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1

Clark, Grahame. "JOHN MULVANEY." Archaeology in Oceania 21, no. 1 (1986): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1834-4453.1986.tb00119.x.

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2

Oransky, Ivan. "Richard Joseph Mulvaney." Lancet 368, no. 9553 (2006): 2120. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(06)69851-6.

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3

Mulvaney, John. "Reflections." Antiquity 80, no. 308 (2006): 425–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x0009373x.

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Professor John Mulvaney, pioneer and champion of Australian archaeology, offers us some reflections from the vantage point of his eightieth year. On his retirement 20 years ago Antiquity was glad to publish his Retrospect (Mulvaney 1986), in which he described his awakening interest in history at Melbourne, his first visit to the Rollright Stones and his fruitful encounters with Gordon Childe, Graham Clark, Glyn Daniel, Mortimer Wheeler and many other great figures of the 50s, 60s and 70s in classrooms at Cambridge and in the field in England and Australia. This paper remains a classic of archaeological history which readers will find in our electronic archive (at http://www.antiquity.ac.uk). It ended with his (victorious) battle for the archaeological heritage of the Franklin River heritage of Tasmania in the early 1980s.Now he reflects on the subsequent decades in which much has changed. Of especial interest to our readers will be Professor Mulvaney's current assessment of the Aboriginal-European discourse and the management of the Australian heritage.
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4

Bowdler, Sandra. "Unquiet slumbers: the return of the Kow Swamp burials." Antiquity 66, no. 250 (1992): 103–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00081096.

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5

O'Connell, James. "Prehistory of Australia. John Mulvaney , Johan Kamminga." Journal of Anthropological Research 56, no. 3 (2000): 407–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/jar.56.3.3631100.

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6

Bowman, David. "Prehistory of Australia. John Mulvaney , Johan Kamminga." Quarterly Review of Biology 75, no. 2 (2000): 223. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/393486.

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7

Frankel, David. "The Archaeologist as tribal elder: John Mulvaney 1925–2016." Australian Archaeology 82, no. 3 (2016): 286–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2016.1249695.

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8

Mulvaney, D. J. "Past regained, future lost: the Kow Swamp Pleistocene burials." Antiquity 65, no. 246 (1991): 12–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00079266.

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The Kow Swamp collection of Pleistocene human remains from southeast Australia is perhaps the largest skeletal collection ever recovered from a single Pleistocene context. It was ‘returned’ for re-burial last year. John Mulvaney, a senior Australian prehistorian, reports on a situation in which the issues concerning the bones of ancient people are at their most acute.
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9

Martínez, Julia. "The ‘Malay’ Community in Pre-war Darwin." Queensland Review 6, no. 2 (1999): 45–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600001148.

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This paper examines the ‘Malay’ community in pre-war Darwin, focusing on those men who were brought to Australia to work in the pearling industry. It considers their status within the community, and questions the degree to which the White Australia policy impinged upon their lives. The tenn ‘Malay’ in this context does not refer to the ‘Malays’ of present-day Malaysia, but rather to the ambiguous colonial construction which was loosely based on notions of ‘racial’ grouping. Adrian Vickers’ study of South-East Asian ‘Malay’ identity points to its multiple forms: the colonial constructions of the British and the Dutch; the existence of non-Muslim Malays; and the many ethnic groups whose identities cut across the national boundaries which form present-day Malaysia and Indonesia and the southern Philippines. In the Australian context, the works of John Mulvaney and Campbell Macknight have examined Macassan contact with northern Aboriginal groups, particularly in the Gulf of Carpentaria. According to Mulvaney, the term ‘Macassan’ was used to refer to the Bugis and Macassan seafarers who came to Australia from southern Sulawesi. He notes, however, that nineteenth-century Europeans, such as French commander Baudin and Matthew Flinders referred to them as ‘Malays’.
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10

Spriggs, Matthew, and Christopher Chippindale. "Early setlement of Island Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific." Antiquity 63, no. 240 (1989): 547. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00076535.

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It was a quarter of a century ago that ANTIQUITY first announced the ‘Pleistocene colonization of Australia’, when Mulvaney (1964) reported secure dates before 12,000 b.p. from Kenniff Cave, Queensland. The last three years alone have seen dates from New Guinea of around 40,000 b.p., early dates from the offshore islands of the Bismarck Archipelago, and dates from Australia itself that show a rapid colonization of both the arid central desert and cold, wet Tasmania – environments very different from the tropical islands of Southeast Asia, whence the first Australasian populations must surely have come. It is a record with great implications for early settlement elsewhere, most plainly of the American continents.
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11

Willoughby, Pamela. "Prehistory of Australia, by lohn Mulvaney and lohan Kamminga, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., 1999." Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 10, no. 1 (2000): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/bha.10106.

