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         Australian Archaeology:     more books (103)
  1. The Social Archaeology of Australian Indigenous Societies.(Book review): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Anne Ross, 2007-07-01
  2. Archaeology in the North: Proceedings of the 1993 Australian Archaeological Association Conference by Australian Archaeological Association, 1994
  3. Much More Than Stones and Bones. Australian Archaeology in the late Twentieth Century.(Book Review): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Richard Mackay, 2003-07-01
  4. Visions of the Past: the Archaeology of Australian Aboriginal Art.(Book Review): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Meg Conkey, 2003-07-01
  5. Australian Field Archaeology: A Guide to Techniques (Aias New Series)
  6. Proceedings of the Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology seminar on Asiatic shipbuilding techniques held in Launceston, 24-26 September 1985 (The ... Institute of Maritime Archaeology)
  7. Using Photo Modeler 3.0: Guidelines for maritime archaeologists (Report / Australian National Centre of Excellence for Maritime Archaeology) by Jochen Franke, 1998
  8. Proposals for the development of the Australian National Centre for Excellence in Maritime Archaeology (Report) by Jeremy N Green, 1998
  9. HSK Kormoran related documents in the Military Archive Freiburg, Germany: A brief look at the German perspective on the sinking of HMAS Sydney (Report ... Archaeology, Western Australian Museum) by Jochen Franke, 1998
  10. Maritime Archaeology: Australian Approaches by Various, 2008-01-01
  11. Port Essington: the historical archaeology of a north Australian nineteenth-century military outpost.(Book review): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Clayton Fredericksen, 2009-07-01
  12. Chinese export porcelain from the wreck of the Sydney Cove (1797) (Special publication / Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology) by Mark Staniforth, 1998
  13. AUSTRALIAN ARCHAEOLOGY: A GUIDE TO FIELD TECHNIQUES by D. J. Ed. Mulvaney, 1968
  14. Popular Notions of Australian Archaeology.: An article from: Journal of Australian Studies by Hilary du Cros, 1999-09-01

41. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Australia
Government Subjects australia DeweyClass 351.94 ResourceType government Locationaustralia Last checked 20000822 australian archaeology Collection of
http://bubl.ac.uk/link/a/australia.htm
BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
Australia
A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • About Australia
  • All Australian
  • Australia Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
  • Australia: Government of the Commonwealth of Australia ...
  • World Upside Down - Australia 1788-1830 Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    About Australia
    A guide and travelogue for visitors to Australia, with information about its people, culture, commerce and the Australian lifestyle. Includes travel, shopping, lifestyle, business and news resources.
    Author: Cardline Pty. Ltd
    Subjects: australia, australian business, australian culture
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    promotion
    Location: australia
    Last checked:
    All Australian
    Collection of information about Australia including the constitution, national anthem, the system of government, Aborigines, songs and poetry, famous Australians, and common slang expressions.
    Author: All Australian
    Subjects: australia
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    documents Location: australia Last checked:
    Australia Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
    Detailed assessment of human rights practices in Australia. Topics assessed include torture, arbitrary detention or exile, fair public trial, freedom of speech and press, freedom of assembly, movement and religion; democratic rights, worker rights, and discrimination based on race, sex, religion, disability, language, or social status.
  • 42. Bryce Barkers Home Page
    In Ulm, S., Lilley, I. and Ross R. (eds.) australian archaeology 95, Proceedingsof the 1995 Australian Archaeological Association Annual Conference.
    http://www.usq.edu.au/users/barker/
    Dr. Bryce Barker
    Anthropology/Archaeology
    Department of Humanities and International Studies
    Department of Humanities and International Studies
    University of Southern Queensland, Qld 4350
    Room
    Phone
    Email
    barker@usq.edu.au
    USQ Home Page
    Current Research Teaching/Unit Information ... Other Archaeology Links
      PUBLICATIONS
      *Books
      Barker, B. (in press) ‘The Sea People’ - Maritime Hunter-Gatherers on the Tropical Coast, A late Holocene marine specialisation in the Whitsunday Islands, central Queensland coast. Terra Australis Monographs, Australian National University, Canberra.
      *Chapters in books/monographs and conference proceedings
      Barker, B. 1998. Use and Continuity in the Customary Marine Tenure of the Whitsunday Islands. In Peterson, N. and Rigsby, B. Customary Marine Tenure in Australia. Oceania Monograph 48, University of Sydney, pp 89-96. Barker, B. 1998. (in press) A Critique and Discussion of Australian Coastal Models and Models of Holocene Change. In Hall, J. and McNiven I., Proceedings of the Australian Coastal Archaeology Symposium. Barker, B. 1996. Maritime Hunter-Gatherers on the Tropical Coast: A Social Model for Change. In Ulm, S., Lilley, I. and Ross R. (eds.)

