Academic literature on the topic 'Aboriginal australians – antiquities – congresses'

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Aboriginal australians – antiquities – congresses"

1

Florek, Stan M. "Archaeology of the mound spring campsites near Lake Eyre in South Australia." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/18420.

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This study examines the variability of the stone assemblages at the mound springs campsites in South Australia. The research area is part of the tribal territories of Arabana and Diyari people. It comprises a network of mound springs stretching for about 200 km along the south and southwest shores of Lake Eyre. These mound springs were vital for permanent occupation of this arid region in late prehistory and in the post contact period. Large campsites located near the major springs attest to the prehistoric occupation of the area. Historical accounts reveal that this occupation was abruptly te
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Slack, Michael Jon. "Between the desert and the Gulf : evolutionary anthropology and Aboriginal prehistory in the Riversleigh/Lawn Hill region, Northern Australia." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/2748.

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Gandhi, Vidhu Built Environment Faculty of Built Environment UNSW. "Aboriginal Australian heritage in the postcolonial city: sites of anti-colonial resistance and continuing presence." Publisher:University of New South Wales. Built Environment, 2008. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/41460.

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Aboriginal Australian heritage forms a significant and celebrated part of Australian heritage. Set within the institutional frameworks of a predominantly ??white?? European Australian heritage practice, Aboriginal heritage has been promoted as the heritage of a people who belonged to the distant, pre-colonial past and who were an integral and sustainable part of the natural environment. These controlled and carefully packaged meanings of Aboriginal heritage have underwritten aspects of urban Aboriginal presence and history that prevail in the (previously) colonial city. In the midst of the cit
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Stead, Roberta E. "Towards a classification of Australian Aboriginal stone arrangements : an investigation of methodological problems with a gazetteer of selected sites." Thesis, Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/110256.

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A classification of Australian Aboriginal stone arrangements is fundamental to the understanding of their function and social significance for both Australian and world prehistory. The implications of certain problems with the archaeological data for a classification of arrangements, such as dating and inadequate reporting, are discussed. Possible principles governing the mode of construction, design and location of arrangements are investigated, and the criteria for classification suggested. A two-tier classification is proposed. On the first level, the technological and morphologica
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Fanning, Patricia C. "Beyond the divide: a new geoarchaeology of Aboriginal stone artefact scatters in Western NSW, Australia." Australia : Macquarie University, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/45010.

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Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Environmental & Life Sciences, Graduate School of the Environment, 2002.<br>Includes bibliographical references: p. 228-232.<br>Geomorphology, archaeology and geoarchaeology: introduction and background -- Surface stone artefact scatters: why can we see them? -- Geomorphic controls on spatial patterning of the surface stone artefact record -- A temporal framework for interpreting surface artefact scatters in Western NSW -- Synthesis: stone artefact scatters in a dynamic landscape.<br>Surface scatters of stone artefacts are the most ubiquitous fea
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Paterson, A. G. (Alistair Graham). "Confronting the sources : the archaeology of culture-contact in the South-Western Lake Eyre Basin, Central Australia." Phd thesis, Department of Prehistory and Historical Archaeology, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/7892.

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Sefton, Caryll. "Site and artefact patterns on the Woronora Plateau." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/7222.

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Walshe, Keryn A. "A taphonomic analysis of the vertebrate material from Allen's Cave : implications for Australian arid zone archaeology." Phd thesis, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/109962.

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This thesis analyses an extensive bone deposit from Allen's Cave, which is situated on the southern Nullarbor, South Australia. Excavation of the site in 1989 yielded evidence for 38,000 years of human occupation, the first 25,000 years of which took place under extremely arid conditions. A taphonomic analysis of the bone debris was undertaken in order to identify patterns of Aboriginal arid zone subsistence and occupation. The bone debris consists of skeletal material from a range of small to large prey. The smaller species are both better represented and preserved than larger species
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Law, Wallace Boone. "Chipping away in the past : stone artefact reduction and Holocene systems of land use in arid Central Australia." Master's thesis, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/151219.

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Cundy, B. J. "An analysis of the Ingaladdi assemblage : a critique of the understanding of Lithic technology." Phd thesis, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/114472.

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Despite the changes in method and theory which have occurred in the study of prehistory over the last one hundred and fifty years the understanding of lithic technology has been dominated by a single perspective. This has been based on three central assumptions: (1) the form of an artifact reflects prior mental or cognitive processes which supply the formal cause, (2) the clear delineation of products as ends and (3) the neutrality of the experience of the production process which converts the cognitive into the material. This thesis presents a critique of these assumptions and demon
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Books on the topic "Aboriginal australians – antiquities – congresses"

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AURA Congress (1st 1988 Darwin, N.T.). State of the art: Regional rock art studies in Australia and Melanesia ; proceedings of Symposium C "Rock art studies in Australia and Oceania" and Symposium D "The rock art of Northern Australia" of the First AURA Congress held in Darwin in 1988. Australian Rock Art Research Association, 1992.

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Mass.) Harvard Australian Studies Symposium (1st 2009 Cambridge. 1st Harvard Australian Studies Symposium, people colonizing new worlds, Gutman Conference Centre, Graduate School of Education, April 17-18, 2009. Australian Studies Committee, Harvard University, 2009.

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Conference, Australian Archaeological Association. Barriers, borders, boundaries: Proceedings of the 2001 Australian Archaeological Association annual conference. Anthropology Museum, University of Queensland, 2002.

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Conference, Australian Archaeological Association. Barriers, borders, boundaries: Program and abstracts of the 2001 Australian Archaeological Association Annual Conference. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit, The University of Queensland, 2001.

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1933-, Meehan Betty, Jones Rhys, and Australian Archaeological Association, eds. Archaeology with ethnography: An Australian perspective. Dept. of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University, 1988.

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Smith, Keith. Wallumedegal: An Aboriginal history of Ryde. Community Services Unit, City of Ryde, 2005.

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7

Rhodes, David. Coranderrk Aboriginal Station archaeological survey. Aboriginal Affairs Victoria, 1998.

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Brayshaw, Helen. Well beaten paths: Aborigines of the Herbert/Burdekin district, north Queensland : an ethnographic and archaeological study. Department of History, James Cook University of North Queensland, 1990.

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Sutherland, Phillippa. Shire of Bulla aboriginal archaeological study. s.n., 1994.

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10

Deunert, Boris. Modern archaeology and its reflection in the value system of contemporary culture: Based on anthropological/archaeological research conducted in Australia. Tempus Reparatum, 1996.

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