Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) dispersed rapidly through island southeast Asia (Sunda and Wallacea) and into Sahul (Australia, New Guinea and the Aru Islands), before 50,000 years ago. Multiple routes have been proposed for this dispersal and all involve at least one multi-day maritime voyage approaching 100 km. Here we use new regional-scale bathymetry data, palaeoenvironmental reconstruction, an assessment of vertical land movements and drift modeling to assess the potential for an initial entry into northwest Australia from southern Wallacea (Timor-Roti). From ∼70,000 until ∼10,000 years ago, a chain of habitable, resource-rich islands were emergent off the coast of northwest Australia (now mostly submerged). These were visible from h...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
It is postulated that modern humans speciated in Africa sometime after 300,000 years ago, but most l...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...
Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) dispersed rapidly through island southeast Asia (Sunda and Wallace...
Archaeological records from Australia provide the earliest, indirect evidence for maritime crossings...
Wallacea is the transitional biogeographic zone between the continents of Sunda (Southeast Asia) and...
Archaeological records from Australia provide the earliest, indirect evidence for maritime crossings...
The first peopling of Sahul (Australia, New Guinea and the Aru Islands joined at lower sea levels) b...
The peopling of Sahul (the combined continent of Australia and New Guinea) represents the earliest c...
Colonisation of Sahul 70-60 thousand years ago (kya) represents the first great maritime migration u...
pre-print manuscriptThe questions of when and how humans reached Sahul, the Pleistocene continent of...
The First Australians were among the world\u27s earliest great ocean explorers, undertaking a remark...
New evidence from Lene Hara Cave, East Timor, demonstrates that it was first occupied by modern huma...
Maritime migration and island adaptation by anatomically modern humans (AMH) are among the most sign...
textabstractThe Australian continent holds some of the earliest archaeological evidence for the expa...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
It is postulated that modern humans speciated in Africa sometime after 300,000 years ago, but most l...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...
Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) dispersed rapidly through island southeast Asia (Sunda and Wallace...
Archaeological records from Australia provide the earliest, indirect evidence for maritime crossings...
Wallacea is the transitional biogeographic zone between the continents of Sunda (Southeast Asia) and...
Archaeological records from Australia provide the earliest, indirect evidence for maritime crossings...
The first peopling of Sahul (Australia, New Guinea and the Aru Islands joined at lower sea levels) b...
The peopling of Sahul (the combined continent of Australia and New Guinea) represents the earliest c...
Colonisation of Sahul 70-60 thousand years ago (kya) represents the first great maritime migration u...
pre-print manuscriptThe questions of when and how humans reached Sahul, the Pleistocene continent of...
The First Australians were among the world\u27s earliest great ocean explorers, undertaking a remark...
New evidence from Lene Hara Cave, East Timor, demonstrates that it was first occupied by modern huma...
Maritime migration and island adaptation by anatomically modern humans (AMH) are among the most sign...
textabstractThe Australian continent holds some of the earliest archaeological evidence for the expa...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
It is postulated that modern humans speciated in Africa sometime after 300,000 years ago, but most l...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...