Nagaland University is conducting archaeological research of prehistoric life of Naga communities, seeking climate change mitigation strategies that can aid in providing food security
Published on Jun 16, 2025
By EMN
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DIMAPUR — Nagaland University is currently conducting archaeological research of prehistoric life of Naga communities, seeking climate change mitigation strategies that can aid in providing food security in the region.
In a press release, the university stated that the research covers Holocene and Anthropocene geological time periods.
To respect the heritage and traditional knowledge of Indigenous communities associated with Naga ancestral sites, the researchers are working with Indigenous populations and are actively engaging in community-based participatory research.
The core of this project is archaeology and palaeo climate research towards establishing a basic understanding of the history of Naga life from earliest times to the recent past.
To date, little work has been done in this field and the story of the deep Naga past is fragmentary, lacking details and a well-dated chronology.
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The team is studying two kinds of sites - prehistoric sites where they hope to find clues to the pre-agricultural past and the Naga ancestral village sites, mostly lying beneath modern village settlements.
“These ancestral sites represent pre-colonial indigenous occupation and serve as a collective memory for groups of descent, for example, as part of narratives of group migrations from prominent sites of dispersal,” it stated.
The community-driven multi-disciplinary study is funded for four years (2025-2028) by the Australian Research Council, a Commonwealth organisation within the Australian Government.
It is a collaboration between Nagaland University, University of Sydney, La Trobe University, University of York and the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences, Lucknow, with local government support from the Department of Art and Culture, Nagaland.
“The outcomes of this project will include targeted information for the communities in which the team works, a large number of scientific publications, and wide-ranging community dissemination of key recommendations for actions towards sustainability across Nagaland,” the release stated.
This project is headed by Prof. Tiatoshi Jamir, Department of History and Archaeology, Nagaland University, and includes Dr. Anil Pokharia, Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences; Prof. Alison Betts, Dr. Rebecca Hamilton and Dr. Nicholas Fuller, University of Sydney (Australia); Dr. Michael Spate, La Trobe University (Australia); Dr. Hayley Saul and Dr. Oliver Craig, University of York (UK).
Elaborating on the importance of this research, Prof. Alison Betts said, “We work with communities to uncover the deep history of their villages, to see how their food systems have changed through time and to identify any past adaptations they may have made to altered climatic conditions.”
“Using this knowledge and wider scientific studies, our research will include suggestions and advice that may assist Indigenous communities towards further adaptation in the face of an increasingly environmentally unstable future.”
Prof. Tiatoshi Jamir also stated that the team has already conducted a pilot study at Langa village in Shamator district.
“Langa was abandoned at some point in the historical past and has only recently been reoccupied. The village elders provided their own oral history of the first establishment and the reasons for abandonment. Excavations have uncovered the remains of an earlier village settlement.
“As part of our work targeted towards public outreach, we have produced a short community archaeology film documenting the traditional oral history of the village and the archaeology of this ancestral site with the collaborative efforts of the local communities of Langa, Kuthur, and Yimkhiung Tribal Council (YTC),” he disclosed.
Further study of a similar nature is also on-going at New Phor (Burakha), Meluri district with the support of the local community of New Phor and Pochury Hoho, Jamir added.
The project is a pioneering multi-disciplinary approach to the study of the past, community engagement, agriculture and sustainability.
“The study of the past to inform the future is an increasing trend in academic research, particularly in light of diminishing ecosystems, the loss of traditional knowledge, and the urgent need to develop sustainable food security in the face of impending dramatic environmental change,” the release added.