The Aboriginal Material Culture of the Wellesley Islands and Adjacent Mainland Coast, Gulf of Carpentaria: Social and Environmental Factors Affecting Variations in Style

Q1 Arts and Humanities
A. Best
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Similarities and differences in aspects of the culture of the Aboriginal people of the Wellesley Islands, has been noted by European writers. This remote island group is situated in the southern region of the Gulf of Carpentaria, northwest Queensland. Observed differences appear to demonstrate dissimilarities in certain cultural manifestations between the North Wellesley Islands (Mornington and Forsyth) and the South Wellesley Islands (Bentinck and Sweers). These include language, social organisation, land-use, ritual and ceremonial practices and manufactured objects of material culture. However, other cultural practices, namely an economy based on marine resources, are shared throughout the region. The data used here focus on items of portable material culture used by the people of the Wellesley Islands and the adjacent mainland coast at a time before intensified social disruptions to Aboriginal people in the area was brought about by increased European presence and by the establishment of missions in the region in the first quarter of the twentieth century. All items are from museum collections and were collected no later than 1916. Using a relational database, the morphological variations present in the objects are quantified and analysed. The study area is divided into three regional zones; the North Wellesley Islands, the South Wellesley Islands and the Adjacent Mainland Coast. In the region, four different languages are spoken and the data are also analysed by language group. The aim of the study is to determine whether quantifiable regional variation can be demonstrated. This article intentionally focuses narrowly on portable objects of material culture. For references to wider cultural aspects of the study area, see Roth (1897, 1901, 1903), Tindale (1977), Trigger (1987), Robins et al. (1998), Evans (2005), Memmott (2010), whose work has previously explored similarity and difference in the culture of the region as well as theoretical discussions of the reasons for these differences.
卡奔塔利亚湾韦尔斯利群岛及其邻近大陆海岸的土著物质文化:影响风格变化的社会和环境因素
欧洲作家注意到威尔斯利群岛土著人文化各方面的异同。这个偏远的岛屿群位于昆士兰西北部卡奔塔利亚湾的南部地区。观察到的差异似乎表明,在北韦尔斯利群岛(莫宁顿和福赛斯)和南韦尔斯利群岛(本廷克和斯韦尔斯)之间,某些文化表现存在差异。这些包括语言、社会组织、土地使用、仪式和仪式实践以及物质文化的制造对象。然而,其他文化习俗,即以海洋资源为基础的经济,在整个区域共享。这里使用的数据集中在韦尔斯利群岛和邻近大陆海岸的人们使用的便携式物质文化项目,当时欧洲人的增加和20世纪前25年在该地区建立的使团加剧了对该地区土著居民的社会破坏。所有物品都来自博物馆收藏,收藏时间不晚于1916年。使用关系数据库,在对象中存在的形态变化被量化和分析。研究区划分为三个区域带;北韦尔斯利群岛、南韦尔斯利群岛和邻近的大陆海岸。在该地区,人们使用四种不同的语言,数据也按语言群体进行分析。这项研究的目的是确定是否可以证明可量化的区域差异。这篇文章有意狭隘地聚焦于物质文化的便携物品。有关研究区域更广泛的文化方面的参考资料,请参见Roth (1897, 1901, 1903), Tindale (1977), Trigger (1987), Robins等人(1998),Evans (2005), Memmott(2010),他们的工作先前探讨了该地区文化的相似性和差异性,以及对这些差异原因的理论讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Queensland Archaeological Research
Queensland Archaeological Research Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
期刊介绍: Queensland Archaeological Research is a peer-reviewed journal published since 1984 devoted to publishing substantive, original and high-quality archaeological research pertaining to Queensland, Australia and adjacent areas. Data-rich manuscripts are particularly welcome. Queensland Archaeological Research is published in English in one volume each year. Submission of articles to Queensland Archaeological Research is free. Access to articles in Queensland Archaeological Research is free.
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