneo.edu for more information about our latest research and innovations.

Ethnic and Cultural Studies Filipino and Philippine Studies History International and Area Studies Sociology and Anthropology General Interest International Research, Creativity, and Innovation Rosita G Leong School of Social Sciences
Share:

Recent News

Testing Updating of Medical Record

16 Jul 2025

One Big Flight of the tiniest wings: AIS installs 16th pollinator pocket in Ateneo at the Grade School Complex

15 Jul 2025

RGL Hub examines the intersection of health and politics in Brown Bag Session

15 Jul 2025

Updating of Medical Records First Semester SY 2025-2026 (College OHS Memo)

15 Jul 2025

AIS bridges climate change education through interactive workshop

15 Jul 2025

Fire stove project of DS majors receives 2025 ASCEND Excellence Award

15 Jul 2025

From vision to reality: 10 new homes turned over in German Village, GK Kalikasan, Cabiao, Nueva Ecija

15 Jul 2025

AJHS chess wizards Fua and Co help Team PH shine at 23rd ASEAN+ Age Group Chess Championships

15 Jul 2025

Join the Ateneo Art Gallery for an ArtSpeak session with Baguio artists at Ili-likha Artists Wateringhole this 24 July

14 Jul 2025

Application for Credit for the College Board’s Advanced Placement (AP) or International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (IB DP) for the First Semester of SY 2025-2026 (OUR Memo)

14 Jul 2025

You may also like these articles

Eagle1

16 Jul 2025

Testing Updating of Medical Record

Immunization Record

RGL Brown Bag Session: Health is Political: The Elections as a Social Determinant of Health

15 Jul 2025

RGL Hub examines the intersection of health and politics in Brown Bag Session

On 5 July 2025, the Dr Rosita G Leong Primary Healthcare Hub (RGL Hub) held another Brown Bag session at Heyden Hall, Manila Observatory, Ateneo

Eagle1

15 Jul 2025

Updating of Medical Records First Semester SY 2025-2026 (College OHS Memo)

15 July 2025 TO: Undergraduate and Graduate Students FROM: Higher Education Office of Health Services-College SUBJECT: Updating of Medical Records First Semester SY 2025-2026 Please

CF

15 Jul 2025

AIS bridges climate change education through interactive workshop

Last 08 July 2025, the Ateneo Institute of Sustainability (AIS) hosted a three-hour workshop modeled after Climate Fresk , a global, science-based collaborative mapping project

Salutuan

15 Jul 2025

Fire stove project of DS majors receives 2025 ASCEND Excellence Award

This year’s ASCEND Excellence Award for College Coursework Research was awarded to Team Kaibanan sa Kalambuan, composed of Christine Noelle Choo, Glenn Derwin Dela Torre

GKA July 1

15 Jul 2025

From vision to reality: 10 new homes turned over in German Village, GK Kalikasan, Cabiao, Nueva Ecija

On 12 April 2025, ten families were formally welcomed into their new homes during a house turnover ceremony at the German Village in Gawad Kalinga

Katipunan Avenue, Loyola Heights, Quezon City 1108, Philippines

info@ateneo.edu

+63 2 8426 6001

Connect With Us
  • Contact Ateneo
  • A to Z Directory
  • Social Media
Information for
  • Current Students
  • Prospective Students
  • International Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Researchers & Visiting Academics
  • Parents
  • Donors & Partners
  • Visitors & Media
  • Careers
Security & Emergency
  • COVID-19
  • Campus Safety
  • Network & Tech
  • Emergency Management
  • Disaster Preparedness
Digital Resources
  • AteneoBlueCloud
  • Archium
  • Rizal Library
  • Ateneo Mail (Staff)
  • Ateneo Student Email
  • Alumni Mail
  • Branding & Trademarks
  • Data Privacy
  • Acceptable Use Policy
  • Report Website Issues
  • Ateneo Network
  • Philippine Jesuits

Copyright © 2022 Ateneo de Manila University. All rights reserved. | info@ateneo.edu | +63 2 8426 6001