Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-wg55d Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-05T12:33:18.302Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

1.37 - The Later Prehistory of Australia

from IV. - The Pacific

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2014

Caroline Bird
Affiliation:
Western Australian Museum
Colin Renfrew
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

Introduction

Australia is unique in that it is the only continent peopled exclusively by hunter-gatherers until the arrival of European settlers in the late 18th century ce. Ethnographic and historical information from the last two centuries paints a picture of an extraordinarily diverse society, with a richly creative spiritual life and a range of highly successful adaptations to different environments. Archaeological evidence also indicates that Australian Aboriginal society over the last ten thousand years was dynamic and innovative. Holocene Australia therefore provides a unique perspective on the range of variability of hunter-gatherer societies in both space and time. Why and how this adaptation persisted in Australia, when elsewhere the hunter-gatherer way of life survived only in marginal environments, are also of interest and call into question the notion of inevitable progress to social and economic complexity.

Archaeologists traditionally draw a distinction between the Pleistocene and the Holocene. The profound environmental changes that occurred with the retreat of the ice some ten thousand years ago are associated with major economic and social transformations leading to the emergence of agriculture and the development of complex urban societies in many areas of the world. However, Australian prehistory does not easily fit this pattern. The absence of significant continental glaciation means that environmental change is more usefully understood through long-term trends in precipitation. Indeed, the stabilisation of sea levels by about six thousand years ago is arguably a more useful division. At this time, rising sea levels finally severed the land connections between mainland Australia and Tasmania and New Guinea, and substantial areas of the continental shelf were inundated.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allen, H. 1979. Left out in the cold: why the Tasmanians stopped eating fish. The Artefact 4: 1–10.Google Scholar
Attenbrow, V. 2004. What’s changing: population size or land-use patterns? Terra Australis 21. Pandanus Books, Australian National University: Canberra.
Barker, B. C. 1991. Nara Inlet 1: coastal resource use and the Holocene marine transgression in the Whitsunday Islands, central Queensland. Archaeology in Oceania 26: 102–9.Google Scholar
Beaton, J. M. 1985. Evidence for a coastal occupation time-lag at Princess Charlotte Bay (North Queensland) and implications for coastal colonization and population growth theories for Aboriginal Australia. Archaeology in Oceania 20: 1–20.Google Scholar
Bird, C. F. M. & Frankel, D. 1991. Chronology and explanation in western Victoria and south-east South Australia. Archaeology in Oceania 26: 1–16.Google Scholar
Bird, C. F. M. 2001. Excavations at Koongine Cave: lithics and land-use in the Terminal Pleistocene and Holocene of South Australia. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 67: 49–83.Google Scholar
Black, M. P., Mooney, S. D. & Haberle, S. G. 2007. The fire, human and climate nexus in the Sydney Basin, eastern Australia. The Holocene 17: 465–78.Google Scholar
Bowdler, S. 1980. Fish and culture: a Tasmania polemic. Mankind 12: 334–40.Google Scholar
Bowdler, S. 1981. Hunters in the highlands: Aboriginal adaptations in the eastern Australian uplands. Archaeology in Oceania 16: 99–111.Google Scholar
Builth, H., Kershaw, A. P., White, C., Roach, A., Hartney, L., McKenzie, M., Lewis, T. & Jacobsen, G. 2008. Environmental and cultural change on the Mt Eccles lava-flow landscapes of southwest Victoria. The Holocene 18: 413–24.Google Scholar
Butlin, N. 1983. Our Original Aggression. Allen and Unwin: Sydney.
Clarkson, C. 2006. Explaining point variability in the eastern Victoria River region, Northern Territory. Archaeology in Oceania 41: 97–106.Google Scholar
Colley, S. & Jones, R. 1987. New fish bone data from Rocky Cape, northwest Tasmania. Archaeology in Oceania 22: 67–71.Google Scholar
Cosgrove, R. 1995. Late Pleistocene behavioural variation and time trends: the case from Tasmania. Archaeology in Oceania 30: 83–104.Google Scholar
Coutts, P. J. F., Frank, R. K. & Hughes, P. 1978. Aboriginal Engineers of the Western District, Victoria. Records of the Victorian Archaeological Survey 7. Ministry for Conservation: Melbourne.
Critchett, J. 1990. A “Distant Field of Murder”: Western District Frontiers 1834–1848. Melbourne University Press: Melbourne.
