Clio’s Armada: In the News

Experimental archaeologists recently created and travelled in a Dugout canoe named Sugime from Taiwan to the Ryukyu islands south of Japan.

According to Reuters, they “ simulated methods Paleolithic people would have used and employed replicas of tools from that prehistoric time period such as an axe and a cutting implement called an adze in fashioning the 25-foot-long (7.5-meter) canoe, named Sugime, from a Japanese cedar tree chopped down at Japan’s Noto Peninsula.”

“A crew of four men and one woman paddled the canoe on a voyage lasting more than 45 hours, traveling roughly 140 miles (225 km) across the open sea and battling one of the world’s strongest ocean currents, the Kuroshio. The crew endured extreme fatigue and took a break for several hours while the canoe drifted at sea, but managed to complete a safe crossing to Yonaguni.”

https://www.reuters.com/science/with-primitive-canoe-scientists-replicate-prehistoric-seafaring-2025-06-25/

Leave a comment