The archaeology of Australia's deserts

Author(s)

    • Smith, M. A.

Bibliographic Information

The archaeology of Australia's deserts

Mike Smith

(Cambridge world archaeology)

Cambridge University Perss, 2013

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 349-390) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This is the first book-length study of the archaeology of Australia's deserts, one of the world's major habitats and the largest block of drylands in the southern hemisphere. Over the last few decades, a wealth of new environmental and archaeological data about this fascinating region has become available. Drawing on a wide range of sources, The Archaeology of Australia's Deserts explores the late Pleistocene settlement of Australia's deserts, the formation of distinctive desert societies, and the origins and development of the hunter-gatherer societies documented in the classic nineteenth-century ethnographies of Spencer and Gillen. Written by one of Australia's leading desert archaeologists, the book interweaves a lively history of research with archaeological data in a masterly survey of the field and a profoundly interdisciplinary study that forces archaeology into conversations with history and anthropology, economy and ecology, and geography and Earth sciences.

Table of Contents

  • 1. The archaeology of deserts: Australia in context
  • 2. Deserts past: a history of ideas
  • 3. The empty desert: inland environments prior to people
  • 4. Foundations: moving into the deserts
  • 5. Islands in the interior: last glacial aridity and its aftermath
  • 6. The 'desert culture' revisited: assembling a cultural system
  • 7. Rock art and place: evolution of an inscribed landscape
  • 8. The chain of connection: trade and exchange across the interior
  • 9. The last millennium: archaeology and the classic ethnographies.

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