We present data from Australian study areas that support episodic nonequilibrium as a suitable model for developing a theoretical and methodological framework for interpreting the surface archaeological record. According to this model, long periods of little or no geomorphic activity are punctuated by catastrophic events that erode or deposit sediments, and hence remove or cover up surface stone artefact deposits discarded by Indigenous people in the past. We demonstrate the impact of a single rainfall event on the surface archaeological record at one of our western New South Wales study locations. We then use the results of Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) of sediments underlying the artefact deposits and radiocarbon dating of assoc...
An intensification theory was developed in Australian archaeology in the early 1980s from a desire t...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
In Australia, geomorphological change since the late nineteenth century ensures surface artifact vis...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Geomorphic processes that affect the archaeological record – by exposing it, destroying it or coveri...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of th...
The conventional approach to assessing the archaeological record in most parts of the world involves...
The archaeological record of much of Australia is dominated by deposits that date to the mid to late...
Archaeologists make inferences about past human behaviour based on patterned material residues in va...
Investigating past human-environment interactions requires not only suitable environmental proxies a...
Archaeologists make inferences about past human behaviour based on patterned material residues in va...
Abstract: This paper reviews the long history of interaction between scientists working in geo-morph...
Investigating past human-environment interactions requires not only suitable environmental proxies a...
Investigating past human-environment interactions requires not only suitable environmental proxies a...
An intensification theory was developed in Australian archaeology in the early 1980s from a desire t...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
In Australia, geomorphological change since the late nineteenth century ensures surface artifact vis...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Surface deposits of stone artefacts are the most common feature of the Australian Aboriginal archaeo...
Geomorphic processes that affect the archaeological record – by exposing it, destroying it or coveri...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of th...
The conventional approach to assessing the archaeological record in most parts of the world involves...
The archaeological record of much of Australia is dominated by deposits that date to the mid to late...
Archaeologists make inferences about past human behaviour based on patterned material residues in va...
Investigating past human-environment interactions requires not only suitable environmental proxies a...
Archaeologists make inferences about past human behaviour based on patterned material residues in va...
Abstract: This paper reviews the long history of interaction between scientists working in geo-morph...
Investigating past human-environment interactions requires not only suitable environmental proxies a...
Investigating past human-environment interactions requires not only suitable environmental proxies a...
An intensification theory was developed in Australian archaeology in the early 1980s from a desire t...
An analysis of surface scatters of stone artifacts from late Holocene contexts at Stud Creek, Sturt ...
In Australia, geomorphological change since the late nineteenth century ensures surface artifact vis...