Environmental and cultural change in the Gippsland Lakes Region, Victoria, Australia
Date
1990
Authors
Hotchin, K.L.
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Abstract
The subject matter of this thesis spans the disciplines of Geography, Prehistory and
Anthropology in attempting to examine the interaction of environmental and socio-cultural
systems. The thesis is not meant to be primarily be an in-depth study of the evolution of the
Gippsland Lakes system but is concerned with the question of the nature of the interaction
of a small-scale society with its environment and how this is reflected in the cultural forms
of the society.
That is, rather than being the focus of the study, reconstruction of changes in the
environmental parameters of the field area over time is undertaken to support the primary
inquiry into the nature of environmental-cultural interaction. The goal of the study is
therefore to examine cultural process rather than sedimentary processes.
This empirical approach tests the correlation between the evolving landscape and the
archaeological and ethnographic cultures of the Quaternary barrier systems of the
Gippsland Lakes-Ninety Mile Beach region. This involves environmental reconstruction
largely using published geomorphological and palynological information, and extensive
archaeological site survey and analysis to develop an outline of the prehistory of the study
area. Ethnographic and ethnohistoric reconstruction of aspects of the historical sociocultural
organisation of the area are undertaken in order to provide a comparative base for
archaeologically reconstructed culture. The study identifies a number of problems with the
use of the rich ethnography of the area.
Use of information hinges upon its validity and reliability. For these reasons sources of
bias, particularly natural factors working upon the archaeological record, are investigated.
These have considerable implications for the design and execution of survey, and for
interpretation and analysis of results. It appeared that in the study area at least statistical
description of site location data could not be carried out validly. It was also concluded that
ethnographic accounts of the study area must be used with caution.
Shifts in the natural environment and cultural change in the area seemed to show a poor
correlation. This gave rise to the conclusion that much of what is seen in the reconstructed culture history is attributable to wider scale movements of cultural information in
prehistory rather than to the details of the evolution of the local environment. Upon closer
examination it can be seen that this picture alters according to the scale at which it is
viewed.
There have been major spreads of information, including technological information,
which lead to economic and therefore ecological changes through the Holocene. This
expansion of ideas involved the proliferation of microlithic technologies in the mid-
Holocene, and in the later Holocene a wide-spread expansion of such technologies as fishing
hooks and tied-end canoes. As these phenonema also occurred beyond the study area it is
invalid to attribute them to local adaptive processes.
It is argued that the later Holocene developments, facilitated by technological innovation,
could have been induced by landscape evolution including estuary and wetland
sedimentation and evolution of other, rocky, coasts. At a closer scale, it can be seen that
within these trends local aspects of Holocene Aboriginal culture were closely adjusted to
local environmental conditions. Thus while gross configurations of local culture owe much
to broad scale historic processes, allowed or induced by large scale environmental
evolution, details of local culture may be explicable in terms of local conditions. At either
scale conscious perception and culturally informed response are indicated, and changes
must be seen as significantly induced rather than as the outcomes of random evolutionary
processes.
The concept of adaptation to environment is also examined from a theoretical perspective,
and the use of models of adaptation derived from neo-Darwinian theory in examination of
culture process is scrutinised. It is concluded that the application of an evolutionary model
based on natural selection to cultural process cannot be supported. A process of cultural
selection is suggested as a more valid model in the evolution and reproduction of sociocultural
systems.
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Thesis (PhD)