Localised deposits of Late Pleistocene and Holocene bird bones occur in wetlands throughout New Zealand. These are characterised by dense accumulations of mostly disarticulated bones, with assemblages dominated by large, flightless bird taxa; in particular the extinct ratite moa (Aves: Dinornithiformes). A wide range of deposition mechanisms were historically proposed for these sites, including large floods and stampedes during wildfires. We outline a simple method for analysing the orientation and spatial distribution of bones within these deposits using GIS software, and apply this method to the interpretation of three such deposits from South Island, New Zealand. The results are consistent with non-catastrophic, periodic miring of indivi...
A modern Lesser Flamingo (Phoeniconaias minor) assemblage was collected along the shoreline of Lake ...
The human colonisation of New Zealand in the late thirteenth century AD led to catastrophic impacts ...
The extinct, flightless moa of New Zealand included some of the largest birds to have existed and po...
<p>Many of New Zealand’s coastal sand dune systems contain naturally accumulated deposits of late Ho...
The avifauna from the Glencrieff swamp deposit in North Canterbury, South Island, New Zealand, is de...
It is often assumed that all avifaunal remains recovered from archaeological contexts have been depo...
The cause(s) of the worldwide Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions and their effects on modern ec...
This thesis examines patterns of bone remains from big-game hunting in New Zealand archaeological si...
A fossil deposit excavated from the floor of Kids Cave, West Coast, South Island, New Zealand, is in...
This study is an archaeological examination of the prehistoric hunting of moa, a family (Dinornithid...
New Zealand offers a unique opportunity to investigate the response of extinct megafaunal ecosystems...
The extinction date of the giant flightless New Zealand ratite bird, the crested moa (Pachyornis aus...
Also published as a journal article: Records of the Australian Museum, 2010; 62(1):105–114Fossil egg...
We provide the first complete review of soft tissue remains from New Zealand birds that became extin...
The nine currently recognized species of moa (Order – Dinornithiformes; Bonaparte 1853) suffered ext...
A modern Lesser Flamingo (Phoeniconaias minor) assemblage was collected along the shoreline of Lake ...
The human colonisation of New Zealand in the late thirteenth century AD led to catastrophic impacts ...
The extinct, flightless moa of New Zealand included some of the largest birds to have existed and po...
<p>Many of New Zealand’s coastal sand dune systems contain naturally accumulated deposits of late Ho...
The avifauna from the Glencrieff swamp deposit in North Canterbury, South Island, New Zealand, is de...
It is often assumed that all avifaunal remains recovered from archaeological contexts have been depo...
The cause(s) of the worldwide Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions and their effects on modern ec...
This thesis examines patterns of bone remains from big-game hunting in New Zealand archaeological si...
A fossil deposit excavated from the floor of Kids Cave, West Coast, South Island, New Zealand, is in...
This study is an archaeological examination of the prehistoric hunting of moa, a family (Dinornithid...
New Zealand offers a unique opportunity to investigate the response of extinct megafaunal ecosystems...
The extinction date of the giant flightless New Zealand ratite bird, the crested moa (Pachyornis aus...
Also published as a journal article: Records of the Australian Museum, 2010; 62(1):105–114Fossil egg...
We provide the first complete review of soft tissue remains from New Zealand birds that became extin...
The nine currently recognized species of moa (Order – Dinornithiformes; Bonaparte 1853) suffered ext...
A modern Lesser Flamingo (Phoeniconaias minor) assemblage was collected along the shoreline of Lake ...
The human colonisation of New Zealand in the late thirteenth century AD led to catastrophic impacts ...
The extinct, flightless moa of New Zealand included some of the largest birds to have existed and po...