Dating the Dreaming: extinct fauna in the petroglyphs of the Pilbara region, Western Australia

Title
Dating the Dreaming: extinct fauna in the petroglyphs of the Pilbara region, Western Australia
Publication Date
2009
Author(s)
Mulvaney, Ken
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Oceania Publications
Place of publication
Australia
UNE publication id
une:5184
Abstract
Examples of striped marsupial depictions have been reported from both the coastal and inland Pilbara. Many are regarded as images of the thylacine, an animal that disappeared from mainland Australia some 3000–4000 years ago. Also observable in the rock art is the 'fat-tailed macropod', a distinctive rendition of a marsupial with an extremely thick tail. Recent investigations in the Tom Price area and on the Burrup Peninsula confirm that both motifs pertain to the more ancient rock art corpus. Restricted artistic variation within the depiction of these two species confirms the trend to naturalistic style within animal subjects and suggests a extensive, culturally cohesive, artistic tradition across the Pilbara during the Pleistocene and early Holocene. At two specific locations, aspects of the rock art may be explained in terms of contemporary oral traditions and cultural practices, affording one way of placing temporal parameters on these early graphic traditions. I argue that the rock art is not just representational; that it communicates mythological narratives and behavioural traits, which have a deep antiquity to the Dreaming of more than just a few thousand years.
Link
Citation
Archaeology in Oceania, 44(Supplement), p. 40-48
ISSN
1834-4453
0728-4896
Start page
40
End page
48

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