David, B. 2002. Landscapes, Rock Art and the Dreaming. Leicester University Press: London.
David, B. & Chant, D. 1995. Rock art and regionalisation in North Queensland prehistory. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 37 (2): 357–528.Google Scholar
Davidson, I., Cook, N., Fischer, M., Ridges, M., Ross, J. & Sutton, S. 2005. Archaeology in another country: exchange and symbols in north-west central Queensland, pp. 103–30 in (Macfarlane, I., with Mountain, M.-J. & Paton, R., eds.) Many Exchanges: Archaeology, History, Community and the Work of Isabel McBryde. Aboriginal History Monograph 11. Australian National University: Canberra.
Dodson, J., Fullagar, R. & Head, L. 1992. Dynamics of environment and people in the forested crescents of temperate Australia, pp. 115–59 in (Dodson, J., ed.) The Naive Lands: Prehistory and Environmental Change in the Southwest Pacific. Longman Cheshire: Melbourne.
Draper, N. 1987. Context for the Kartan: a preliminary report on excavations at Cape du Couedic rockshelter, Kangaroo Island. Archaeology in Oceania 22: 1–8.Google Scholar
Frankel, D. 1986. Excavations in the lower south east of South Australia, November 1985. Australian Archaeology 30: 71–2.Google Scholar
Godfrey, M. C. S. 1989. Shell midden chronology in southwestern Victoria: reflections of change in prehistoric population and subsistence. Archaeology in Oceania 24: 65–9.Google Scholar
Gould, R. A. 1977. Puntutjarpa Rockshelter and the Australian Desert Culture. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 54: New York.
Hallam, S. J. 1975. Fire and Hearth. Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies: Canberra.
Head, L. 1983. Environment as artefact: a geographic perspective on the Holocene occupation of southwestern Victoria. Archaeology in Oceania 18: 73–80.Google Scholar
Head, L. 1986. Palaeological contributions to Australian prehistory. Archaeology in Oceania 21: 121–9.Google Scholar
Hiscock, P. 1994. Technological responses to risk in Holocene Australia. Journal of World Prehistory 8: 267–92.Google Scholar
Hiscock, P. 1999. Holocene coastal occupation of western Arnhem Land, pp. 91–103 in (Hall, J. & McNiven, I., eds.) Australian Coastal Archaeology. Australian National University: Canberra.
Hiscock, P. 2006. Blunt and to the point: changing technological strategies in Holocene Australia, pp. 69–95 in (I. Lilley, ed.) Archaeology of Oceania: Australia and the Pacific Islands. Blackwell: Oxford.
Hiscock, P. 2008. Archaeology of Ancient Australia. Routledge: London.
Hiscock, P. & Attenbrow, V. 1998. Early Holocene backed artefacts from Australia. Archaeology in Oceania 33: 49–63.Google Scholar
Hiscock, P. 2004. A revised sequence of backed artefact production at Capertee 3. Archaeology in Oceania 39: 94–9.Google Scholar
Hiscock, P. & Veth, P. 1991. Change in the Australian desert culture: a reanalysis of tulas from Puntutjarpa rockshelter. World Archaeology 22: 332–45.Google Scholar
Holdaway, S. J., Fanning, P. & Rhodes, E. 2008. Challenging intensification: human-environment interactions in the Holocene geoarchaeological record from western New South Wales, Australia. The Holocene 18: 403–12.Google Scholar
Holdaway, S. J. & Stern, N. 2004 A Record in Stone: The Study of Australia’s Flaked Stone Artefacts. Aboriginal Studies Press: Canberra.
Jones, R. 1969. Fire stick farming. Australian Natural History 16: 224–28.Google Scholar
Jones, R. 1977. The Tasmanian paradox, pp. 189–204 in (Wright, R. V. S., ed.) Stone Tools as Cultural Markers: Change, Evolution and Complexity. Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies: Canberra.
Jones, R. 1978. Why did the Tasmanians stop eating fish?, pp. 11–48 in (Gould, R. A., ed.) Explorations in Ethnoarchaeology. University of New Mexico Press: Albuquerque.
Kamminga, J. 1982. Over the Edge: Functional Analysis of Australian Stone Tools. Occasional Papers in Anthropology 12, Anthropology Museum: University of Queensland: Brisbane.
Keen, I. 2004. Aboriginal Economy and Society: Australia at the Threshold of Colonisation. Oxford University Press: Oxford.
Lourandos, H. 1983. Intensification: a Late Pleistocene–Holocene archaeological sequence from southwestern Victoria. Archaeology in Oceania 18: 81–94.Google Scholar
Lourandos, H. 1997. Continent of Hunter-Gatherers: New Perspectives in Australian Prehistory. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
Lourandos, H. & Ross, A. 1994. The great “intensification” debate: its history and place in Australian archaeology. Australian Archaeology 38: 54–63.Google Scholar
Luebbers, R. 1978. Meals and Menus: A Study of Change in Prehistoric Coastal Settlement in South Australia. Ph. D. thesis, Australian National University.
Macknight, C. C. 1976. The Voyage to Marege: Macassan Trepangers in Northern Australia. Melbourne University Press: Melbourne.
McBryde, I. 1984. Kulin greenstone quarries: the social contexts of production and distribution for the Mt William Site. World Archaeology 16: 267–85.Google Scholar