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12

McDonald, Helen. "Murujuga Marni: Rock Art of the Macropod Hunters and Mollusc Harvesters, by Ken Mulvaney." Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art 17, no. 1 (2017): 113–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14434318.2017.1333405.

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13

Scott, A. W. "Aboriginal Material Culture - Let’s Get It Right - Redressing the Folklore." Aboriginal Child at School 14, no. 4 (1986): 11–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0310582200014486.

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Since the mid 1970s (cf. Mulvaney 1976, p.74) there has been a rapid expansion in the study of Aboriginal material culture which has led to modification of ideas relating to the interpretation of this culture. It is therefore most important that current data sources and interpretations are used by teachers. In response to the comments and opinion of persons not particularly conversant with the field, one is forced to conclude that there are many misconceptions held by our society in general concerning traditional Aboriginal culture.The purpose of this paper is to dispel some of these subjectively based impressions so that any materials, examples or ideas which are drawn from the area of Aboriginal studies are presented in an accurate context.
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14

Rumsey, Alan. "Comment on Mulvaney et al. 1997My Dear Spencerand Review of it inOceaniaby Diane Austin-Broos." Oceania 70, no. 2 (1999): 177–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1834-4461.1999.tb02999.x.

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15

Beaton, J. M. "Cathedral Cave, a rockshelter in Carnarvon Gorge, Queensland." Queensland Archaeological Research 8 (January 1, 1991): 33–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.25120/qar.8.1991.118.

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Cathedral Cave is a large rockshelter site in the uplands of southeast central Queensland. In 1975 I excavated a sample of the site as part of a study into the regional prehistory of this remote part of Queensland. At that time, archaeological data of any kind for the state of Queensland was at a premium. At 1,727,000km², Queensland takes up about as much of the world's surface as do France, Italy, Spain, and Germany combined. Yet, by the early 1970's in this northeastern tropical and sub-tropical one-fifth of the Australian continent we had not quite a handful of archaeological studies. In 1963 R.V.S. Wright (1971) had broken ground in a rockshelter at Mushroom Rock, near Laura, on the spine of the Cape York Peninsula, and had also determined the human genesis of the massive shell mounds at Albatross Bay in the gulf waters of the west coast of the Peninsula. Laila Haglund (1976) had worked for several seasons during the years 1965 through 1968 at the Broadbeach cemetery site in the far southeastern corner of Queensland, and the years of 1960, 1962 and 1964 had seen John Mulvaney's classic excavations in the south-central Queensland highlands (Mulvaney and Joyce 1965). It would be a decade, and later, before these pioneering studies would be followed by regional reconnaissance and excavations programs such as those of Geoff Bailey (1977) who in 1972 followed on from Wright's work at Albatross Bay, my own in 1974 through 1977 in the southeastern uplands (Beaton 1977, 1982, 1991 - this volume, Beaton and Walsh 1977), Michael Morwood on the western slopes of the Dividing range (Morwood 1979, 1980, 1981), Jay Hall and associates in the Moreton Bay area (Hall 1982, Hall and Hiscock 1988), and John Campbell (Campbell 1982) in the northeast.
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Heard, Alexander. "Response to Mulvaney, “Are green jobs just jobs? Cadmium narratives in the life cycle of photovoltaics”." Geoforum 56 (September 2014): 249–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2014.08.001.

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17

Shugui, Hou, Qin Dahe, and Ren Jiawen. "Different post-depositional processes of NO3– in snow layers in East Antarctica and on the northern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau." Annals of Glaciology 29 (1999): 73–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/172756499781821049.

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AbstractThrough comparison of snow-pit NO3– profiles from central East Antarctica and the northern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP), we conclude that NO3– peaks in the uppermost surface snow layers in central East Antarctica are not related to an atmospheric signal and that they need to be accounted for by post-depositional effects. Such effects, however, are not found in the snow-pit NO3– profiles from the northern QTP. NO3– can be deposited as a gas (HNO3–) or as a neutral salt, particularly by reaction with ammonia to form NH4NO3, or fixed by sea salt or terrestrial dust (Mulvaney and others, 1998). Thus, a difference in speciation between NO3– in snow layers in East Antarctica and at the northern QTP is suggested as the reason for the different post-depositional processes of NO3– in the two areas.
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18

Mulvaney, D. J. "Archaeological retrospect 9." Antiquity 60, no. 229 (1986): 96–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x0005849x.

