Shifting Palaeoeconomies at the Rockshelter Site Madjedbebe, Australia
Author(s): Katherine Woo
Year: 2018
Summary
The East Alligator River Region has undergone considerable environmental change throughout the Pleistocene and Holocene, with changing sea levels dramatically altering the ecosystems of this region. Current archaeological models for this area indicate that people adapted their economic activities to successfully exploit these shifting environments. Throughout these changes molluscs have played an important role in the economic activities of these groups and often comprise large portions of the regional assemblages, but they have not been subject to in-depth studies. Detailed analyses of midden material from Madjedbebe, a rockshelter site, will develop a more comprehensive understanding of the changing economic role of molluscs. Additionally, this project will use the known biological and ecological information available for these organisms as environmental proxies, in combination with existing data, to reconstruct the past environments at this site and to examine and build on current models of long-term human behaviour and use of coastal resources. These detailed analyses of the molluscan material provides new lines of evidence enabling re-examination of pre-existing models for the region.
Cite this Record
Shifting Palaeoeconomies at the Rockshelter Site Madjedbebe, Australia. Katherine Woo. Presented at The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, DC. 2018 ( tDAR id: 443406)
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Keywords
General
historical ecology
•
Zooarchaeology
Geographic Keywords
AUSTRALIA
Spatial Coverage
min long: 111.797; min lat: -44.465 ; max long: 154.951; max lat: -9.796 ;
Record Identifiers
Abstract Id(s): 18850