    43. Research Publications List 2000
    Balme, J. Excavations revealing 40,000 years of occupation at Mimbi Cavesin South Central Kimberley, australian archaeology, 51 pp 15 (2000).
    http://www.publishing.uwa.edu.au/research/2000/Anthropology.asp
    Research Publications List 2000
    Publications Unit
    Research Lists of Previous Years

    Contents of 2000

    Previous
    ... Next
    Anthropology, Department of
    Books and Chapters
    Acciaioli, G. Kinship and debt: The Social organization of Bugis migration and fish marketing at Lake Lindu, Central Sulawesi, Bijdragen Tot De Taal-, Land-En Volkenkunde (BKI) , eds R. Tol, D. Van Kees, G. Acciaioli, Leiden, KITLV, Verhandelingen 188: pp 211-239 (2000) Baldassar, L. and Baldock, C. Linking Migration and family studies. Transnational Migrants and the care of ageing parents, Theoretical and methodological issues in migration research interdisciplinary, intergenerational and international persp , ed Biko Agzino, Aldershot, UK, Ashgate, 0: pp 61-89 (2000) McNamara, B. Dying of Cancer, Death and Dying in Australia , ed Allan Kellehear, South Melbourne, Victoria, Oxford University Press, 0: pp 133-144 (2000) Tol, R., Kees Van, D. and Acciaioli, G. Authority and Enterprise among the peoples of South Silawesi , Leiden, KITLV Press (2000) Tol, R., Kees van, D. and Acciaioli, G.

    44. Research Publications 1996
    Balme, J. and W. Beck (1996). Earth mounds in southeastern Australia. AustralianArchaeology 42 3951. Re-engendering Lapita. West australian archaeology.
    http://www.publishing.uwa.edu.au/research/1996/anth.html
    Anthropology
    Research Publications 1996 Baldassar, L. V. (1996). Bouquets and Garters: Ethnicity, Gender, Sexuality and the Second Generation . The Australian Sociological Assocation: Community, State, Nation, Tasmania, University of Tasmania. Baldassar, L. V. (1996). "Italian Ethnicities: A transnational perspective" . Regulating Identities, Queensland University of Technology: Brisbane, Queensland University of Technology. Baldassar, L. V. (1996). 'Gender, ethnicity and transnational citizenship: Italian-Australian experiences' . Culture and Citizenship, Brisbane, Australian Key Centre for Cultural and Media Policy. Balme, J. and W. Beck (1996). "Earth mounds in southeastern Australia." Australian Archaeology Balme, J. (1996). "Book review: The Illustrated History of Human Kind." Australian Archaeology Bowdler, S. (1996). "Freud and Archaeology." Anthropological Forum (3): (pending). Bowdler, S. and S. McGann (1996). Prehistoric fishing at Shark Bay, Western Australia. Prehistoric Hunter - Gatherer fishing strategies . M. G. Plew. Boise, Boise State University.

