Across the Australian continent, backed artefacts are produced in enormous numbers during the mid-late Holocene. Previous examinations have revealed variation in the average shape of these artefacts, at both continental and regional scales. To better understand the factors creating this variability, we examine a large assemblage of backed artefacts from Ngungara (Weereewa/Lake George), in south-eastern Australia. This is one of the few open sites in Australia which has high-resolution evidence for spatially distinct, short-term workshops. Within these well-bounded workshops both locally manufactured and imported backed artefacts are present. However, across this landscape the shape of these artefacts is not uniform; rather, similarly shaped...
At one of the classic Australian sites we document how retouched flakes (often called ‘scrapers’) di...
A review of selected Holocene artefact assemblages in Australia demonstrates that assemblage composi...
[Introduction]: One of the tenets of Australian archaeology is that there are certain artefact types...
The timing of the introduction, proliferation and decline of backed artefacts in Australia has been ...
Early models of backed artefact use in Australia proposed that they were typically barbs or tips on ...
The reduction of stone materials to produce functional tools has formed a vital part of hunter-gathe...
Backed artefacts, otherwise microliths or backed bladelets, are key indicators of cultural practice ...
Excavations at a number of sites in Australia during recent years have allowed prehistorians to reco...
The Backed Artefact Symmetry Index (BASI) provides a measure with which to describe geometric vari...
Manufacture of bondi points in the Hunter valley, New South Wales, took place in a standardized way,...
A study of the artefact assemblage from the Henry Lawson Drive Rockshelter, a stratified midden depo...
Understanding post-depositional movement of artefacts is vital to making reliable claims about the f...
Examining why human populations used specific technologies in the Final Pleistocene is critical to u...
Refitting of knapping floors in northern Australia is used to analyse the production technology empl...
Dortch (1977:117) first identified the �Kimberley backed point� from the east Kimberley as an asymme...
At one of the classic Australian sites we document how retouched flakes (often called ‘scrapers’) di...
A review of selected Holocene artefact assemblages in Australia demonstrates that assemblage composi...
[Introduction]: One of the tenets of Australian archaeology is that there are certain artefact types...
The timing of the introduction, proliferation and decline of backed artefacts in Australia has been ...
Early models of backed artefact use in Australia proposed that they were typically barbs or tips on ...
The reduction of stone materials to produce functional tools has formed a vital part of hunter-gathe...
Backed artefacts, otherwise microliths or backed bladelets, are key indicators of cultural practice ...
Excavations at a number of sites in Australia during recent years have allowed prehistorians to reco...
The Backed Artefact Symmetry Index (BASI) provides a measure with which to describe geometric vari...
Manufacture of bondi points in the Hunter valley, New South Wales, took place in a standardized way,...
A study of the artefact assemblage from the Henry Lawson Drive Rockshelter, a stratified midden depo...
Understanding post-depositional movement of artefacts is vital to making reliable claims about the f...
Examining why human populations used specific technologies in the Final Pleistocene is critical to u...
Refitting of knapping floors in northern Australia is used to analyse the production technology empl...
Dortch (1977:117) first identified the �Kimberley backed point� from the east Kimberley as an asymme...
At one of the classic Australian sites we document how retouched flakes (often called ‘scrapers’) di...
A review of selected Holocene artefact assemblages in Australia demonstrates that assemblage composi...
[Introduction]: One of the tenets of Australian archaeology is that there are certain artefact types...