This study investigates the palynological remains (both fossil pollen and charcoal) recovered from the Thundiy shell midden deposit, Bentinck Island, Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia, to provide a vegetation and fire record for this site, which sheds light on human occupation of the southern Wellesley Archipelago over the late Holocene. Results show that the development of a high-density shell deposit by human activities was directly responsible for pollen preservation, possibly through the creation of a moist, anaerobic environment that reduces oxidation of pollen grains. The presence of recoverable pollen from a shell midden deposit from Bentinck Island provides a valuable new proxy to provide greater context for archaeological rec...
We reconstruct long-term vegetation development in a temperate Australian oceanic setting using wetl...
Palynological study of Whitehaven Swamp, Whitsunday Island, provides the first Holocene palaeoenviro...
Pollen and charcoal analyses are presented from the islands of Mua and Badu, western Torres Strait (...
This study investigates the palynological remains (both fossil pollen and charcoal) recovered from t...
This study presents three records of environmental change during the late-Holocene from wetlands acr...
The Bass Strait islands are some of the few areas in Australia that were not occupied by humans at t...
The islands of Torres Strait occupy a shallow area of submerged continental shelf narrowly separatin...
A 2400 year record of environmental change is reported from a wetland on Bentinck Island in the sout...
The South Wellesley Islands in the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia, were the recent focus of...
Archaeological survey, excavations, and analyses of the Murdumurdu shell midden on Bentinck Island, ...
The South Wellesley Islands in the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia, were the recent focus of...
The islands of Torres Strait occupy a shallow area of submerged continental shelf narrowly separatin...
[Extract] This report presents results of the first systematic palaeobiogeographical investigation u...
A 2400 year record of environmental change is reported from a wetland on Bentinck Island in the sout...
We reconstruct long-term vegetation development in a temperate Australian oceanic setting using wetl...
Palynological study of Whitehaven Swamp, Whitsunday Island, provides the first Holocene palaeoenviro...
Pollen and charcoal analyses are presented from the islands of Mua and Badu, western Torres Strait (...
This study investigates the palynological remains (both fossil pollen and charcoal) recovered from t...
This study presents three records of environmental change during the late-Holocene from wetlands acr...
The Bass Strait islands are some of the few areas in Australia that were not occupied by humans at t...
The islands of Torres Strait occupy a shallow area of submerged continental shelf narrowly separatin...
A 2400 year record of environmental change is reported from a wetland on Bentinck Island in the sout...
The South Wellesley Islands in the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia, were the recent focus of...
Archaeological survey, excavations, and analyses of the Murdumurdu shell midden on Bentinck Island, ...
The South Wellesley Islands in the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia, were the recent focus of...
The islands of Torres Strait occupy a shallow area of submerged continental shelf narrowly separatin...
[Extract] This report presents results of the first systematic palaeobiogeographical investigation u...
A 2400 year record of environmental change is reported from a wetland on Bentinck Island in the sout...
We reconstruct long-term vegetation development in a temperate Australian oceanic setting using wetl...
Palynological study of Whitehaven Swamp, Whitsunday Island, provides the first Holocene palaeoenviro...
Pollen and charcoal analyses are presented from the islands of Mua and Badu, western Torres Strait (...