Current archaeological research suggests that first human occupation of the Torres Strait Islands occurred sometime between 2500 and 3000 cal b.p., and evidence indicates that the development of agricultural mound-and-ditch systems occurred there after 1200 cal b.p. Although archaeological remains testify to the existence of a marine based subsistence economy prior to 1200 cal b.p., the potential presence of earlier prehistoric horticultural signatures has yet to be adequately examined. This study investigates such evidence through a preliminary application of fossil phytolith and starch grain analysis using excavated sediments from two archaeological sites on Dauar Island, eastern Torres Strait. The results show the early presence of yam (...
The timing and nature of hunter-gather exploitation of tropical rainforests is a topic of ongoing de...
The mid- to late-Holocene palaeoenvironmental history of a low island adjacent to the southern Papua...
The plant macrofossil assemblage from Madjedbebe, Mirarr Country, northern Australia, provides insig...
Current archaeological research suggests that first human occupation of the Torres Strait Islands oc...
Multiproxy archaeobotanical analyses (starch granule, phytolith and microcharcoal) of an abandoned a...
The functional study of ground stone artefacts and the analysis of charred plant remains together de...
Recent multidisciplinary investigations document an independent emergence of agriculture at Kuk Swam...
This dissertation describes analyses and contextualises the results of archaeological investigation...
[Extract] This report presents results of the first systematic palaeobiogeographical investigation u...
There is little evidence for the role of plant foods in the dispersal of early modern humans into ne...
We synthesize northern Channel Islands archaeobotanical data to discuss broad, diachronic patterns i...
This paper reports a pilot study undertaken at the Lavongai rectilinear earth mounds site in New Han...
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, ...
ABSTRACT. Analysis of phytoliths in sediments from Kainapirina (SAC) locality in the Reber-Rakival L...
Pollen and starch residue analyses were conducted on 24 sediment samples from archaeological sites o...
The timing and nature of hunter-gather exploitation of tropical rainforests is a topic of ongoing de...
The mid- to late-Holocene palaeoenvironmental history of a low island adjacent to the southern Papua...
The plant macrofossil assemblage from Madjedbebe, Mirarr Country, northern Australia, provides insig...
Current archaeological research suggests that first human occupation of the Torres Strait Islands oc...
Multiproxy archaeobotanical analyses (starch granule, phytolith and microcharcoal) of an abandoned a...
The functional study of ground stone artefacts and the analysis of charred plant remains together de...
Recent multidisciplinary investigations document an independent emergence of agriculture at Kuk Swam...
This dissertation describes analyses and contextualises the results of archaeological investigation...
[Extract] This report presents results of the first systematic palaeobiogeographical investigation u...
There is little evidence for the role of plant foods in the dispersal of early modern humans into ne...
We synthesize northern Channel Islands archaeobotanical data to discuss broad, diachronic patterns i...
This paper reports a pilot study undertaken at the Lavongai rectilinear earth mounds site in New Han...
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, ...
ABSTRACT. Analysis of phytoliths in sediments from Kainapirina (SAC) locality in the Reber-Rakival L...
Pollen and starch residue analyses were conducted on 24 sediment samples from archaeological sites o...
The timing and nature of hunter-gather exploitation of tropical rainforests is a topic of ongoing de...
The mid- to late-Holocene palaeoenvironmental history of a low island adjacent to the southern Papua...
The plant macrofossil assemblage from Madjedbebe, Mirarr Country, northern Australia, provides insig...