Coastal foragers on southern shores: marine resource use in northeast Australia since the late Pleistocene

Other Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Ulm, Sean
Abstract

The sea is central to the lives of contemporary coastal Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people across northeast Australia. Indigenous histories and documentary sources show the sea to be a vital source of subsistence, raw materials, spirituality and connection with other peoples. Coasts, and especially islands, were a focus of occupation, with high population densities linked to low mobility along the length of the Queensland coast. But what are the antecedents of these people-sea relationships? In this review, the archaeological evidence for coastal foraging across northeast Australia from the late Pleistocene is explored and the main themes and challenges in developing an understanding of how coastal resources figured in the lives of ancient Australians are discussed.

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Publication Name

Trekking the Shore: changing coastlines and the antiquity of coastal settlement

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ISBN/ISSN

978-1-4419-8218-6

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Pages Count

21

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Springer

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Publisher Location

New York, NY, USA

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DOI

10.1007/978-1-4419-8219-3