McCarthy, M. 2008. The Australian contact shipwrecks program, pp. 227–36 in (Veth, P., Sutton, P. & Neale, M., eds.) Strangers on the Shore: Early Coastal Contacts in Australia. National Museum of Australia Press: Canberra.
McDonald, J. J., Donlon, D., Field, J. H., Fullagar, R. L. K., Coltrain, J. B., Mitchell, P. & Rawson, M. 2007. The first archaeological evidence for death by spearing in Australia. Antiquity 81: 877–85.Google Scholar
Mitchell, S. 1994. Stone exchange network in north-western Arnhem Land, pp. 188–200 in (Sullivan, M., Brockwell, S. & Webb, A., eds.) Archaeology in the North. North Australia Research Unit: Darwin.
Mitchell, T. L. 1848. Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia. Longman: London.
Morse, K. 1999. Coastwatch: Pleistocene resource use on the Cape Range Peninsula, western Australia, pp. 73–78 in (Hall, J. & McNiven, I., eds.) Australian Coastal Archaeology. Australian National University: Canberra.
Morwood, M. J. 2002. Visions from the Past: The Archaeology of Australian Aboriginal Art. Allen and Unwin: Sydney.
Morwood, M. J. & Hobbs, D. R. 1995. Conclusions, pp. 178–85 in (Morwood, M. J. & Hobbs, D. R., eds.) Quinkan Prehistory: The Archaeology of Aboriginal Art in S.E. Cape York Peninsula, Australia. Tempus 3: St. Lucia, Queensland.
Mulvaney, D. J. 1976. The chain of connection: the material evidence, pp. 72–94 in (Peterson, N., ed.) Tribes and Boundaries in Australia. Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies: Canberra.
Mulvaney, J. & Kamminga, J. 1999. Prehistory of Australia. Allen and Unwin: St. Leonards.
O’Connor, S. 1999. A diversity of coastal economies: shell mounds in the Kimberley region in the Holocene, pp. 37–50 in (Hall, J. & McNiven, I., eds.) Australian Coastal Archaeology. Australian National University: Canberra.
O’Connor, S. & Sullivan, M. 1994. Distinguishing middens and cheniers: a case study from the southern Kimberley, W.A. Archaeology in Oceania 29: 16–28.Google Scholar
Pardoe, C. 1988. The cemetery as symbol: the distribution of prehistoric Aboriginal burial grounds in southeastern Australia. Archaeology in Oceania 23: 1–16.Google Scholar
Pardoe, C. 1990. The demographic basis of human evolution in southeastern Australia, pp. 59–70 in (Meehan, B. & White, N., eds.) Hunter-Gatherer Demography: Past and Present. Oceania Monograph 39: Sydney.
Reynolds, H. 1987. Frontier. Allen and Unwin: Sydney.
Robertson, G., Attenbrow, V. & Hiscock, P. 2009. Multiple uses for Australian backed artefacts. Antiquity 83: 296–308.Google Scholar
Sim, R. 1999. Why the Tasmanians stopped eating fish: evidence for Late Holocene expansion in resource exploitation strategies, pp. 263–70 in (Hall, J. & McNiven, I., eds.) Australian Coastal Archaeology. Australian National University: Canberra.
Slack, M. J., Fullagar, R. L. K., Field, J. H. & Border, A. J. 2004. New Pleistocene ages for backed artefact technology in Australia. Archaeology in Oceania 39: 131–7.Google Scholar
Smith, M. 2006. Characterising Late Pleistocene and Holocene stone artefact assemblages from Puritjarra rock shelter: a long sequence from the Australian desert. Records of the Australian Museum 58: 371–410.Google Scholar
Smith, M. 2013. The Archaeology of Australia’s Deserts. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
Smith, M. & Ross, J. 2008. What happened at 1500–1000 cal. bp in central Australia? Timing, impact and archaeological signatures. The Holocene 18: 379–88.Google Scholar
Taçon, P. C. S. 1993. Regionalism in the recent rock art of western Arnhem Land, Northern Territory. Archaeology in Oceania 28: 112–20.Google Scholar
Thomson, D. F. 1949. Economic Structure and the Ceremonial Exchange Cycle in Arnhem Land. Macmillan: Melbourne.
Veth, P. 1999. The occupation of arid coastlines during the Terminal Pleistocene of Australia, pp. 65–72 in (Hall, J. & McNiven, I., eds.) Australian Coastal Archaeology. Australian National University: Canberra.
Walshe, K. 2000. Carnivores, taphonomy and dietary stress at Puntutjarpa, Serpents Glen and Intitjikula. Archaeology in Oceania 35: 74–81.Google Scholar
Webb, S. G. 1984. Intensification, population and social change in southeastern Australia: the skeletal evidence. Aboriginal History 8: 154–72.Google Scholar
Williamson, C. & Harrison, R. 2002. Introduction: “Too many Captain Cooks”? An archaeology of Aboriginal Australia after 1788, pp. 1–13 in (Harrison, R. & Williamson, C., eds.) After Captain Cook: The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia. Sydney University Archaeological Methods Series 8: Sydney.
Woodroffe, C. D., Chappell, J. & Thom, B. G. 1988. Shell middens in the context of estuarine development, South Alligator River, Northern Territory. Archaeology in Oceania 23: 95–103.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×