Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-5g6vh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T13:18:35.467Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Trends in Australian prehistoric research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1975

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allen, H. 1972. Where the crow flies backwards: man and land in the Darling basin, unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.Google Scholar
Allen, H. 1974. The Bagundji of the Darling basin: cereal gatherers in an uncertain environment, World Archaeology, V, 30922.Google Scholar
Allen, J. 1972. The first decade in New Guinea archaeology, Antiquity, XLVI, 18090.Google Scholar
Binns, R. A., and McBryde, I.. 1972. A petrological analysis of ground-edge artefacts from northern New South Wales (Canberra).Google Scholar
Bowdler, S. 1974. A pleistocene date for man in Tasmania, Nature, 252, 697.Google Scholar
Bowler, J. M. 1971. Pleistocene salinities and climatic change: evidence from lakes and lunettes in south-eastern Australia, in (eds.) Mulvaney, D. J. and Golson, J., Aboriginal man and environment in Australia (Canberra), 4765.Google Scholar
Bowler, J. M., Jones, R., Allen, H. and Thorne, A. G.. 1970. Pleistocene human remains from Australia: a living site and human cremation from Lake Mungo, western New South Wales, World Archaeology, 11, 3960.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowler, J. M., Thorne, A. G. and Polach, H. A.. 1972. Pleistocene man in Australia: age and significance of the Mungo skeleton, Nature, 240: 4850.Google Scholar
Dohtch, C. E., and Merrilees, D.. 1973. Human occupation of Devils’ Lair, Western Australia, during the Pleistocene, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania, VIII, 89115.Google Scholar
Flood, J. M. 1973. The moth hunters, unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.Google Scholar
Gallus, A. 1972. Excavations at Keilor. Report No. 2, The Artefact, 27: 919.Google Scholar
Gallus, A. 1974. A summary of the results of excavations by the Archaeological Society of Victoria at Keilor (near Melbourne). The Artefact, 33: 19.Google Scholar
Gould, R. A. 1969. Puntutjarpa rockshelter: a reply to Messrs. Glover and Lampert, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania, IV, 22937.Google Scholar
Gould, R. A. 1971. The archaeologist as ethnographer: a case from the western desert of Australia, World Archaeology, III, 143177.Google Scholar
Hale, H. M., and Tindale, N. B.. 1930. Notes on some human remains in the lower Murray Valley, South Australia, Records of the South Australian Museum, IV, 145218.Google Scholar
Hayden, B. and Kamminga, J.. 1973. Gould, Koster, and Sontz on ‘microwear’: a critical review, Newsletter of Lithic Technology, II, 38.Google Scholar
Jones, R. 1966. A speculative archaeological sequence for north-western Tasmania, Records of the Queen Victoria Museum, Launceston, XXV, 112.Google Scholar
Jones, R. 1968. The geographical background to the arrival of man in Australia and Tasmania, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania, II, 186215.Google Scholar
Jones, R. 1969. Fire-stick farming, Australian Natural History, XVI, 2248.Google Scholar
Jones, R. 1971. Rocky Cape and the problem of the Tasmanians, unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Sydney.Google Scholar
Jones, R. 1973. Emerging picture of Pleistocene Australians, Nature, 246: 27881.Google Scholar
Lampert, R. J. 1966. An excavation at Durras North, New South Wales, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania, I, 83118.Google Scholar
Lampert, R. J. 1971a. Coastal Aborigines of southeastern Australia, in (eds.) Mulvaney, D. J. and Golson, J., Aboriginal man and environment in Australia (Canberra), 11432.Google Scholar
Lampert, R. J. 1971b. Burrill Lake and Currarong, Terra Australis (Canberra), 1.Google Scholar
Lampert, R. J. 1972. A carbon date for the Aboriginal occupation of Kangaroo Island, South Australia, Mankind, VIII, 2234.Google Scholar
Lampert, R. J. 1975a. A preliminary report on some waisted blades found on Kangaroo Island, South Australia, Australian Archaeology: Australian Archaeologial Newsletter 2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lampert, R. J. 1975b. Kangaroo Island and the antiquity of Australians, in (Ed.) Wright, R. V. S., Stone tools as cultural markers—change, evolution and complexity (Canberra).Google Scholar
Luebbers, R. 1975. Ancient boomerangs discovered in South Australia, Nature, 253, 39.Google Scholar
