Aboriginal migration from South East Asia is the beginning of Australian economic history. Prehistorians have tended to focus on means to sea travel rather than opportunity and motive to migrate. American and Australian measures of sea depth contours throw new light on possible migration paths and the conditions that might have prompted Aboriginal ancestors to move through island SE Asia to Australia. Interpretation of the data depends on a reconsideration of palaeodemography and the introduction of some economic and historical analysis. Several scenarios suggest possible conditions influencing trends and fluctuations in Aboriginal migration over the past 60,000 years
This thesis presents a view of multiple human contacts with Australia, using a variety of data from ...
This book tracks the progress of the prehistoric influx of population into the Pacific region, the l...
The question of when people first arrived in Australia has been the subject of lively debate among a...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
archaeologists. There are two basic schools of archaeological thought as to where Australia’s Indige...
The Southeast Asian region has experienced many episodes of human migration. It may also have been w...
International audienceWe present an Aboriginal Australian genomic sequence obtained from a 100-year-...
International audienceWe present an Aboriginal Australian genomic sequence obtained from a 100-year-...
We present an Aboriginal Australian genomic sequence obtained from a 100-year-old lock of hair donat...
Colonisation of Sahul 70-60 thousand years ago (kya) represents the first great maritime migration u...
The size of the first population of people needed to arrive, survive, and thrive in what is now Aust...
The First Australians were among the world\u27s earliest great ocean explorers, undertaking a remark...
Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) dispersed rapidly through island southeast Asia (Sunda and Wallace...
The Australian continent holds some of the earliest archaeological evidence for the expansion of mod...
Australia's modern history has been defined by the country's experience of migration and its associa...
This thesis presents a view of multiple human contacts with Australia, using a variety of data from ...
This book tracks the progress of the prehistoric influx of population into the Pacific region, the l...
The question of when people first arrived in Australia has been the subject of lively debate among a...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
archaeologists. There are two basic schools of archaeological thought as to where Australia’s Indige...
The Southeast Asian region has experienced many episodes of human migration. It may also have been w...
International audienceWe present an Aboriginal Australian genomic sequence obtained from a 100-year-...
International audienceWe present an Aboriginal Australian genomic sequence obtained from a 100-year-...
We present an Aboriginal Australian genomic sequence obtained from a 100-year-old lock of hair donat...
Colonisation of Sahul 70-60 thousand years ago (kya) represents the first great maritime migration u...
The size of the first population of people needed to arrive, survive, and thrive in what is now Aust...
The First Australians were among the world\u27s earliest great ocean explorers, undertaking a remark...
Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) dispersed rapidly through island southeast Asia (Sunda and Wallace...
The Australian continent holds some of the earliest archaeological evidence for the expansion of mod...
Australia's modern history has been defined by the country's experience of migration and its associa...
This thesis presents a view of multiple human contacts with Australia, using a variety of data from ...
This book tracks the progress of the prehistoric influx of population into the Pacific region, the l...
The question of when people first arrived in Australia has been the subject of lively debate among a...