Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-r6qrq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T08:31:15.793Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Australian transition: real and perceived boundaries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

David Frankel*
Affiliation:
School of Archaeology, La Trobe University, Bundoora 3083, Australia

Abstract

The Pleistocene to Holocene transition is both a reality of climate history, and a notion of the prehistorian. A century of approaches to Australian archaeology guides the frameworks of the issue today.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1995

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

Abbie, A.A. 1976. Morphological variation in the adult Australian Aboriginal, in Kirk, R.L. & Thorne, A.G. (ed.), The origin of the Australians: 211–14. Canberra: Australian Instituo of Aboriginal Studies.Google Scholar
Allen, J. 1993. Notions of the Pleistocene in Greater Australia, in Spriggs et al. (ed.): 139–51Google Scholar
Allen, J. 1994. Radiocarbon determinations, luminescence dating and Australian archaeology, Antiquity 68: 339–43.Google Scholar
Allen, J., Golson, J. & Jones, R. (ed.). 1977. Sunda and Sahul. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Allen, J., Gosden, C. & White, J.P. 1989. Human Pleistocene adaptations in the tropical island Pacific: recent evidence from New Ireland, a Greater Australian outlier, Antiquity 63: 548–61.Google Scholar
Allen, J. & Holdaway, S. 1995. The contamination of Pleistocene radiocarbon determinations in Australia, Antiquity 69: 101–12.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1968. Archaeology in Australia, Current Affairs Bulletin 41: 194207.Google Scholar
Beaton, J.M. 1985. Evidence for a coastal occupation time-lag at Princess Charlotte Bay (North Queensland) and implications for coastal colonisation and population growth theories for Aboriginal Australia, Archaeology in Oceania 20: 7380.Google Scholar
Bird, C.F.M. & Frankel, D. 1991. Chronology and explanation in western Victoria and south-east South Australia, Archaeology in Oceania 25: 116.Google Scholar
Birdsell, J.B. 1967. Preliminary data on the trihybrid origin of the Australian Aborigines, Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 2: 100155.Google Scholar
Blainey, G. 1975. Triumph of the nomads. Melbourne: Sun Books.Google Scholar
Bowdler, S. 1977. The coastal colonisation of Australia, in Allen et al. (ed.): 205–46.Google Scholar
Bowdler, S. 1993. Views of the past in Australian prehistory, in Spriggs et al. (ed.): 123–38.Google Scholar
Flannery, T.F. 1994. The future eaters. Melbourne: Reed Books.Google Scholar
Frankel, D. 1991. Remains to be seen. Melbourne: Longman Cheshire.Google Scholar
Frankel, D. 1993. Pleistocene chronological structures and explanations: a challenge, in Smith et al. (ed.): 2433 Google Scholar
Horton, D. 1981. Early thoughts on early man in Australia, The Artefact 6: 5369.Google Scholar
Horton, D. 1991. Recovering the tracks. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.Google Scholar
Jones, R. 1993. A continental reconnaissance: some observations concerning the discovery of the Pleistocene archaeology of Australia, in Spriggs et al. (ed.): 97122.Google Scholar
Loukandos, H. 1983. Intensification: a late Pleistocene-Holocene archaeological sequence from southwestern Victoria, Archaeology in Oceania 18: 8194.Google Scholar
Morwood, M.J. 1987. The archaeology of social complexity in south-east Queensland, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 53: 337–50.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D.J. 1963. The antiquity of man in Australia, in Stanner, W.E.H. & Sheils, H. (ed.), Australian Aboriginal studies: 3351. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D.J. 1964. Australian archaeology 1929–1964: problems and policies, Australian Journal of Science 27: 3944.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D.J. 1971. Aboriginal social evolution: a retrospective view, in Mulvaney & Golson (ed.): 368–80. Canberra: Australian National University Press.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D.J. 1977. Classification and typology in Australia: the first 340 years, in Wright, R.V.S. (ed.). Stone tools as cultural markers: 263–8. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D.J. 1981. Gum leaves on the Golden Bough: Australia’s Palaeolithic survivals discovered, in Evans, J.D. et al. (ed.), Antiquity and man: 5264. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, D.J. & Golson, J. (ed.). 1971. Aboriginal man and environment in Australia. Canberra: Australian National University Press.Google Scholar
O’connor, S., Veth, P. & Hubbard, N. 1993. Changing interpretations of postglacial human subsistence demography in Sahul, in Smith et al. (ed.): 95105.Google Scholar
Pardoe, C. 1993. The Pleistocene is still with us; analytical constraints and possibilities for the study of ancient human remains in archaeology, in Smith et al. (ed.): 8194.Google Scholar
Pulleine, R. 1928. The Tasmanians and their stone culture, Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science 19: 294314.Google Scholar
Roberts, R.G., Jones, R. & Smith, M.A. 1994. Beyond the radiocarbon barrier in Australian prehistory, Antiquity 68: 611–16.Google Scholar
Smith, M.A., Spriggs, M. & Fankhauser, B. (ed.). 1993a. Sahul in review. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, RSPacS, Australian National University. Occasional Papers in Prehistory 24.Google Scholar
Smith, M.A., Spriggs, M. & Fankhauser, B. (ed.). 1993b. Sahul in review: an introduction, in Smith et al. (ed.): 17.Google Scholar
Spriggs, M. 1993. Island Melanesia: the last 10,000 years, in Spriggs et al. (ed.): 187205.Google Scholar
Spriggs, M. et al. (ed.). 1993. A community of culture. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, RSPacS, Australian National University. Occasional Papers in Prehistory 21.Google Scholar
Thorne, A.G. 1977. Separation or reconciliation? Biological clues to the development of Australian society, in Allen et al. (ed.): 187204.Google Scholar
White, J.P. 1971. New Guinea and Australian prehistory: the ‘Neolithic problem’, in Mulvaney & Golson (ed.): 182–95.Google Scholar
Yen, D.E. 1993. Pacific subsistence systems and aspects of cultural evolution, in Spriggs et al. (ed.): 8896.Google Scholar