After Captain Cook The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia
, by Harrison, Rodney; Williamson, Christine- ISBN: 9780759106574 | 0759106576
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 3/9/2004
Figures | p. ix |
Tables | p. xi |
Foreword | p. xiii |
Introduction: 'Too many Captain Cooks'? An archaeology of Aboriginal Australia after 1788 | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 2 |
Captain Cook and the Historical Archaeology of Aboriginal Australia | p. 3 |
Rationale for the Volume | p. 4 |
The problem of 'tradition' and 'change': Contact archaeology and native title | p. 5 |
Structure of the Volume | p. 7 |
Research on the archaeology of the recent Indigenous past in Australia | p. 7 |
Native title and the archaeology of the recent Aboriginal past | p. 8 |
Contact archaeology and heritage management | p. 8 |
Conclusion | p. 9 |
References | p. 10 |
Research on the Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia | |
The Mjoberg collection and contact period Aboriginal material culture from north-east Queensland's rainforest region | p. 17 |
Introduction | p. 18 |
Environmental background | p. 18 |
Sources of ethnographic information | p. 19 |
Research Results | p. 21 |
Characteristic rainforest artefacts | p. 21 |
Two curiosities | p. 25 |
Variability in Material Culture between Groups | p. 27 |
Evidence for Aboriginal-European Contact | p. 29 |
Conclusion | p. 32 |
Acknowledgments | p. 33 |
References | p. 33 |
Shared histories and the archaeology of the pastoral industry in Australia | p. 37 |
Introduction | p. 38 |
Shared Histories and the Continuity of Australian (Pre)History | p. 38 |
The shared histories of the pastoral industry in Australia | p. 40 |
Hidden histories/'singing the country' | p. 41 |
Case Studies in the Archaeology of the Pastoral Industry | p. 43 |
Previous studies | p. 43 |
Old Lamboo, south-east Kimberley, Western Australia | p. 43 |
Shared Histories of the Pastoral Industry in NSW | p. 46 |
East Kunderang, Oxley Wild Rivers NP, north-east NSW | p. 47 |
Kunderang and the archaeology of a colonial palimpsest | p. 49 |
Dennawan, north-west NSW | p. 50 |
Conclusion: A Shared History? | p. 51 |
Acknowledgments | p. 52 |
References | p. 53 |
'This civilising experiment': Photography at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station during the 1860s | p. 59 |
Introduction | p. 60 |
Colonial discourse | p. 60 |
Newspaper engravings | p. 61 |
'Australian Aborigines Under Civilisation' | p. 63 |
Page one: The panorama | p. 63 |
Coranderrk as Goshen, a 'land of light and plenty' | p. 66 |
Intercolonial exhibition panel 1866 | p. 69 |
Green album | p. 70 |
Conclusion | p. 72 |
Acknowledgments | p. 72 |
References | p. 72 |
Finding meaning in the patterns: The analysis of material culture from a contact site in Tasmania | p. 75 |
Introduction | p. 76 |
Historical Background | p. 77 |
The Archaeology of Burghley | p. 79 |
The Aboriginal assemblages | p. 81 |
The European assemblages | p. 89 |
The unknown assemblages | p. 95 |
Conclusion | p. 98 |
References | p. 99 |
Native Title and the Archaeology of the Recent Aboriginal Past | |
Legislating the past: Native title and the history of Aboriginal Australia | p. 105 |
Introduction | p. 106 |
Understanding native title | p. 107 |
The implications of cultural change | p. 109 |
Findings of fact and problems of truth | p. 110 |
Making the past plausible: Writing histories for native title | p. 113 |
Conclusion | p. 115 |
References | p. 115 |
Can archaeology be used to address the principle of exclusive possession in native title? | p. 121 |
Introduction | p. 122 |
Exclusive possession and beneficial ownership in native title | p. 122 |
Theoretical considerations of continuity and transformation after contact | p. 122 |
The problem of defining the land-owning and land-using group in native title | p. 123 |
Archaeological Evidence in Native Title and the Emerging Problem of Boundaries | p. 124 |
Explorations in ethnicity and boundedness--art and bifacial points | p. 124 |
Art as an indicator of identity and social space | p. 125 |
Kimberley points and their capacity to inform on identity and exchange systems | p. 127 |
Conclusion | p. 129 |
References | p. 129 |
Contact Archaeology and Heritage Management | |
An archaeology of attachment: Cultural heritage and the post-contact | p. 105 |
Introduction | p. 136 |
Post-colonial subversions | p. 137 |
Locality, heritage and post-contact archaeology | p. 138 |
Social significance and the post-contact: A nexus of neglect | p. 140 |
The inadequacy of background research in EIA | p. 142 |
The problem of detectability | p. 143 |
Certain intangibles | p. 144 |
Conclusion | p. 145 |
References | p. 145 |
Recent investigations at the Ebenezer Mission cemetery | p. 147 |
Introduction | p. 148 |
Review | p. 148 |
Ebenezer Mission | p. 149 |
Investigative Techniques | p. 151 |
Documentary history | p. 151 |
Oral history | p. 154 |
Ground penetrating radar (GPR) | p. 154 |
Re-establishment survey from 1904 plan | p. 154 |
Investigation of micro-topography and surface vegetation | p. 157 |
Ground magnetic survey | p. 158 |
Further options | p. 158 |
Extent and Layout of the Ebenezer Mission Cemetery | p. 160 |
Conclusion | p. 162 |
Acknowledgments | p. 162 |
References | p. 162 |
Deaths at Ebenezer Mission 1861-1918 | p. 165 |
Places people value: Social significance and cultural exchange in post-invasion Australia | p. 171 |
Introduction | p. 172 |
Contact Sites, Social Significance and Cultural Exchange in Northern Cape York | p. 173 |
Social Significance as an Indicator of Continuing Cultural Exchange | p. 176 |
Social significance in the assessment of the heritage values of NSW forests | p. 178 |
Discussion | p. 182 |
A rose by any other name? | p. 182 |
The rationale for community value/social significance | p. 183 |
Conclusion | p. 184 |
Acknowledgments | p. 185 |
References | p. 186 |
A past remembered: Aboriginal 'historical' places in central Queensland | p. 191 |
Introduction | p. 192 |
Historical Background | p. 192 |
Methodology | p. 195 |
Description of Places | p. 197 |
Early contact | p. 197 |
Massacres or violent incidents | p. 198 |
Native Mounted Police camps | p. 198 |
Historical cemeteries and burials | p. 198 |
Yambas | p. 198 |
Town camps | p. 198 |
Station camps | p. 199 |
Drover's and stockmen's camps | p. 199 |
Post-contact archaeological places | p. 199 |
Ceremonial, spiritual and story places | p. 199 |
Resource or 'good food' places | p. 199 |
Travel routes | p. 199 |
Settlements, missions and reserves | p. 200 |
Birthplaces | p. 200 |
Miscellaneous | p. 200 |
Discussion | p. 200 |
Conclusion | p. 208 |
Acknowledgments | p. 209 |
References | p. 210 |
Epilogue: An archaeology of Indigenous/non-Indigenous Australia from 1788 | p. 213 |
Introduction | p. 214 |
The Current State of Play | p. 214 |
A Sharper Focus on 'Shared Histories' | p. 217 |
Developing 'Conjectural Histories' | p. 219 |
References | p. 220 |
Index | p. 225 |
About the Contributors | p. 229 |
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