The invasion of the Australian continent by Europeans caused massive disruptions to Indigenous cultures and ways of life. The adoption of new raw materials, often for the production of “traditional” artifact forms, is one archaeological indicator of the changes wrought by “colonization.” Two camp sites associated with the Queensland Native Mounted Police (NMP), a punitive paramilitary government force that operated through the latter half of the nineteenth century in the northeastern part of the continent, contain abundant flaked glass artifacts. These were undoubtedly manufactured by the Aboriginal men who were employed as troopers in the NMP, and/or their wives and children. Produced using traditional stone working techniques applied to a...
The archaeological study of Aboriginal knapped glass artefacts in Australia has focussed almost enti...
The archaeological record of Lower Laura (aka Boralga) Native Mounted Police camp, a longstanding ba...
© 2000 Dr. Nathan WolskiThis thesis demonstrates the possibility and value of a postcolonial archaeo...
Flaked glass artifacts from archaeological contexts in the Andaman Islands and several widely separa...
many parts of the world that were already occupied by other people. Many of the previous landholders...
This paper reports on a glass artefact found on an earth mound at Diingwulung in Wathayn Country, ne...
Glass artefacts are reported from the surface of two long-term Aboriginal sites at Bustard Bay on th...
While Aboriginally flaked bottle glass artefacts have been widely described in the Australian archae...
This article examines the ways in which material objects are invoked and constantly recontextualized...
Contact archaeology in Australia is emerging as an important tool in the independent verification of...
The 'Frontier Wars' in Australia were a series of conflicts carried out at different times and place...
Research into Indigenous bead use in Australia has emphasised the use of organic materials, such as ...
The archaeological record of Lower Laura (aka Boralga) Native Mounted Police camp, a longstanding ba...
This paper builds on the few well known analyses of glass artefacts by recognising that bottle shape...
Although the historical record relating to nineteenth century frontier conflict between Aboriginal g...
The archaeological study of Aboriginal knapped glass artefacts in Australia has focussed almost enti...
The archaeological record of Lower Laura (aka Boralga) Native Mounted Police camp, a longstanding ba...
© 2000 Dr. Nathan WolskiThis thesis demonstrates the possibility and value of a postcolonial archaeo...
Flaked glass artifacts from archaeological contexts in the Andaman Islands and several widely separa...
many parts of the world that were already occupied by other people. Many of the previous landholders...
This paper reports on a glass artefact found on an earth mound at Diingwulung in Wathayn Country, ne...
Glass artefacts are reported from the surface of two long-term Aboriginal sites at Bustard Bay on th...
While Aboriginally flaked bottle glass artefacts have been widely described in the Australian archae...
This article examines the ways in which material objects are invoked and constantly recontextualized...
Contact archaeology in Australia is emerging as an important tool in the independent verification of...
The 'Frontier Wars' in Australia were a series of conflicts carried out at different times and place...
Research into Indigenous bead use in Australia has emphasised the use of organic materials, such as ...
The archaeological record of Lower Laura (aka Boralga) Native Mounted Police camp, a longstanding ba...
This paper builds on the few well known analyses of glass artefacts by recognising that bottle shape...
Although the historical record relating to nineteenth century frontier conflict between Aboriginal g...
The archaeological study of Aboriginal knapped glass artefacts in Australia has focussed almost enti...
The archaeological record of Lower Laura (aka Boralga) Native Mounted Police camp, a longstanding ba...
© 2000 Dr. Nathan WolskiThis thesis demonstrates the possibility and value of a postcolonial archaeo...