The southern lowlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG) are biogeographically distinct. Vast tracts of savanna vegetation occur there and yet most palaeoecological studies have focused on highlands and/or forest environments. Greater focus on long-term lowland environments provides a rare opportunity to understand and promote the significance of local and regional savannas, ultimately allowing non-forested and forested ecosystem dynamics to be compared. This paper examines palaeoecological and archaeological data from a lowland open savanna site situated on the south-central PNG coastline. The methods used incorporate pollen and micro-charcoal analyses, artefact recovery and sediment descriptions. We conclude with an environmental model of sediment...
Fire is an essential component of tropical savannas, driving key ecological feedbacks and functions....
This paper presents preliminary results from the 2019 excavations at Walufeni Cave, at the eastern e...
That pollen and sedimentological evidence can make a significant contribution to our understanding o...
The southern lowlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG) are biogeographically distinct. Vast tracts of savan...
Pollen, phytolith and charcoal records from the archaeological wetland site of Kuk Swamp, Wahgi Vall...
This study presents new palynological data from Caution Bay, south-central Papua New Guinea (PNG). I...
In the highlands of New Guinea, the development of agriculture as an indigenous innovation during th...
A series of monoliths collected from Ambra Crater in the Upper Wahgi valley, Papua New Guinea have b...
An integrated approach to the reconstruction of vegetation history and human land use during the Hol...
An environmental history is presented from Girraween Lagoon, Darwin region of the Northern Territory...
The Holocene Period for the province of West New Britain, Papua New Guinea, is characterised by peri...
This study presents three records of environmental change during the late-Holocene from wetlands acr...
Major cultural changes that appeared during the early to mid-Holocene (c.10,000 - 4000 years) are pr...
Master of Science in Geography. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 2016.Palaeoenvironment...
Phytoliths and micro-charcoal from the Yombon Airstrip archaeological site in central New Britain, P...
Fire is an essential component of tropical savannas, driving key ecological feedbacks and functions....
This paper presents preliminary results from the 2019 excavations at Walufeni Cave, at the eastern e...
That pollen and sedimentological evidence can make a significant contribution to our understanding o...
The southern lowlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG) are biogeographically distinct. Vast tracts of savan...
Pollen, phytolith and charcoal records from the archaeological wetland site of Kuk Swamp, Wahgi Vall...
This study presents new palynological data from Caution Bay, south-central Papua New Guinea (PNG). I...
In the highlands of New Guinea, the development of agriculture as an indigenous innovation during th...
A series of monoliths collected from Ambra Crater in the Upper Wahgi valley, Papua New Guinea have b...
An integrated approach to the reconstruction of vegetation history and human land use during the Hol...
An environmental history is presented from Girraween Lagoon, Darwin region of the Northern Territory...
The Holocene Period for the province of West New Britain, Papua New Guinea, is characterised by peri...
This study presents three records of environmental change during the late-Holocene from wetlands acr...
Major cultural changes that appeared during the early to mid-Holocene (c.10,000 - 4000 years) are pr...
Master of Science in Geography. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 2016.Palaeoenvironment...
Phytoliths and micro-charcoal from the Yombon Airstrip archaeological site in central New Britain, P...
Fire is an essential component of tropical savannas, driving key ecological feedbacks and functions....
This paper presents preliminary results from the 2019 excavations at Walufeni Cave, at the eastern e...
That pollen and sedimentological evidence can make a significant contribution to our understanding o...