Jinmium rock shelter is famous for the claims made by Fullagar et al. (1996) for the early human colonization and ancient rock art of northern Australia. These claims were based on thermo‐luminescence ages obtained for the artefact‐bearing quartz sediments that form the floor deposit at the site. In this paper, we outline the background to the optical dating programme at Jinmium, and describe the experimental design and statistical methods used to obtain optical ages from single grains of quartz sand. The results, interpretations, and implications of this dating programme are reported in a companion paper (Roberts et al. 7999, this volume)
Sixteen accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon (14C) determinations for oxalate crusts over...
Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating is a tool used in Quaternary Geology for assessing ag...
Mineral coatings, fringes, glazes and skins forming on the surfaces of sandstone rock shelters in We...
Jinmium rock shelter is famous for the claims made by Fullagar et al. (1996) for the early human col...
Jinmium rock shelter is famous for the claims made by Fullagar et al. (1996) for the early human col...
This article describes the principles of optical dating-an umbrella term for a family of related tec...
The human settlement of Australia falls into that period where dating is hard because it is near or ...
In this paper, we demonstrate that optical dating of single grains of quartz offers an alternative m...
Applications of luminescence dating to Quaternary earth science are reviewed, the examples being fro...
Recent age constraints on Australia\u27s oldest human remains (Mungo I and III), found at Lake Mungo...
Research conducted by the Western New South Wales Archaeology Program (WNSWAP) provides the opportun...
Oxalate-rich mineral accretions, often found in rock shelters around the world, offer important oppo...
Determining the age of glacigenic sediments is difficult for many geochronological methods because o...
Despite the ubiquity of Aboriginal stone arrangements around the Australian continent, there is very...
Optically-stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating provides the time since sediments and their associate...
Sixteen accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon (14C) determinations for oxalate crusts over...
Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating is a tool used in Quaternary Geology for assessing ag...
Mineral coatings, fringes, glazes and skins forming on the surfaces of sandstone rock shelters in We...
Jinmium rock shelter is famous for the claims made by Fullagar et al. (1996) for the early human col...
Jinmium rock shelter is famous for the claims made by Fullagar et al. (1996) for the early human col...
This article describes the principles of optical dating-an umbrella term for a family of related tec...
The human settlement of Australia falls into that period where dating is hard because it is near or ...
In this paper, we demonstrate that optical dating of single grains of quartz offers an alternative m...
Applications of luminescence dating to Quaternary earth science are reviewed, the examples being fro...
Recent age constraints on Australia\u27s oldest human remains (Mungo I and III), found at Lake Mungo...
Research conducted by the Western New South Wales Archaeology Program (WNSWAP) provides the opportun...
Oxalate-rich mineral accretions, often found in rock shelters around the world, offer important oppo...
Determining the age of glacigenic sediments is difficult for many geochronological methods because o...
Despite the ubiquity of Aboriginal stone arrangements around the Australian continent, there is very...
Optically-stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating provides the time since sediments and their associate...
Sixteen accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon (14C) determinations for oxalate crusts over...
Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating is a tool used in Quaternary Geology for assessing ag...
Mineral coatings, fringes, glazes and skins forming on the surfaces of sandstone rock shelters in We...