0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 90%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
键盘快捷键
Shortcuts Open/Close/ or ?
播放/暂停空格键
增大音量↑
减小音量↓
快进5秒→
快退5秒←
打开/关闭字幕c
全屏/離開全螢幕f
静音/取消静音m
Decrease Caption Size-
Increase Caption Size+ or =
跳转至%0-9
返回
Walk through Yung Shue Wan on Lamma Island and below your feet could be pottery and other items dating back 6,000 years. Archaeologists Mick Atha and Kennis Yip researched the back beach of Sha Po village on Lamma. Their research tells the story of people at different times who would come in dugout boats to fish or forage, to make jewellery, or bream their boats. They are the co-authors of the book of their research, Piecing Together Sha Po: Archaeological Investigations and Landscape Reconstruction. Mick Atha told Annemarie about some of their finds and the work of Father Daniel Finn in the 1930s.
Piecing Together Sha Po
2017-04-15Walk through Yung Shue Wan on Lamma Island and below your feet could be pottery and other items dating back 6,000 years. Archaeologists Mick Atha and Kennis Yip researched the back beach of Sha Po village on Lamma. Their research tells the story of people at different times who would come in dugout boats to fish or forage, to make jewellery, or bream their boats. They are the co-authors of the book of their research, Piecing Together Sha Po: Archaeological Investigations and Landscape Reconstruction. Mick Atha told Annemarie about some of their finds and the work of Father Daniel Finn in the 1930s.