Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T06:50:05.111Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Human cognition: the Australian evidence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Research article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2012 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Balme, I., Davidson, J., Mcdonald, J., Stern, N. & Veth, P.. 2009. Symbolic behaviour and the peopling of the southern arc route to Australia. Quaternary International 202: 5968.Google Scholar
Bowler, J.M. 1998. Willandra Lakes revisited: environmental framework for human occupation. Archaeology in Oceania 33: 120–55.Google Scholar
Bowler, J.M., Jones, R., Allen, H. & Thorne, A.G.. 1970. Pleistocene human remains from Australia: a living site and human cremation from Lake Mungo, western New South Wales. World Archaeology 2: 3960.Google Scholar
Bowler, J.M., Johnston, H., Olley, J.M., Prescott, J.R., Roberts, R.G., Shawcross, W. & Spooner, N.A.. 2003. New ages for human occupation and climatic change at Lake Mungo. Nature 421: 837–40.Google Scholar
Chaloupka, G. 1984. From Palaeoart to casual paintings; the chronological sequence of Arnhem Land Plateau rock art (Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences Monograph series 1). Darwin: Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences.Google Scholar
Chaloupka, G. 1993. Journey in time. Sydney: Reed New Holland.Google Scholar
Chippindale, C., Smith, B. & Taçon, P.S.. 2000. Visions of dynamic power: archaic rock-paintings, altered states of consciousness and ‘clever men’ in western Arnhem Land. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 10: 63101.Google Scholar
Davidson, I. 2010. The colonization of Australia and its adjacent islands and the evolution of modern cognition. Current Anthropology 51: 5177–89.Google Scholar
Franklin, N.R. & Habgood, P.J.. 2007. Modern human behaviour and Pleistocene Sahul in review. Australian Archaeology 65: 116.Google Scholar
Mcdonald, J. 2005. Archaic faces to headdresses: the changing role of rock art across the arid zone, in Veth, P., Smith, M. & Hiscock, P. (ed.) Desert peoples: archaeological perspectives: 116–41. Malden (MA) & Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Mithen, S. 1996. The prehistory of the mind. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, K.J. 2011a. About time: toward a sequencing of the Dampier Archipelago of the Pilbara region, Western Australia, in Bird, C. & Webb, R.E. (ed.) Fire and hearth forty years on: essays in honour of Sylvia J. Hallam: 3049. Perth: Western Australian Museum.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, K.J. 2011b. Murujuga Marni - Dampier petroglyphs. Shadows in the landscape echoes across time. Unpublished PhD dissertation, University of New England.Google Scholar
O’Connor, S. & Fankhauser, B.. 2001. Art at 40,000? One step closer: an ochre covered rock from Carpenters Gap Shelter 1, Kimberley region, in Anderson, A., Lilley, J. & O'Connor, S. (ed.) Histories of old ages: essays in honour of Rhys Jones: 287300. Canberra: Pandanus Books, School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University.Google Scholar
O’Connor, S., Aplin, K.A., Stpierre, E. & Feng, X.. 2010. Faces of the ancestors revealed: discovery and dating of Pleistocene-aged petroglyphs in Lene Hara Cave, East Timor. Antiquity 84: 649–65.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. 2007. Prehistory: the making of the human mind. London: Phoenix.Google Scholar
Rosenfeld, A., Horton, D. & Winter, J.. 1981. Early man in north Queensland (Terra Australis 6). Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University.Google Scholar
Walsh, G.L. 2000. Bradshaw art of the Kimberley. Toowong: Tararakka Nowan Kas Publication.Google Scholar
Webb, S.G. 1989. The Willandra Lakes hominids. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University.Google Scholar
Westaway, M.C. 2006. The Pleistocene human remains collection from the Willandra Lakes World Heritage Area, and its role in understanding modern human origins, in Tomida, Y. (ed.) Proceedings of the Seventh and Eighth Symposia on Collection Building and Natural History Studies in Asia and the Pacific Rim (National Science Museum Monographs 34): 127–38. Tokyo: National Science Museum.Google Scholar