    45. Australian National University - School Of Archaeology And
    Archaeology of culture contact, australian archaeology, communitybased archaeology,gender and archaeology, Cultural Heritage Management archaeobotany.
    http://archaeology.about.com/library/univ/blanu.htm
    zfp=-1 About Homework Help Archaeology Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
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    Australian National University School of Archaeology and Anthropology
    A.D. Hope Building
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    Phone: 6125 3498 Fax: 6125 2711 Home Page - Degrees Offered - M.A. and Ph.D. - Archaeology Faculty - Matthew Spriggs. Pacific and Southeast Asian Archaeology, British Post-Roman Archaeology and Cornish Studies. Peter Bellwood. Archaeology of SE Asia and Oceania, agricultural origins and dispersals, correlations between the archaeological record and that of the major agriculturalist language families. David Bulbeck. South Sulawesi Historical Archaeology, South Sulawesi Prehistoric Archaeology, Holocene Human Evolution in West Malaysia, Southeast Asian General History and Archaeology, Trade Ceramics. Ian Farrington. Central and south America, and landscape archaeology

    46. Powell's Books - Used, New, And Out Of Print
    Much More Than Stones and Bones australian archaeology in the Late TwentiethCentury by Hilary Du Cros Publisher Comments Collection of cases studies
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    Browse the aisle by Title by Author by Price See recently arrived used books in this aisle. Featured Titles in Archaeology -Australia: Page 1 of 1 Used Hardcover Green was the earth on the seventh day by Thor Heyerdahl Synopsis The memoirs of a celebrated adventurer, in which he relates his and his wife's experiences living on a remote island in the Marquesas in the 1930s.... read more about this title check for other copies Used Trade Paper List Price $29.95 Legacy of the Landscape: An Illustrated Guide to Hawaiian Archaeological Sites by Patrick Vinto Kirch Publisher Comments Precontact Hawaiian civilization is represented by a rich legacy of archaeological sites, many of which have been preserved and are accessible to the public. This volume provides for the first time an authoritative handbook to the most important of these... read more about this title check for other copies New Trade Paper Much More Than Stones and Bones: Australian Archaeology in the Late Twentieth Century by Hilary Du Cros Publisher Comments Collection of cases studies illustrating the context and development of Australian archaeology over the past 25 years. Cases include the attempt to save ancient caves from being flooded by the proposed Franklin Dam in Tasmania, the preservation of the...

    47. Online Courses: School Of Sciences
    Introduction to australian archaeology Part 1 In this introductory course Part1, we consider what archaeology is, and how it fits into the scheme of
    http://www.universalclass.com/sciences/
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  • Archaeology (1 Class)
  • Introduction to Australian Archaeology Part 1 In this introductory course Part 1, we consider what archaeology is, and how it fits into the scheme of anthropology. Learn something of early Australian anthropologists and how archaeology developed in Australia. Consider the formative processes of the earth, and look at how plate tectonics effected biogeography. You will gain knowledge about various theories of Hominid dispersal, like Out of Africa and Multi-regionalism. Discover facts about the Ice Age and fluctuating Pleistocene sea levels. Find out when and how Australia was first colonized, was it 40,000 or 60,000 years ago? Archaeology is a multidisciplinary science, and this course exposes you to archaeology papers, with the benefit of discussion through the forum or interaction with the instructor. This course is designed for anyone interested in Australian archaeology, or archaeology in general. Completing Introductory Australian Archaeology Part 1 is a prerequisite to Part 2.
  • 48. Australian Association Of Consulting Archaeologists Inc.
    General Fields. Indigenous australian archaeology site survey; site recording. PARDOE,C. 1994 W(h)ither archaeology. australian archaeology 381113.
    http://www.aacai.com.au/register/full/pardoe.html
    Register of Consultants Dr Colin Pardoe Address
    3 Rose Street
    Gilberton SA 5081 Phone Facscimile Mobile Phone Email pardoe@ozemail.com.au Availability Anywhere; anytime. Academic Qualifications BSc, University of Toronto
    MA, University of Manitoba
    PhD, Australian National University
    Professional Associations and Positions
    • Full Member, Australian Association of Consulting Archaeologists Inc.
    • Member, Australian Archaeological Association Inc.
    • President, Australian Archaeological Association Inc. (1998-2001)
    • Member, American Association of Physical Anthropology
    • Member, Australasian Society for Human Biology
    • Member, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
    General Fields
    Indigenous Australian Archaeology
    • site survey
    • site recording
    Special Fields
    • analysis of human skeletal remains
    Selected Publications
    PARDOE, C. 2002 Expert Assessment and Documentation of Larrakia Skeletal Remains Collected by W.R. Smith in 1906, and held by the National Museum of Australia, Canberra. Unpublished report to the Repatriation Unit, National Museum of Australia, Canberra. PARDOE PARDOE Australian Natural History PARDOE , C. 2001 Who were the first Australians? In B.M. Fagan (ed.)