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In this penultimate contribution to our series in which archaeologists look back at archaeology in their time, John Mulvaney, formerly Professor of Prehistory and head of the Department of Prehistory and Anthropology in the Faculty of Arts, Australian National University, Canberra, speaks of his work as a teacher, writer, researcher and archaeological politician. More than anyone he has taught the world about Australian prehistory and the Australians about their own past—and the need to preserve it, culminating in the triumphal campaign to save the Franklin River region of SW Tasmania. He resigned from professional commitment to Australian archaeology at the early age of sixty. His retirement will allow him more time for writing, reading and, perhaps, recreation (the Production Editor treasures the gift of his book, ‘Cricket Walkabout’, in 1967: an account of the Aboriginal Cricket Tour of England, 1867–8).
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19

Stocking,, George W. ""So Much That Is New": Baldwin Spencer, 1860-1929: A Biography. D. J. Mulvaney , J. H. Calaby." Isis 77, no. 2 (1986): 360–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/354172.

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20

Paz, Victor. "Cut not smashed: a new type of evidence for nut exploitation from Sulawesi." Antiquity 75, no. 289 (2001): 497–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00088621.

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In archaeology the recovery of ‘nuts’ means the recovery of any hard-shelled fruit or seeds, further qualified as those eaten by people. Recent analysis of environmental samples from Leang Burung-1 in the Maros district of Sulawesi (FIGURE 1) led to the recovery of a charred, almost intact nut, in deposits with an age range of 1430±600 BC (ANU-390) (Bulbeck 1997; Mulvaney & Soejono 1970).The nut has a clear cut mark starting from the tapered end, running along the long axis. The cut was established as an incision and not a taphonomic feature based on observations under light microscopy and Scanning Electron Microscopy, where the cut could be seen scraping the outer tissue (FIGURE 2). The cut was probably made before charring, using a sharp tool to cut deep enough for the instrunent to pry open one of the locules to get to one of three kernels. Based on the associated materials recovered from the site, the cut probably was made using one of several flaked tool types recovered from the area, such as a levallois point — part of the Maros region blade assemblage (FIGURE 3).
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21

Ulm, Sean. "Prehistory of AustraliaJohn Mulvaney and Johan Kamminga Published by Allen and Unwin, St Leonards, NSW, 1999, xii + 480 pp, pb, $39.95." Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 28, no. 2 (2000): 35–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1326011100001630.

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22

Schrire, Carmel. "AUSTRALIANS TO 1788, by D.J. Mulvaney and J.P. White (eds)./[Volume 1 of AUSTRALIANS: A HISTORICAL LIBRARY, by A.D. Gilbert and K.S. Inglis (eds)." Australian Archaeology 28, no. 1 (1989): 147–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03122417.1989.12093219.

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23

Mulvaney, R., D. A. Peel, and A. P. Reid. "26-Year High Resolution Profile Of Major Anions In Snow From Coats Land, Antarctica." Annals of Glaciology 14 (1990): 349. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260305500009198.

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In January 1987, an 7.8 m core, with an age at the bottom of 26 years, was collected from a site approximately 150 km inland from Halley Station (77°02.2′S, 22°32′W; altitude 1862 m a.s.l.); 10 m temperature ≈ −30°C; accumulation rate ≈ 14 g cm−2 a−1). The site lies some 140 km from the coast of the Weddell Sea and within the area bounded in winter by the polar vortex. The core has been analysed at a frequency of ≈28 samples per accumulation year for sulphate, nitrate and chloride, and has been dated stratigraphically from the clear seasonal cycles in non sea salt sulphate (Mulvaney and Peel, 1988). With this resolution it is possible to examine the seasonal pattern of deposition of chemical species and their phase relationships. Of particular interest is the possibility that ice cores may preserve evidence for disturbances in tropospheric chemistry, associated with the recent spring-time depletion of stratospheric ozone. It has been proposed that this is accompanied by a denitrification of the stratosphere during the winter months, implying enhanced levels of NOX in the late winter/spring troposphere and in precipitation. Our data reveal a strong seasonal signal in nitrate deposition, apparently peaking in spring. Similar behaviour has been reported by Wagenbach and others (1988) for nitrate in the atmospheric aerosol, in a 3-year sequence (1983–86) from Georg von Neumayer Station (70°S, 8°W). There does not appear to be any evidence in our data of an increase in spring-time nitrate deposition since the appearance of the Antarctic ozone hole in 1978.
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24

Mulvaney, R., D. A. Peel, and A. P. Reid. "26-Year High Resolution Profile Of Major Anions In Snow From Coats Land, Antarctica." Annals of Glaciology 14 (1990): 349. http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/s0260305500009198.

