We match stone artefact distributions and assemblage compositions at the local geographical scale to measures of both complex topography and environmental history, as suggested by the work of Bailey and King. By comparing two study regions that have different topographic complexity measures, one in western New South Wales, Australia, and the other in Oglala National Grassland, North American Great Plains, we show that people created distinct long-term landscape use histories in both regions. While stone artefact manufacture and use, and indeed the transport of stone artefacts over great distances, feature in both areas, the accumulation of stone artefacts in different places leads to a quite different site use history in each of the case st...
This thesis documents systems of stone artefact provisioning, or the strategic organisation of proc...
Recent research conducted on the stone artefacts from the Tasmanian Pleistocene site of Bone Cave co...
Recent decades have seen a surge of landscape concepts in archaeology. Despite strong, growing inter...
The conventional approach to assessing the archaeological record in most parts of the world involves...
In Australia, geomorphological change since the late nineteenth century ensures surface artifact vis...
Geomorphic processes that affect the archaeological record – by exposing it, destroying it or coveri...
Surface scatters of Aboriginal stone artifacts have been exposed in many parts of inland Australia b...
Understanding human-environment interactions has emerged as a prominent research agenda within both ...
We present data from Australian study areas that support episodic nonequilibrium as a suitable model...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Abstract: This paper reviews the long history of interaction between scientists working in geo-morph...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of th...
An intensification theory was developed in Australian archaeology in the early 1980s from a desire t...
This thesis documents systems of stone artefact provisioning, or the strategic organisation of proc...
Recent research conducted on the stone artefacts from the Tasmanian Pleistocene site of Bone Cave co...
Recent decades have seen a surge of landscape concepts in archaeology. Despite strong, growing inter...
The conventional approach to assessing the archaeological record in most parts of the world involves...
In Australia, geomorphological change since the late nineteenth century ensures surface artifact vis...
Geomorphic processes that affect the archaeological record – by exposing it, destroying it or coveri...
Surface scatters of Aboriginal stone artifacts have been exposed in many parts of inland Australia b...
Understanding human-environment interactions has emerged as a prominent research agenda within both ...
We present data from Australian study areas that support episodic nonequilibrium as a suitable model...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Abstract: This paper reviews the long history of interaction between scientists working in geo-morph...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of th...
An intensification theory was developed in Australian archaeology in the early 1980s from a desire t...
This thesis documents systems of stone artefact provisioning, or the strategic organisation of proc...
Recent research conducted on the stone artefacts from the Tasmanian Pleistocene site of Bone Cave co...
Recent decades have seen a surge of landscape concepts in archaeology. Despite strong, growing inter...