'Complexity' and the Australian continental narrative: Themes in the archaeology of Holocene Australia

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Ulm, Sean
Abstract

Accounts of long-term cultural change in Australia have emphasised the late Holocene as the period when 'complexity' emerged amongst foragers in Australia, associated with increased economic productivity, reduced mobility, population growth, intensified social relations and cosmological elaboration. These reconfigurations have often been interpreted as the result of continent-wide trajectories which began in the mid-Holocene, often termed 'intensification'. These approaches have been found wanting as they homogenise diverse records of human adaptation into a single account which inexorably leads to the ethnographic present. The archaeological record tells a rather different story with fluctuating occupational intensity and even regional abandonments featuring in well-documented archaeological records. Instead, variability documented in the ethnographic and archaeological records can be understood as a product of local adaptations reflecting the operation of historically situated systems of social organisation in diverse environmental settings.

Journal

Quaternary International

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Volume

285

ISBN/ISSN

1873-4553

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Pages Count

11

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Publisher

Elsevier

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1016/j.quaint.2012.03.046