Published January 1, 1996 | Version v1
Conference paper Restricted

Radiocarbon and Cultural Chronologies in Southeast Queensland Prehistory

Description

In this paper we present an overview of the radiocarbon chronology of pre-European Aboriginal occupation of southeast Queensland. Analysis of these data provides the basis for evaluating cultural chronologies proposed for southeast Queensland which emphasise time-lags between sea-level stabilisation and permanent occupation of the coast and late prehistoric structural change in settlement and subsistence strategies linked to intensifying regional social alliance networks. This synthesis of the radiocarbon chronology demonstrates that significant increases in the number of occupied sites and the rate of site establishment does not occur until after 1,200 cal BP, and is restricted to the coastal strip. While sea-level change may have significantly influenced the representation of earlier sites, the pattern over the last 1,000 years cannot be explained solely in terms of differential preservation due to geomorphological processes. While these results indicate significant structural change in the archaeological record of southeast Queensland in the late Holocene, the nature of that change requires closer examination through further detailed studies of local and regional patterns.

Notes

Tempus: archaeology and material culture studies in anthropology; Australian Archaeology '95: Proceedings of the 1995 Australian Archaeological Association Annual Conference Tempus 6, Chapter 4, 45--62.

Files

Restricted

The record is publicly accessible, but files are restricted to users with access.

Request access

If you would like to request access to these files, please fill out the form below.

You need to satisfy these conditions in order for this request to be accepted:

This publication may contain culturally sensitive information. Therefore, access is restricted. Access can be granted upon request, however, the intended use must be specified. Permit will be subject to approval by an Indigenous and / or scientific advisory committee. Please send your request to octopus-database@googlegroups.com.

You are currently not logged in. Do you have an account? Log in here