    49. Australian Association Of Consulting Archaeologists Inc.
    General Fields. Indigenous australian archaeology site survey; siterecording; excavation. Special Fields. australian archaeology 353250.
    http://www.aacai.com.au/register/full/mcdonald.html
    Register of Consultants Dr Josephine McDonald Address Jo McDonald Cultural Heritage Management Pty Ltd
    15/198-204 Marrickville Road
    Postal - PO Box 856
    Marrickville NSW 2204
    122 Monaro Crescent
    Red Hill ACT 2603 Phone NSW (02) 9560 0275
    ACT (02) 6295 3355 Facscimile NSW (02) 9560 0279
    ACT (02) 6295 3366 Mobile Phone Email JMcDonald@jmcdchm.com.au Availability Anywhere; anytime Academic Qualifications BA (Hons), University of Sydney
    PhD, Australian National University
    Professional Associations and Positions
    • Full Member, Australian Association of Consulting Archaeologists Inc.
    • President, Australian Association of Consulting Archaeologists Inc. (1993-1997)
    • Member, Australian Archaeological Association Inc.
    • President, Australian Archaeological Association Inc. (1997-1998)
    • Member, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies

    50. Cultural Heritage Of The Australian Alps: Moths
    australian archaeology Dec 1995, no 41 3036 ISSN 0312-2417. Popularaccount of Aboriginal archaeology in the Australian alps and the ACT.
    http://www.ahc.gov.au/heritage/infores/HERA/alps/indigenous/moths.html
    Moths
    Argue, D Aboriginal occupation of the Southern Highlands: was it really seasonal? Australian archaeology : Dec 1995, no 41: 30-36 : ISSN 0312-2417 The prevailing picture of the Southern Highlands as a site of summer exploitation of the Bogong moth is challenged by the view that, while the Bogong moth provided a staple for large ceremonial groups of people, a day-to-day staple existed in the daisy yam (Microseris lanceolata) which was available around the year. The yam would leave no archaeological material, nor would the artefact associated with obtaining it, the digging stick. A vegetation and fauna survey of the region, combined with archaeological data, indicates that the valleys could have sustained human occupation year round. (JD) Aboriginal archaeology ; Aborigines ; Food Southern Highlands NSW ACT Vic Bell, DR From moth-hunters to black trackers: an interpretive analysis of the black and white experience Clayton Vic, Monash University, 1975 : 1 vol; BA(Hons) thesis An historical and anthropological account of interaction between Ngunnawal and European settlers from 1820 to 1897. The data for this account was derived from linguistics, archaeology, and the researcher's fieldwork among living descendants of early white settlers. Refers to bogong moth collecting, food resources and initiation ceremonies. Some reference is made to a tape recording of language by A McGuiness. (JK)

    51. Welcome To The Centre For Archaeology
    Research interests Aboriginal australian archaeology, subsistence and socialorganisation, gender in the archaeological record and spatial archaeology.
    http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/Archaeology/staff.htm
    CENTRE STAFF
    Dr Jane BALME Phone: (08) 9380 3825
    Fax: (08) 9380 1023
    Email: jbalme@cyllene.uwa.edu.au
    Research interests: Aboriginal Australian archaeology, subsistence and social organisation, gender in the archaeological record and spatial archaeology. Teaching interests: General archaeology; Australian Aboriginal archaeology; Method and Theory.
    Professor Sandra BOWDLER
    Phone: (08) 9380 2113
    Fax: (08) 9380 1023
    Email: sbowdler@cyllene.uwa.edu.au
    Research interests
    the archaeology of Aboriginal Australia, particularly Shark Bay, Tasmania, coastal New South Wales; the pre-neolithic archaeology of East and Southeast Asia; midden analysis; stone artefact analysis; site management; Freudian archaeology. click here.

