Imagine a shoreline where canoes creak at dawn and gardens slope up from the reef. Archaeological evidence from late-pre-contact Vanuatu points to mixed subsistence strategies: intensive horticulture (taro, yams, breadfruit), reef and open-ocean fishing, and the management of domesticates and forest resources. Settlement traces at Efate and nearby islands suggest hamlets and family compounds organized around coastal access and productive gardens.
Craft traditions—carved wood, shell ornamentation, and locally produced ceramics—reflect both continuity and localized innovation. Exchange of high-value goods, such as obsidian or shell, maintained inter-island links; oral histories recorded at European contact hint at ranked social leadership and ritual specialists, though archaeological data on social hierarchy in this window remain nuanced and site-specific.
Daily life was anchored by mobility: canoe technology enabled travel, trade, and social alliance across the archipelago. Environmental management, including arboriculture and agroforestry, shaped resilient island economies. However, because archaeological sampling from this 1450–1650 CE interval is limited, many aspects of household organization and social complexity remain incompletely documented.