Author(s) |
Attenbrow, Val
Corkill, Tessa
Pogson, Ross
Sutherland, Lin
Grave, Peter
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Publication Date |
2017
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Abstract |
Ground-edged artifacts were an important part of the Australian Aboriginal toolkit. They had practical day-to-day uses, but some had symbolic and social values that led to their movement across great distances. Australian provenance studies document long-distance Aboriginal exchange systems extending over hundreds of kilometers. The size and complexity of exchange systems and social networks were contingent upon resources and the productivity of a region's environment. Along the fertile, well-watered lands east of the Great Dividing Range, movement of objects may have been geographically more circumscribed than in drier areas to the west. One hundred and twenty-one mafic, ground-edged artifacts from the New South Wales (NSW) Central Coast and 368 geological specimens from potential sources were non-destructively analyzed by portable X-Ray fluorescence spectrometry. Results indicate the existence of a well-used basalt source within the region at Peats Ridge-Popran Creek as well as multiple local and non-local sources up to 430 km from Mangrove Mountain on the NSW Central Coast.
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Citation |
Journal of Field Archaeology, 42(3), p. 173-186
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ISSN |
2042-4582
0093-4690
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Link | |
Language |
en
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Publisher |
Routledge
|
Title |
Non-destructive Provenancing of Ground-Edged Mafic Artifacts: A Holocene Case Study from the Sydney Basin, Australia
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Type of document |
Journal Article
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Entity Type |
Publication
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