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In January 1987, an 7.8 m core, with an age at the bottom of 26 years, was collected from a site approximately 150 km inland from Halley Station (77°02.2′S, 22°32′W; altitude 1862 m a.s.l.); 10 m temperature ≈ −30°C; accumulation rate ≈ 14 g cm−2 a−1). The site lies some 140 km from the coast of the Weddell Sea and within the area bounded in winter by the polar vortex.The core has been analysed at a frequency of ≈28 samples per accumulation year for sulphate, nitrate and chloride, and has been dated stratigraphically from the clear seasonal cycles in non sea salt sulphate (Mulvaney and Peel, 1988). With this resolution it is possible to examine the seasonal pattern of deposition of chemical species and their phase relationships.Of particular interest is the possibility that ice cores may preserve evidence for disturbances in tropospheric chemistry, associated with the recent spring-time depletion of stratospheric ozone. It has been proposed that this is accompanied by a denitrification of the stratosphere during the winter months, implying enhanced levels of NOX in the late winter/spring troposphere and in precipitation. Our data reveal a strong seasonal signal in nitrate deposition, apparently peaking in spring. Similar behaviour has been reported by Wagenbach and others (1988) for nitrate in the atmospheric aerosol, in a 3-year sequence (1983–86) from Georg von Neumayer Station (70°S, 8°W). There does not appear to be any evidence in our data of an increase in spring-time nitrate deposition since the appearance of the Antarctic ozone hole in 1978.
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25

Zimmermann, Erik, and Laura Bracalenti. "Validación de una metodología empírica para evaluar modificaciones del riesgo de inundación urbana ante escenarios hipotéticos de uso del suelo." Cuadernos del CURIHAM 23 (April 22, 2019): 63–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.35305/curiham.v23i0.31.

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Con el propósito de analizar la incidencia de los espacios verdes urbanos y periurbanos en la dinámica hídrica de subcuencas urbanas de la ciudad de Rosario se propuso, en trabajos precedentes, una metodología de estimación de los cambios en el riesgo de inundación pluvial urbana frente a cambios de uso del suelo. La metodología es de carácter empírico y se basa en la fórmula racional de Mulvaney junto con la expresión de Kieffer y Chu para las curvas IDR, siendo aplicada a 5 cuencas urbanas de Rosario, considerando un escenario base (actual) de uso del suelo y 3 escenarios futuros con/sin disponibilidad de espacios verdes. En este trabajo se valida la metodología empírica aplicando una estimación estadística convencional a las cuencas anteriores. La misma contempla la estimación de parámetros geomorfológicos e hidrológicos de las cuencas para el escenario base y los escenarios futuros, aplicando el Colorado Urban Hydrograph Procedure, CUHP. Se procesan series pluviométricas de Rosario Aero (71 años de extensión, alrededor de 7000 eventos) construyendo hietogramas de lluvia total y neta mediante un coeficiente de escorrentía por cuenca y escenario. Se generan series de caudales diarios y se seleccionan los máximos anuales, asignándoles leyes de distribución de probabilidad (Gumbel). Finalmente, para cada cuenca y escenario se obtienen los cambios de probabilidad de excedencia para las series actuales y futuras de caudales. Al comparar los resultados con la metodología empírica se alcanzan coeficientes de correlación muy altos (0.9975) y coeficientes de eficiencia de Nash-Sutcliffe elevados (0.9929). Consecuentemente la metodología denominada empírica constituye una simple y efectiva herramienta para estimar los cambios en el riesgo de inundación ante cambios de uso del suelo evaluados a través del coeficiente de escorrentía.
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Mulvaney, Derek John. "Petroglyphs of Dampier—foreword. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1684.

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Taylor, Russell C. "Petroglyphs of Dampier—foreword. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1685.

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Ward, Graeme K. "Petroglyphs of Dampier—preface. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 5–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1686.

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Ward, Graeme K., and Ken Mulvaney. "Archaeology and petroglyphs of Dampier—editors’ introduction. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 9–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1687.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "Petroglyphs of Dampier—general conclusions. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 9." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 687–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1697.

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31

Chippindale, Christopher. "John Mulvaney & Johan Kamminga. Prehistory of Australia. xx+480 pages. b&w illustrations, 16 colour plates. 1999. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution Press; 1-56098-804-5 paperback £19.95 & $27.95." Antiquity 74, no. 283 (2000): 238–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x0006645x.

