Various chronologies for the arrival of modern humans in Australia and New Guinea are discussed, together with a consideration of possible routes of entry. The archaeological evidence from the New Guinea Highlands and the islands of Melanesia is reviewed. After a general discussion of human colonization of Pleistocene Australia, some of the key sites in two contrasting environments - the arid zone and Tasmania - are compared
Sahul, the combined landmass of Australia and New Guinea, provides a record of behavioural modernity...
A continental-scale model of Holocene Australian hunter-gatherer demography and mobility is generate...
A continental-scale model of Holocene Australian hunter-gatherer demography and mobility is generate...
The peopling of Sahul (the combined landmass of New Guinea and Australia) is a topic of much debate....
There is some debate about the timing of the first occupation of Sahul (Australia, New Guinea and th...
It is postulated that modern humans speciated in Africa sometime after 300,000 years ago, but most l...
In this review volume, we bring together researchers and institutions involved in Australian island ...
The time of arrival of people in Australia is an unresolved question. It is relevant to debates abou...
The question of when people first arrived in Australia has been the subject of lively debate among a...
Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) dispersed rapidly through island southeast Asia (Sunda and Wallace...
The Pleistocene continent of Sahul was first settled by people who arrived by watercraft from Island...
Recent archaeological discoveries of pottery on mainland New Guinea dating to 3000 years ago have dr...
The remote 'Top End' of Australia, far distant from the main urban centres, has been largely neglect...
Robust waisted stone tools were recently discovered on Rossel Island, the easternmost island in the ...
About the first human settlements in South Pacific. South Pacific includes Australia and the Pacific...
Sahul, the combined landmass of Australia and New Guinea, provides a record of behavioural modernity...
A continental-scale model of Holocene Australian hunter-gatherer demography and mobility is generate...
A continental-scale model of Holocene Australian hunter-gatherer demography and mobility is generate...
The peopling of Sahul (the combined landmass of New Guinea and Australia) is a topic of much debate....
There is some debate about the timing of the first occupation of Sahul (Australia, New Guinea and th...
It is postulated that modern humans speciated in Africa sometime after 300,000 years ago, but most l...
In this review volume, we bring together researchers and institutions involved in Australian island ...
The time of arrival of people in Australia is an unresolved question. It is relevant to debates abou...
The question of when people first arrived in Australia has been the subject of lively debate among a...
Anatomically Modern Humans (AMHs) dispersed rapidly through island southeast Asia (Sunda and Wallace...
The Pleistocene continent of Sahul was first settled by people who arrived by watercraft from Island...
Recent archaeological discoveries of pottery on mainland New Guinea dating to 3000 years ago have dr...
The remote 'Top End' of Australia, far distant from the main urban centres, has been largely neglect...
Robust waisted stone tools were recently discovered on Rossel Island, the easternmost island in the ...
About the first human settlements in South Pacific. South Pacific includes Australia and the Pacific...
Sahul, the combined landmass of Australia and New Guinea, provides a record of behavioural modernity...
A continental-scale model of Holocene Australian hunter-gatherer demography and mobility is generate...
A continental-scale model of Holocene Australian hunter-gatherer demography and mobility is generate...