Skeletal remains provide PNG clue

Danish archaeologists have found an ancient skeleton on M'buke Island in Papua New Guinea in what is being described as a sensational discovery.
Danish archaeologists have found an ancient skeleton on M'buke Island in Papua New Guinea in what is being described as a sensational discovery.
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Danish archaeologists searching for pottery in M'buke in Papua New Guinea, claim to have made a sensational discovery that further refutes claims by the Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl that Polynesian culture can originally have come from South America.

A female skeleton found just outside their camp, under 2,000 year-old pottery shards seems to confirm that the Polynesian islands were populated as a result of migration from Asia.

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