1st Edition

Prehistory of Australia

By John Mulvaney Copyright 1999
    512 Pages
    by Routledge

    508 Pages
    by Routledge

    Australia's human prehistory through more than 40,000 years is the challenging theme of this masterly survey. John Mulvaney and Johan Kamminga bring together the discoveries and often controversial interpretations of six decades of archaeological research to reveal that across this island continent, in the face of contrasting environments and changing climates, human responses produced many cultures, languages and life styles.

    The Old World is usually credited with the origins of art and spirituality. Recent discoveries, however, prove that symbolic rock art and complex burial rites also existed in Australia at challengingly early times. The authors evaluate the dating evidence upon which Australia's human story before 1788 is reconstructed. They review diverse topics, such as the controversy about the time people first arrived on the continent's northern coast, the extinction of marsupial megafauna and the diversity of Aboriginal rock art.

    Prehistory of Australia explains why Aboriginal Australia is recognised today for its significance in global prehistory and why so many of its archaeological places have merited World Heritage listing.

    Preface

    1 The past uncovered and its ownership

    2 The diversity of surviving traces

    3 Dating the past

    4 Changing landscapes

    5 People, language and society

    6 Subsistence and reciprocity

    7 Seafarers to Sahul

    8 Sahul: a Pleistocene continent

    9 The initial colonisation

    10 The original Australians

    11 Pleistocene settlement

    12 Conquest of the deserts

    13 Pleistocene artefacts

    14 Holocene stone tool innovations

    15 Theories and models

    16 People of the coast

    17 Regional challenges and responses

    18 Island settlement

    19 Tasmania

    20 Art on rock

    21 Rock art of temperate Australia

    22 Rock art of trpoical Australia

    23 Asian and European newcomers

    Glossary

    Endnotes

    References

    Index

    Biography

    John Mulvaney is the founder of Australian archaeology, a frequent media commentator on current issues and the only living Australian public intellectual to have had a book entirely devoted to his work. After 40 years of university teaching and advising governments, he remains a highly respected yet controversial activist.

    Johan Kamminga is a consultant archaeologist, chosen by Mulvaney to assist him in surveying the last three decades of discovery.