The ebb and flow : an archaeological investigation of late holocene economic variability on the Coastal Margin of Blue Mud Bay, Northern Australia
Date
2006
Authors
Faulkner, Patrick
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This
thesis is primarily concerned with human-environment interactions on the tropical coast of
northern Australia during the late Holocene. Based on the suggestion that significant change
can occur within short time-frames as a direct result of interactive processes, the archaeological
evidence from the Point Blane peninsula, Blue Mud Bay, is used to address the issue of how
much change and variability occurred in hunter-gatherer economic and social structures during
the late Holocene in coastal northeastern Arnhem Land. The suggestion proposed in this thesis
is that processes of environmental and climatic change resulted in changes in resource
distribution and abundance, which in turn affected patterns of settlement and resource
exploitation strategies, levels of mobility and, potentially, the size of foraging groups on the
coast. Whereas previous archaeological models for coastal northern Australia have used
ethnographies as interpretive tools, it is demonstrated that using ethnographies to aid
interpretations of the archaeological record is a problematic approach for this specific region. In
particular, such an approach has most likely underestimated the nature and extent of variability
that may have existed in the late Holocene. Therefore, the focus here is on what the
archaeological and ecological evidence can tell us about human behaviour in the late Holocene.
The question of human behavioural variability relative to the climatic and ecological parameters
of the last 3000 years in Blue Mud Bay has been addressed by examining issues of scale and
resolution in archaeological interpretation. Specifically, the differential chronological and
spatial patterning of shell midden and mound sites on the peninsula in conjunction with
variability in molluscan resource exploitation. To this end, the biological and ecological
characteristics of Anadara granosa, the dominant molluscan species for much of the known
period of occupation in the region, are considered in detail, in combination with assessing the
potential for human impact through predation. In explaining long-term economic change, the
focus has been placed on the analysis of relative changes and trends through time in prehistoric
resource exploitation, and their relationship to environmental factors. This thesis therefore
makes a contribution to our knowledge of pre-contact coastal foragers by viewing the
archaeological record as a reflection of the process of the interaction of humans with their
environment. In doing so, an opportunity is provided in which change can be recognised in a
number of ways. For example, differential focus on resources, variations in group size and
levels of mobility can all be identified. It has also been shown that human-environment
interactions are non-linear or progressive, and that human behaviour during the late Holocene
was both flexible and dynamic.
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Thesis (PhD)
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