Archaeological records from Australia provide the earliest, indirect evidence for maritime crossings by early modern humans, as the islands to the north-west of the continent (Wallacea) have never been connected to the mainland. Suggested in 1977 by Joseph B. Birdsell, the two main routes from Sunda (mainland Southeast Asia) to Sahul (Australia-New Guinea), still in debate today, are a northern route through Sulawesi with a landing in New Guinea, or a southern route through Bali, Timor and thence landing in northern Australia. Here we construct least-cost pathway models of human dispersal from Sunda to Sahul at 65 ka and 70 ka by extending previous out-of-Africa least-cost models through the digitization of these routes. We recover overwhel...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...
In this chapter we examine the evidence for modern human dispersal, early settlement and later adapt...
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...
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...
Maritime migration and island adaptation by anatomically modern humans (AMH) are among the most sign...
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...
Past environments of equatorial SE Asia must have played a critical role in determining the timing a...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...
Island migration and adaptation including both marine and terrestrial resource use and technological...
pre-print manuscriptThe questions of when and how humans reached Sahul, the Pleistocene continent of...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...
In this chapter we examine the evidence for modern human dispersal, early settlement and later adapt...
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...
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...
Maritime migration and island adaptation by anatomically modern humans (AMH) are among the most sign...
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...
Past environments of equatorial SE Asia must have played a critical role in determining the timing a...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...
Island migration and adaptation including both marine and terrestrial resource use and technological...
pre-print manuscriptThe questions of when and how humans reached Sahul, the Pleistocene continent of...
Most prehistorians take seafaring – defined as deliberate, place-to-place, open-ocean voyaging – to ...
The migration of anatomically modern humans (AMH) from Africa to every inhabitable continent include...
In this chapter we examine the evidence for modern human dispersal, early settlement and later adapt...