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Giving it a burl: towards the integration of genetics, isotope chemistry, and osteoarchaeology in Cape York, Tropical North Queensland, Australia

Authors

Collard, Mark
Wasef, S.
Adams, Shaun
Wright, Kirsty
Mitchell, R.
Wright, Joanne L.
Wrobel, Gabriel
Nagle, Nano
Miller, Adrian
Wood, Rachel

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Publisher

Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

In this paper we outline a worked example of the combined use of genetic data and archaeological evidence. The project focuses on Queensland's Cape York Peninsula and has two goals. One is to shed new light on the population history of the region. The other is to develop a methodology to facilitate repatriation of the remains of Aboriginal Australians. After providing some background to the project and outlining its main activities, we summarize our key findings to date. Subsequently, we discuss what the project has taught us about the prehistory of Cape York, the potential for DNA research and isotope chemistry to assist research institutions and Aboriginal communities with the repatriation of unaffiliated remains, and the process of conducting combined genetic and archaeological research.

Description

Citation

Mark Collard, Sally Wasef, Shaun Adams, Kirsty Wright, R. John Mitchell, Joanne L. Wright, Gabriel Wrobel, Nano Nagle, Adrian Miller, Rachel Wood, Timothy J. Pietsch, Sheila Van Holst Pellekaan, Clarence Flinders & Michael C. Westaway (2019) Giving it a burl: towards the integration of genetics, isotope chemistry, and osteoarchaeology in Cape York, Tropical North Queensland, Australia, World Archaeology, 51:4, 602-619, DOI: 10.1080/00438243.2019.1686418

Source

World Archaeology

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Restricted until

2099-12-31