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Attenbrow, Val. "Digging up a Past. By John Mulvaney. 240mm. Pp xiii+348, some b&w ills and map. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press Ltd, 2011. ISBN 9781742232195. $(Aus) 59.95 (hbk)." Antiquaries Journal 92 (September 2012): 457–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581512000777.

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Murray, Tim. "Tim Bonyhardy & Tom Griffiths (ed.). prehistory to politics: John Mulvaney, the humanities and the public intellectual. xii+271 pages, 22 plates. 1996. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press; 0-522-84748-X paperback." Antiquity 71, no. 274 (1997): 1102–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x0008618x.

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Powlson, D. S., D. S. Jenkinson, A. E. Johnston, P. R. Poulton, M. J. Glendining, and K. W. T. Goulding. "Comments on “Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for Sustainable Cereal Production,” by R.L. Mulvaney, S.A. Khan, and T.R. Ellsworth in the Journal of Environmental Quality 2009 38:2295-2314." Journal of Environmental Quality 39, no. 2 (2010): 749–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2010.0001le.

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Wellisch, Hans H. "Indexing Books. Nancy C. Mulvany." Library Quarterly 65, no. 1 (1995): 137–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/602763.

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Orth, Ernst Wolfgang. "Thomas Mulvany Seebohm (1934–2014)." Kant-Studien 106, no. 1 (2015): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/kant-2015-0001.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "General introduction to the research at Dampier. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 1." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 47–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1688.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "The Petroglyphs of Skew Valley. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 2 (part I)." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 59–161. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1689.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "The Eagle Group at Gum Tree Valley. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 4." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 283–416. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1692.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "The Kangaroo Group at Gum Tree Valley. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 5." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 417–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1693.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "The Woman Group at Gum Tree Valley. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 6." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 489–555. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1694.

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David, M. B., G. F. McIsaac, and R. G. Darmody. "Additional Comments on “Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for Sustainable Cereal Production,” by R.L. Mulvaney, S.A. Khan, and T.R. Ellsworth in the Journal of Environmental Quality 2009 38:2295-2314." Journal of Environmental Quality 39, no. 4 (2010): 1526–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2010.0003le.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "The Spirit Figure Group at Gum Tree Valley. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 3." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 191–282. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1691.

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Mulvaney, R. L., S. A. Khan, and T. R. Ellsworth. "Reply to Comments on “Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for Sustainable Cereal Production,” by R.L. Mulvaney, S.A. Khan, and T.R. Ellsworth in the Journal of Environmental Quality 2009 38: 2295-2314." Journal of Environmental Quality 39, no. 2 (2010): 753–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2010.0002le.

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Hobbie, Christine. "We Were the Mulvaneys Joyce Carol Oates ,We Were the Mulvaneys, New York, Penguin Putnam, 1997." San Francisco Jung Institute Library Journal 23, no. 1 (2004): 45–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jung.1.2004.23.1.45.

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Powlson, D. S., D. S. Jenkinson, A. E. Johnston, P. R. Poulton, M. J. Glendining, and K. W. T. Goulding. "Reply to Additional Comments on “Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for Sustainable Cereal Production,” by R.L. Mulvaney, S.A. Khan, and T.R. Ellsworth in the Journal of Environmental Quality 2009 38:2295-2314." Journal of Environmental Quality 39, no. 4 (2010): 1528–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2010.0004le.

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Mulvaney, R. L., S. A. Khan, and T. R. Ellsworth. "Reply to Additional Comments on “Synthetic Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for Sustainable Cereal Production,” by R.L. Mulvaney, S.A. Khan, and T.R. Ellsworth in the Journal of Environmental Quality 2009 38:2295-2314." Journal of Environmental Quality 39, no. 4 (2010): 1530–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2010.0005le.

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SIMMONDS, MARK. "The Whaling Season. An Inside Account of the Struggle to Stop Commercial Whaling, BY KIERAN MULVANEY, xvii + 348 pp., 23.5×15.5×2.5 cm, ISBN 1 55963 978 4 hardback, US$ 26.00, Washington, DC, USA: Island Press, 2003." Environmental Conservation 31, no. 3 (2004): 263–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0376892904231642.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "The Summit of Gum Tree Valley. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 7, with addenda by Jacques Evin and George Kendrick." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 557–668. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1695.

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Lorblanchet, Michel. "Comparisons between the six zones studied in Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley. In Archaeology and Petroglyphs of Dampier (Western Australia), an Archaeological Investigation of Skew Valley and Gum Tree Valley, ed. Graeme K. Ward and Ken Mulvaney, chapter 8." Technical Reports of the Australian Museum online 27 (December 19, 2018): 669–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.1835-4211.27.2018.1696.

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