    52. Dr ALISTAIR PATERSON
    This work has been presented at national forums (australian archaeology Associationconferences 1998, 1999; Australasian Historical Archaeology association
    http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/Archaeology/dr.htm
    Dr ALISTAIR PATERSON (Lecturer) PhD, University of Sydney Phone: 08-9380 2867 Email: paterson@cyllene.uwa.edu.au Background: Teaching and research interests: Research Archaeology of recent Aboriginal Australia, historical archaeology, the archaeology of colonialism, ethnicity, cultural landscapes, archaeology field methods. Teaching I teach the Honours Theory and Method seminar Archaeology 102: Tribes and Empires Archaeology 227/327: Archaeology Practical Course The Modern World: An introduction to historical archaeology Medieval Archaeology , and Indo-Pacific Archaeology Supervision I currently supervise one PhD and one MA candidate, as well as honours students. I have several projects suitable for postgraduate research, including the ARC Linkage-funded scholarship beginning in 2003, and am happy to discuss them with interested researchers. Current research: My scholarship can be divided into the following areas of research: the archaeology of culture contact and historical archaeology. The archaeology of culture contact th World Archaeological Congress, Washington D.C. June 2003).

    53. Dr HJ Hall - School Of Social Science - UQ
    Ch. 7 in W. Beck, A. Clarkeand L. Head (eds.) Plants in australian archaeology, pp.136160. Tempus, Vol....... australian archaeology/Prehistory. Brief
    http://www.ansoc.uq.edu.au/academic/profiles/hall.htm

    Courses
    International Students Academic Staff Interactive ... Academic staff list [Academic staff profiles]
    Dr HJ Hall (A/Prof, Reader)
    - DIRECTOR, UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND ARCHAEOLOGICAL SERVICES UNIT
    - EDITOR, QUEENSLAND ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH
    - JOINT EDITOR OF TEMPUS CONTACT
    Telephone: Facsimile: Email: j.hall@uq.edu.au ACADEMIC QUALIFICATIONS
    Degree Institution Field Year
    Ph.D. University of Chicago Anthropology M.A. University of Utah Anthropology B.A. (Hons) University of Utah Anthropology MEMBERSHIPS
    Australian Archaeological Association (Member and Past President) Society for American Archaeology (Member) Australian Association of Consulting Archaeology Inc (Founding Member) POSITIONS HELD
    Year(s) Position
    2000-present Reader, Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Archaeology, University of Queensland

    54. Archaeology Staff - School Of Social Science - The University Of Queensland
    Holocene changes in human adaptation on the East Coast of Australia; the developmentof middle range research in australian archaeology; the promotion and
    http://www.ansoc.uq.edu.au/archaeology/staff.htm

    Courses
    International Students Academic Staff Interactive ... the
    Copán
    site
    (under construction)
    Staff Note : Link through names to view full staff profile)
    Dr Jay Hall
    Since 1993 he has been involved with Dr Rene Viel in developing the University of Queensland Archaeological Program in Central America , concentrating on cultural evolution during the Formative Period at the Maya site of Copán, Honduras. He is the founder (in 1978) and Director of the Moreton Region Archaeological Project (MRAP) , a multi-stage and multi-faceted regional research program designed to provide a prehistory of this region of southeast Queensland. He is the founder and Director of The University of Queensland Archaeological Services Unit (UQASU), a commercial arm of the department which undertakes archaeological consulting. Jay is the founder and editor of Queensland Archaeological Research , a publication series devoted to the publication of data-rich archaeological research results which pertain to this state. He is a co-editor of

    55. LaTrobe Archaeology - Dr David Frankel
    University, Canberra, pp. 13846. 1998 Review 'The Rocks Life in earlySydney, G. Karskens', australian archaeology 46, pp. 54-56.
    http://www.latrobe.edu.au/archaeology/depinfo/staffdir/lydon.html
    About La Trobe Faculties Campuses Research ... International

