This book provides readers with a unique understanding of the ways in which Aboriginal people interacted with their environment in the past at one particular location in western New South Wales. It also provides a statement showing how geoarchaeology should be conducted in a wide range of locations throughout Australia. One of the key difficulties faced by all those interested in the interaction between humans and their environment in the past is the complex array of processes acting over different spatial and temporal scales. The authors take account of this complexity by integrating three key areas of study – geomorphology, geochronology and archaeology – applied at a landscape scale, with the intention of understanding the record of how Australian Aboriginal people interacted with the environment through time and across space. This analysis is based on the results of archaeological research conducted at the University of New South Wales Fowlers Gap Arid Zone Research Station between 1999 and 2002 as part of the Western New South Wales Archaeology Program. The interdisciplinary geoarchaeological program was targeted at expanding the potential offered by archaeological deposits in western New South Wales, Australia. The book contains six chapters: the first two introduce the study area, then three data analysis chapters deal in turn with the geomorphology, geochronology and archaeology of Fowlers Gap Station. A final chapter considers the results in relation to the history of Aboriginal occupation of Fowlers Gap Station, as well as the insights they provide into Aboriginal ways of life more generally. Analyses are well illustrated through the tabulation of results and the use of figures created through Geographic Information System software.
Aboriginal Archaeology in the Eastern Chichester Ranges, Northwest Australia Caroline Bird, James W. Rhoads. Hiscock, P. (2008). Archaeology of ancient Australia. ... Geoarchaeology of Aboriginal landscapes in semi-arid Australia.
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within the repatriation field for Indigenous communities and institutions internationally, particularly in the location ... include The Desert Fayum Reinvestigated and A Geoarchaeology of Aboriginal Landscapes in Semi- arid Australia.
Fernández-Mier, M., Fernández-Fernández, J., González, P.A., López-Sáez, J.A., Pérez-Díaz, S., and Hernández-Beloqui, B., 2014. The investigation of currently inhabited villages of medieval origin: agrarian archaeology in Asturias ...
The Early to Mid-Holocene Landscape Archaeology of the Fayum North Shore, Egypt Simon J. Holdaway, Willeke Wendrich ... His latest books are A Geoarchaeology of Aboriginal Landscapes in Semiarid Australia (CSIRO Publishing, ...
Mississippian Towns and Sacred Spaces: Searching for an Architectural Grammar. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. Lewis, R. Barry, Charles Stout, and Cameron Wesson. 1998. “The Design of Mississippian Towns.
Geoarchaeology of aboriginal landscape use in semi-arid Australia. Melbourne: CSIRO Publishing. Inglis R.H., Bosworth W., Bailey G.N. & Rasul N. 2018. Investigating the coastal archaeology and raised coral terraces of the southern Red ...
Geomorphic evolution of a Holocene beach - ridge complex , Lefevre Peninsula , South Australia . Journal of Coastal Research , 2 , 345-362 . BRISTOW , C. S. & PUCILLO , K. 2006. Quantifying rates of coastal progradation from sediment ...
129– 39, Research papers in archaeology and natural history 31, ANH Publications, Canberra. ... Bowdler, S & Lourandos, H 1982, 'Both sides of Bass Strait', in S Bowdler (ed.), Coastal archaeology in eastern Australia, pp.
One result sion , with the supernatural thought the inverse is the location of the largest rock - art and vision of the ... from supernatural time- and the Colorado River region . space , which parallels the ' modern ' natural world .