Artefacts and collectors in the tropics of North Queensland
Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCUAbstract
This paper outlines some of the ways early artefact collecting contributed to the definition of the Australian region now known and marketed as the ‘World Heritage Wet Tropics’. While others have collected in this region, we focus on the collecting activities of Hermann Klaatsch and the work of Norman Tindale to explore some factors that contributed to their claims that certain artefacts represent a region and its history. We argue that these understandings of region and the past, along with the now widely dispersed artefacts, maintain a lively, albeit transformed, presence in current debates about Aboriginal regional culture, linking assertions of rights to lost and stolen cultural property with notions of large-scale environmental management within the ‘Wet Tropics’.
Journal
Australian Journal of Anthropology
Publication Name
N/A
Volume
21
ISBN/ISSN
1757-6547
Edition
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Issue
3
Pages Count
17
Location
N/A
Publisher
Australian Anthropological Society
Publisher Url
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Publisher Location
N/A
Publish Date
N/A
Url
N/A
Date
N/A
EISSN
N/A
DOI
10.1111/j.1757-6547.2010.00101.x