Dortch (1977:117) first identified the �Kimberley backed point� from the east Kimberley as an asymmetrical point form with steep-angled backing retouch along one dorsal margin. O�Connor (1999) subsequently recorded backed points as a component of the mid- to late Holocene assemblages in sites from the coastal west Kimberley. However, the distribution and morphology of backed point technology, and the relationship of backed points to other forms of point technology, has not been assessed for the broader Kimberley region. Here we use morphological analysis and measures of retouch intensity to examine the differences between backed points and other forms of point technology. We use three assemblages from the south Kimberley and reassess two as...
Increasing research in northern Australia continues to expand the known distribution of backed blade...
Refitting of knapping floors in northern Australia is used to analyse the production technology empl...
Early models of backed artefact use in Australia proposed that they were typically barbs or tips on ...
Stone points have provided key data for studies of hunter gatherer lifeways in several parts of the ...
Based on recent archaeological research in the southeast Kimberley this paper argues that while bifa...
Kimberley points are pressure flaked bifaces with marginal projections, produced within the last mil...
Across the Australian continent, backed artefacts are produced in enormous numbers during the mid-la...
The peopling of Sahul (the combined landmass of New Guinea and Australia) is a topic of much debate....
[Introduction]: One of the tenets of Australian archaeology is that there are certain artefact types...
At one of the classic Australian sites we document how retouched flakes (often called ‘scrapers’) di...
This paper constructs a reduction sequence model for north Australian points from the eastern Victor...
Stone points were introduced across northern Australia during the mid-Holocene. The reasons behind t...
Excavation of Brooking Gorge 1 rockshelter, located within Bunuba Country, southern Kimberley, Weste...
Manufacture of bondi points in the Hunter valley, New South Wales, took place in a standardized way,...
To better understand the relationship between changing retouched implement morphology and intensity ...
Increasing research in northern Australia continues to expand the known distribution of backed blade...
Refitting of knapping floors in northern Australia is used to analyse the production technology empl...
Early models of backed artefact use in Australia proposed that they were typically barbs or tips on ...
Stone points have provided key data for studies of hunter gatherer lifeways in several parts of the ...
Based on recent archaeological research in the southeast Kimberley this paper argues that while bifa...
Kimberley points are pressure flaked bifaces with marginal projections, produced within the last mil...
Across the Australian continent, backed artefacts are produced in enormous numbers during the mid-la...
The peopling of Sahul (the combined landmass of New Guinea and Australia) is a topic of much debate....
[Introduction]: One of the tenets of Australian archaeology is that there are certain artefact types...
At one of the classic Australian sites we document how retouched flakes (often called ‘scrapers’) di...
This paper constructs a reduction sequence model for north Australian points from the eastern Victor...
Stone points were introduced across northern Australia during the mid-Holocene. The reasons behind t...
Excavation of Brooking Gorge 1 rockshelter, located within Bunuba Country, southern Kimberley, Weste...
Manufacture of bondi points in the Hunter valley, New South Wales, took place in a standardized way,...
To better understand the relationship between changing retouched implement morphology and intensity ...
Increasing research in northern Australia continues to expand the known distribution of backed blade...
Refitting of knapping floors in northern Australia is used to analyse the production technology empl...
Early models of backed artefact use in Australia proposed that they were typically barbs or tips on ...