    Dr Jane Lydon
    Martin Building Room 158
    Phone 9479-2806
    j.lydon@latrobe.edu.au
    Jane Lydon has worked as a historical archaeologist on numerous sites and projects around Australia, including the Rocks area of Sydney where she was employed between 1990-93 by the Sydney Cove Authority, the Museum of Sydney on the site of First Government House prior to its opening in 1995, and the Kingston and Arthur's Vale Historic Area of Norfolk Island (1997-98). She has also worked in the private sector and for government agencies including the Victorian Archaeological Survey and the Australian Heritage Commission. She completed her MA in 1996 at the Australian National University, winning the Crawford Prize for best MA thesis submitted in that year. She received her doctorate from ANU in 2001, an investigation of nineteenth-century Aboriginal-white relations at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station near Healesville, Victoria. Appointed to La Trobe in mid 2000, she combines teaching public archaeology and cultural heritage management with her research interests in cross-cultural exchange. She has recently been awared an ARC Grant for three years to work on a project at Ebenezer Mission.

    56. LaTrobe Archaeology - Dr Susan Lawrence
    1999 The Role of Material Culture in australian archaeology, AustralasianJournal of Historical Archaeology 16815. 1999 Towards
    http://www.latrobe.edu.au/archaeology/depinfo/staffdir/lawrence.html
    About La Trobe Faculties Campuses Research ... International
    Department of Archaeology
    Dr Susan Lawrence
    Martin Building Room 164
    Phone 9479-1790
    s.lawrence@latrobe.edu.au
    Australasian Historical Archaeology , co-edited The Archaeology of Whaling in Southern Australia and New Zealand (1998) with Mark Staniforth. Her book on the archaeology of the gold fields has recently been published by Melbourne University Press Current Research Projects The Archaeology of Whaling in Southern Australia and New Zealand (AWSANZ) Some related publications: S. Lawrence, in press, Whaling in the South Seas: Archaeological Evidence of Australia's First Industry, Mains'l Haul: A Journal of Pacific Maritime History , 36(4). (expected 2002). S. Lawrence, 2001, Foodways on a Colonial Whaling Station: Archaeological and Historical Evidence for Diet in Nineteenth Century Tasmania. Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society S. Lawrence and C. Tucker, in press, Sources of Meat in Colonial Diets: Faunal Evidence from a Nineteenth-Century Tasmanian Whaling Station

    57. EMU Document
    J. Consultancy and thesis what's the difference two approaches to archaeologicalsurvey of Jumping Creek Valley, Queanbeyan australian archaeology, Dec.
    http://www.aiatsis.gov.au/lbry/fct_shts/annbib/annBib97/eMU_7.htm
    AIATSIS Annual Bibliography
    Subject : Research and researchers
    • Bonyhady, Tim; Griffiths, Tom The making of a public intellectual Prehistory to politics; John Mulvaney, the humanities and the public intellectual, Edited by Tim Bonyhady and Tom Griffiths - Carlton, Vic.; Melbourne University Press, 1996; p. 1-19 Bonyhady, Tim; Griffiths, Tom Prehistory to politics: John Mulvaney, the humanities and the public intellectual Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1996 Boot, Philip Gerard; Kuskie, Peter J. Consultancy and thesis - what's the difference: two approaches to archaeological survey of Jumping Creek Valley, Queanbeyan Australian Archaeology, Dec. 1996; no. 43, p. 23-28 ill., map Bourke, Eleanor; Tearle, John South Australian Aboriginal Research Information System Kaurna Higher Education Journal, Nov. 1993; no. 4, p. 25-29 Donovan, Robert J.; Spark, Ross Towards guidelines for survey research in remote Aboriginal communities Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, Feb. 1997; v. 21 no. 1, p. 89-95 ill. Griffiths, Tom

