From the Late Pleistocene to the present: Geochemical characterisation of a lithic assemblage from Widgingarri Shelter 1, Arraluli Country, west Kimberley
Emily Nutman , Sue O'Connor , Wudugu Malanali , Peter Collins
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The geochemical sourcing and characterisation of lithic assemblages is surprisingly rare in Australian archaeology. The studies that have been undertaken have overwhelmingly focused on recent Holocene material and on ethnographic artefacts in museum collections with little attention paid to Pleistocene assemblages. Additionally, no work has been conducted on changes in raw material procurement over long time scales, despite many Australian sites having lengthy occupation histories.
This paper presents the results of a portable X-Ray Fluorescence (pXRF) geochemical analysis of a sizeable sample (n = 760) of lithic artefacts and ochre from the site of Widgingarri Shelter 1, one of the earliest sites in northwest Australia with discontinuous occupation from at least ∼50 ka to the contact period. This represents the first geochemical characterisation and sourcing study conducted on an Australian archaeological assemblage of this age and demonstrates how raw material procurement may have been influenced by climatic, sea-level, and landscape changes from the Late Pleistocene to the recent Holocene.
期刊介绍:
Quaternary Science Reviews caters for all aspects of Quaternary science, and includes, for example, geology, geomorphology, geography, archaeology, soil science, palaeobotany, palaeontology, palaeoclimatology and the full range of applicable dating methods. The dividing line between what constitutes the review paper and one which contains new original data is not easy to establish, so QSR also publishes papers with new data especially if these perform a review function. All the Quaternary sciences are changing rapidly and subject to re-evaluation as the pace of discovery quickens; thus the diverse but comprehensive role of Quaternary Science Reviews keeps readers abreast of the wider issues relating to new developments in the field.