McBryde, I. 1966. Radiocarbon dates for northern New South Wales, Antiquity, XL, 28592.Google Scholar
McBryde, I. 1968. Archaeological investigations in the Graman district, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania, III, 7793.Google Scholar
McBryde, I. Forthcoming. Environment, subsistence economics, site activities, and cultural tradition as determinants of assemblage variation in New England prehistory.Google Scholar
Mccarthy, F. D. 1948. The Lapstone Creek excavation: two culture periods revealed in eastern New South Wales, Records of the Australian Museum, XXII, 134.Google Scholar
Mccarthy, F. D. 1964. The archaeology of the Capertee Valley, New South Wales, Records of the Australian Museum, XXVI, 197246.Google Scholar
Mccarthy, F. D. 1967. Australian Aboriginal Stone implements (Sydney).Google Scholar
McCarthy, F. D., Bramell, E. and Noone, H. V. V.. 1946. The stone implements of Australia, Memoirs of the Australian Museum, IX.Google Scholar
Macintosh, N. W. G., Smith, K. N. and Bailey, A. B.. 1970. Lake Nitchie skeleton—unique Aboriginal burial, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania, V, 85113.Google Scholar
Megaw, J. V. S. 1965. Excavations in the Royal National Park, New South Wales: a first series of radiocarbon dates from the Sydney district, Oceania, XXXV, 2027.Google Scholar
Megaw, J. V. S. 1968. A dated culture sequence for the south Sydney region of New South Wales, Current Anthropology, IX, 3259.Google Scholar
Merrilees, D. 1968. Man the destroyer: late Quaternary changes in the Australian marsupial fauna, Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia, LI, 124.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D. J. 1960. Archaeological excavations at Fromm’s Landing on the lower Murray River, South Australia, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 72: 5385 Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D. J. 1961. The Stone Age of Australia, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 27: 56107.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D. J. 1964a. Australian archaeology 1929–1964: problems and policies, The Australian Journal of Science 27: 3944.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D. J. 1964b. The Pleistocene colonization of Australia, Antiquity, XXVIII: 2637.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D. J. 1974. Summary report on first Mungo project season. Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Newsletter (N.S.) 1: 212.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D. J., and Joyce, E. B.. 1965. Archaeological and geomorphological investigations on Mt. Moffat Station, Queensland, Australia, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 31: 147212.Google Scholar
O’Connell, J. F. 1974. Spoons, knives and scrapers: the function of the Yilugwa in Central Australia, Mankind, IX, 18994.Google Scholar
Peterson, N. 1973. Camp site location amongst Australian hunter-gatherers: archaeological and ethnographic evidence for a key determinant, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania, VIII 17393.Google Scholar
Smyth, R. B. 1878. The Aborigines of Victoria (Melbourne).Google Scholar
Thorne, A. G. 1971. Mungo and Kow Swamp: morphological variation in Pleistocene Australians, Mankind, VIII, 859.Google Scholar
Thorne, A. G., and Macumber, P. G.. 1972. Discoveries of late Pleistocene man at Kow Swamp, Australia, Nature, 238: 31619.Google Scholar
Tindale, N. B. 1957. Culture succession in southeastern Australia from Late Pleistocene to the present, Records of the South Australian Museum, XIII, 149.Google Scholar
Walker, D. (ed.) 1972. Bridge and barrier: the natural and cultural history of Torres Strait (Canberra).Google Scholar
White, C. 1967a. Early stone axes in Arnhem Land, Antiquity, XLI, 14952.Google Scholar
White, C. 1967b. Plateau and plain: prehistoric investigations in Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.Google Scholar
White, J. P. 1971. New Guinea and Australian prehistory: the ‘neolithic problem’, in (eds.) Mulvaney, D. J. and Golson, J., Aboriginal man and environment in Australia (Canberra), 18295.Google Scholar
White, J. P. 1972. Ol Tumbuna, Terra Australis, 11 (Canberra).Google Scholar
White, J. P. 1974. Man in Australia: past and present, The Far Eastern Prehistory Association Newsletter, III, 1327.Google Scholar
White, J. P., Crook, K. A. W. and Ruxton, B. P.. 1970. Kosipe: a Late Pleistocene site in the Papuan Highlands, Proc. Prehis. Soc., XXXVI, 15270.Google Scholar
Wright, R. V. S. 1971. Archaeology of the Gallus Site Koonalda Cave (Canberra).Google Scholar