    58. Research And Scholarly Publications
    Archaeology in Oceania 29(3). Beck, W., Clarke, A. and Head, L. (eds) 1989Plants in australian archaeology. australian archaeology 46 14.
    http://www.uow.edu.au/science/geosciences/staff/lhpub.htm
    Staff Associate-Professor Lesley Head BA PhD (Monash) Research and Scholarly Publications Books Head, L. 2000 Cultural Landscapes and Environmental Change . Arnold, London. Head, L. 2000 Second Nature. The history and implications of Australia as Aboriginal landscape . Syracuse University Press, New York. Edited volumes Head, L. (ed.) 1999 Holocene Human Impacts in Australia and the Western Pacific. Quaternary International Head L., Gosden, C. and White, J.P. (eds) 1994 Social Landscapes. Archaeology in Oceania Beck, W., Clarke, A. and Head, L. (eds) 1989 Plants in Australian Archaeology. Tempus 1, Anthropology Museum, University of Queensland. Refereed papers McCarthy, L. and Head, L. in press Holocene variability in semi-arid environments: new evidence from the Flinders Ranges, South Australia. The Holocene Fullagar, R. and Head, L. 2000 Archaeology and Native Title in Australia; national and local perspectives. In I. Lilley (ed.) Native Title and the Transformation of Archaeology in the Postcolonial World. Oceania Monograph 50, pp. 24-34

    59. Pg_gsusino
    1999. australian archaeology, 53 Susino, GJ, 2000. Microdebitage ThesisAbstracts). australian archaeology, 51 Susino, GJ, 1999.
    http://www.uow.edu.au/science/geosciences/pgrad/gsusino.htm
    George J. Susino Ph.D. Candidate School of GeoSciences University of Wollongong NSW 2522, Australia Phone: +61-(0) 2-4421 4688 Fax:   +61-(0) 2-4221 4250 Mailto:gjs66@uow.edu.au http://www.uow.edu.au/science/geosciences/research/rclc/ Research interests Microdebitage analysis; Rock art research; Archaeological science; GIS applications in Archaeology; Spatial analysis; Quaternary studies; Scanning electron microscopy; Materials analysis; Sedimentary analysis; Optical dating. Thesis abstract ANALYSIS OF LITHIC ARTEFACT MICROWASTE FOR SPATIAL, CHRONOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES This research applies known techniques to the analysis of quartz microdebitage from archaeological deposits.  New techniques are in development to apply luminescence dating to sand-sized quartz microdebitage. This technique can be applied to rock engraving sites, where previously it was thought that the engraving process did not leave any discernible traces in the surrounding environment. This research is based on the recognition of quartz grain surface features, recognition of microdebitage, and grain roundness index. Although these methods, individually, are little used, in combination with the latest technological advances in geosciences and physics they can be valuable methods when employed in the analysis of archaeological deposits. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive x-ray analysis (EDX), and optical stereo microscopy is applied to sedimentary material from archaeological deposits and the surrounding environment to recognise and isolate differences in the surface and roundness of quartz grains.

    60. Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit: Sean Ulm: Recent Research Publ
    australian archaeology 546162. ULM, S. and J. Hall (eds) 2002 Recent archaeologicalresearch in southeast Queensland. australian archaeology 5166-67.
    http://www.uq.edu.au/ATSIS/ulm/
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    my.UQ
    ... myAdvisor Sean Ulm: Recent Research Publications Sean Ulm: Research Publications 2003 and in press 2003 and in press Ulm, S. in prep. Themes in the archaeology of Holocene Australia. ARX-World Journal of Prehistoric and Ancient Studies ULM, S., S. Cotter, M. Cotter, I. Lilley, C. Clarkson and J. Reid in press Edge-ground hatchets on the southern Curtis Coast, central Queensland: A preliminary assessment of technology, chronology and provenance. In I. Macfarlane, R. Paton and M-J. Mountain (eds), Many Exchanges: Archaeology, History, Community and the Work of Isabel McBryde . Canberra: Aboriginal History Inc. ULM, S., J. Reid and N. Woolford in prep. Valve-pairing and stratigraphic integrity in coastal midden deposits: A preliminary study from the Seven Mile Creek Mound, central Queensland. To be submitted to Journal of Archaeological Science ULM, S. and D. Vale in prep. The antiquity of marine fishing in southeast Queensland: New evidence for pre-2000 BP fishing from three sites on the southern Curtis Coast. To be submitted to

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