Northern Australian offshore island use during the
Holocene: the archaeology of Vanderlin Island, Sir Edward Pellew Group, Gulf of
Carpentaria
Northern Australian offshore island use during the
Holocene: the archaeology of Vanderlin Island, Sir Edward Pellew Group, Gulf of
Carpentaria
Date
2008
Authors
Sim, Robin
Wallis, Lynley Anne
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Abstract
This paper presents an overview of archaeological
investigations in the Sir Edward Pellew Islands in the
southwest Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia, It is argued
that Vanderlin Island, like the majority of Australia's offshore
islands, attests to a lacuna in human habitation for several
thousand years after the marine transgression and consequent
insulation c.6700 years ago. With the imminent threat of
inundation, people appear to have retreated to higher land,
abandoning the peripheral exposed shelf areas; subsequent
(re)colonisation of these relict shelf areas in their form as
islands took place steadily from c.4200 Bp, with increased
intensity of occupation after 1300 BP. Possible links between
the timing of island occupation, watercraft technology and
the role of climate change are investigated, with more recent
changes in the archaeological record of Vanderlin Island also
examined in light of cultural contact with Macassans.
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Citation
Sim, R. & Wallis, L.A., 2008.
Northern Australian offshore island use during the Holocene: the archaeology of
Vanderlin Island, Sir Edward Pellew Group, Gulf of Carpentaria. Australian Archaeology,
67, 95-106.