This paper examines a group of Aboriginal bark-paintings featuring Macassan prau s that were collected in 1948 during the American-Australian Scientific Expedition to Arnhem Land. These paintings were studied in an effort to understand issues related to Aboriginal and Macassan cross-cultural interaction, stylistic adaptation and change, and maritime technologies. Furthermore it is one example in which the collaborative efforts of maritime and Indigenous archaeologies can achieve a more holistic technological and stylistic cross-analysis of watercraft imagery
This thesis critically describes the phenomenon of Aboriginal tied-bark canoe making within the high...
Between 1921 and 1977 twelve anthropologists worked in coastal communities of Arnhem Land in Austral...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription.; Part of the Australian Information Service collec...
This paper examines a representative selection of the Aboriginal bark paintings featuring astronomic...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
In 2008 researchers from the Australian National University's Archaeology and Natural History Depart...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
This article brings together existing research as well as new data to examine the shift in the recep...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
Title devised by cataloguer.; Inscriptions: "Bark drawing, 1949 C.P. Mountford"--On card.; Also avai...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
This paper is mainly concerned with Aboriginal portrayal, in graphic art, of the various watercraft ...
This thesis surveys in a strictly chronological fashion discourses that were critical to promoting c...
This thesis critically describes the phenomenon of Aboriginal tied-bark canoe making within the high...
Between 1921 and 1977 twelve anthropologists worked in coastal communities of Arnhem Land in Austral...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription.; Part of the Australian Information Service collec...
This paper examines a representative selection of the Aboriginal bark paintings featuring astronomic...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
In 2008 researchers from the Australian National University's Archaeology and Natural History Depart...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
This article brings together existing research as well as new data to examine the shift in the recep...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
Title devised by cataloguer.; Inscriptions: "Bark drawing, 1949 C.P. Mountford"--On card.; Also avai...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription and accompanying documentation.; Part of the collec...
This paper is mainly concerned with Aboriginal portrayal, in graphic art, of the various watercraft ...
This thesis surveys in a strictly chronological fashion discourses that were critical to promoting c...
This thesis critically describes the phenomenon of Aboriginal tied-bark canoe making within the high...
Between 1921 and 1977 twelve anthropologists worked in coastal communities of Arnhem Land in Austral...
Title devised by cataloguer based on inscription.; Part of the Australian Information Service collec...