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Early human occupation of Australia’s eastern seaboard
Adams, S.; Norman, K.; Kemp, J.; Jacobs, Z.; Costelloe, M.; Fairbairn, A.; Robins, R.; Stock, E.; Moss, P.; Smith, T.; Love, S.; Manne, T.; Lowe, K.M.; Logan, I.; Manoel, M.; McFadden, K.; Burns, D.; Falkiner, Z.; Clarkson, C. (2024). Early human occupation of Australia’s eastern seaboard. NPG Scientific Reports 14(1): 2579. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-52000-y
In: Scientific Reports (Nature Publishing Group). Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 2045-2322; e-ISSN 2045-2322, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Authors  Top 
  • Adams, S.
  • Norman, K.
  • Kemp, J.
  • Jacobs, Z.
  • Costelloe, M.
  • Fairbairn, A.
  • Robins, R.
  • Stock, E.
  • Moss, P.
  • Smith, T.
  • Love, S.
  • Manne, T.
  • Lowe, K.M.
  • Logan, I.
  • Manoel, M.
  • McFadden, K.
  • Burns, D.
  • Falkiner, Z.
  • Clarkson, C.

Abstract
    Secure archaeological evidence for human occupation on the eastern seaboard of Australia before ~ 25,000 years ago has proven elusive. This has prompted some researchers to argue that the coastal margins remained uninhabited prior to 25 ka. Here we show evidence for human occupation beginning between 30 ± 6 and 49 ± 8 ka at Wallen Wallen Creek (WWC), and at Middle Canalpin Creek (MCA20) between 38 ± 8 and 41 ± 8 ka. Both sites are located on the western side of Minjerribah (North Stradbroke Island), the second largest sand island in the world, isolated by rising sea levels in the early Holocene. The earliest occupation phase at both sites consists of charcoal and heavily retouched stone artefacts made from exotic raw materials. Heat-treatment of imported silcrete artefacts first appeared in sediment dated to ~ 30,000 years ago, making these amongst Australia’s oldest dated heat-treated artefacts. An early human presence on Minjerribah is further suggested by palaeoenvironmental records of anthropogenic burning beginning by 45,000 years ago. These new chronologies from sites on a remnant portion of the continental margin confirm early human occupation along Sahul’s now-drowned eastern continental shelf.

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