Ethnohistorical study of the use of clothing among Australian Aborigines in relation to their thermal environment indicates that clothing was a behavioral adaptation to cold exposure. Seasonal data and trends in Tasmania and parts of northern Australia are not entirely consistent with the overall thermal pattern. Likely reasons for these anomalies include interaction between latitude and season of observation, greater biological adaptation to cold south of Bass Strait, and influence from a regional cultural sphere centered north of the mainland
Heat has profoundly influenced many aspects of Australian life and informs a dominant cultural ident...
First Online: 30 June 2016Exposure to extreme heat is a familiar seasonal experience for many rural ...
This chapter explores the adaptive capacity of Indigenous households using the case study area of th...
Anthropological and ethnographical studies of the use of clothing among Aboriginal people of south-e...
A general model is outlined showing how the prehistoric development of clothing for thermal reasons ...
In this chapter, we draw inspiration from Tony McMichael's research on the implications of climate c...
Abstract Although the last 200 years of colonisation has brought radical changes in economic and gov...
The health impacts of climate are widely recognised, and extensive modelling is available on predict...
Human migration to Australia occurred over 62,000 years ago. Those first Australians established one...
The adaptive thermal comfort model links indoor comfort temperatures to prevailing weather outdoors,...
Many authors have suggested that Indigenous communities are especially vulnerable to the direct and ...
This paper argues that those hoping to influence domestic heat management might engage more directly...
It has been largely accepted that Australian Aboriginal people practicing hunting and gathering trad...
Recent reviews have highlighted the challenges posed by the Australian archaeological record for the...
Climates are changing, yet the everyday implications for societies and cultures are unclear. Until r...
Heat has profoundly influenced many aspects of Australian life and informs a dominant cultural ident...
First Online: 30 June 2016Exposure to extreme heat is a familiar seasonal experience for many rural ...
This chapter explores the adaptive capacity of Indigenous households using the case study area of th...
Anthropological and ethnographical studies of the use of clothing among Aboriginal people of south-e...
A general model is outlined showing how the prehistoric development of clothing for thermal reasons ...
In this chapter, we draw inspiration from Tony McMichael's research on the implications of climate c...
Abstract Although the last 200 years of colonisation has brought radical changes in economic and gov...
The health impacts of climate are widely recognised, and extensive modelling is available on predict...
Human migration to Australia occurred over 62,000 years ago. Those first Australians established one...
The adaptive thermal comfort model links indoor comfort temperatures to prevailing weather outdoors,...
Many authors have suggested that Indigenous communities are especially vulnerable to the direct and ...
This paper argues that those hoping to influence domestic heat management might engage more directly...
It has been largely accepted that Australian Aboriginal people practicing hunting and gathering trad...
Recent reviews have highlighted the challenges posed by the Australian archaeological record for the...
Climates are changing, yet the everyday implications for societies and cultures are unclear. Until r...
Heat has profoundly influenced many aspects of Australian life and informs a dominant cultural ident...
First Online: 30 June 2016Exposure to extreme heat is a familiar seasonal experience for many rural ...
This chapter explores the adaptive capacity of Indigenous households using the case study area of th...