Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2016
Skeletal remains from a burial in New South Wales exhibit evidence of fataltrauma, of a kind normally indicative of sharp metal weapons, yet the burialdates to the mid thirteenth century—600 years before European settlersreached the area. Could sharp-edged wooden weapons from traditionalAboriginal culture inflict injuries similar to those resulting from later,metal blades? Analysis indicates that the wooden weapons known as ‘Lil-lils’ and the fighting boomerangs (‘Wonna’) both have blades that could fit within thedimensions of the major trauma and are capable of having caused the fatalwounds.