Browsing Australian Archaeology, Number 010, 1980 by Issue Date
Now showing items 1-20 of 23
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Annual General Meeting of the Australian Archaeological Association - the minutes in brief
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
A resource manual for archaeologists request for help
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)As more and more archaeologists work away from universities, e.g. doing contract work, often outside their own State or region, the old network of information being spread by word of mouth has become inadequate. A resource ... -
The photogrammetric recording of rock art in the Kakadu National Park, Australia
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)An important feature of the recently declared Kakadu National Park is its archaeological resources, in particular the rock art galleries which are among the oldest and most extensive in the world. Situated in the remote ... -
Pleistocene occupation of the arid zone in Southeast Australia: Research prospects for the Cooper Creek-Strzelecki Desert Region
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)Archaeological evidence for the presence of people in southeastern Australia as early as 40,000 years ago in environments substantially different from the Southeast Asian homeland of the initial colonists of Greater Australia ... -
Journal Notifications
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
Archaeology at the University of Queensland: a brief outline
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)In July of this year the prehistory/archaeology component of anthropology at the University of Queensland turned three years of age. This report summarises the past and outlines the future development of the program. -
Pleistocene Archaeology in the Flinders Range: Research Prospects
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)This research in the Flinders Range is aimed at extending northward the earlier work by Lampert (1977, 1979, forthcoming), that was directed mainly towards the prehistory of Kangaroo Island and adjacent parts of the South ... -
General Meeting of the Australian Archaeological Association - the minutes in brief
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
On lithic terminology
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
AAA and education
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
Munsell colour notation in ceramic description: an experiment
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)Archaeologists are making increased use of standardised colour descriptions for material they excavate and study, generally employing the Munsell colour system (Munsell 1966). Readings of soil colours are common practice ... -
A Pleistocene date from an occupation deposit in the Pilbara Region, Western Australia
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)In 1975 Mount Newman Mining Company arranged for an archaeological survey of an outcrop of the Marra Mamba orebody about 3km southeast of their main mine workings on Mount Whaleback near Newman in the Pilbara region of ... -
Advance Notice. Australian Archaeological Association Meeting 1980
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
Two remarkably parallel careers
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)On the 18th of April 1980 two famous Australian pre-historians, F.D. McCarthy and N.B. Tindale, were admitted, honoris causa, to the degree of Doctor of Science at the Australian National University, on the grounds of their ... -
Professor Charles McBurney
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
Pit structures from Selminum Tem Cave, Western Province, Papua New Guinea
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)The purpose of this article is to describe two man-made pits which are located within a limestone cave in the Hindenburg Ranges of Papua. A preliminary discussion of their possible functions follows. The structures described ... -
The Australian Association of Consulting Archaeologists
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
Editorial
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06) -
Backed blades in Northern Australia : evidence from Northwest Queensland
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)One of the tenets of Australian archaeology is that there are certain artefact types for which archetypes and their distribution patterns have been confidently established. An example of this is the long-held belief that ... -
Howman's Gap AAA Annual Conference
(Australian Archaeological Association, 1980-06)