79 results
Search Results
2. Embedded in the Bark: Kimberley Boab Trees as Sites of Historical Archaeology.
- Author
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K. Frederick, Ursula, Balme, Jane, Jamieson, Jeffrey, Marshall, Melissa, and O'Connor, Sue
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,HISTORIC sites ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,CULTURAL landscapes ,TREES ,HISTORY associations - Abstract
This paper discusses the Australian boab tree and its potential for research as living historical archaeology. Boab trees play an important role in the economy, culture, and cosmology of Indigenous people in northwest Australia and continue to hold a powerful presence in the Kimberley region today. Working with Nyikina and Mangala Traditional Owners we have undertaken to document examples of this iconic tree and its cultural and historical associations, particularly in the form of carvings and inscriptions embedded in the bark. Focusing on four individual trees located in the Kimberley region of northwest Australia, we propose that the modification of boab trees, as a practice undertaken by both Indigenous and non-Indigenous people, offers important insights into the everyday lives and historic events that shaped this cultural landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A Grave Situation: Burial Practices among the Chinese Diaspora in Queensland, Australia (ca.1870–1930).
- Author
-
Grimwade, Gordon
- Subjects
- *
CHINESE diaspora , *OVERSEAS Chinese , *GRAVE goods , *TOMBS , *INSCRIPTIONS , *VILLAGES - Abstract
Many nineteenth-century Chinese migrants to Pacific Rim countries died far from their home villages. Diverse approaches were adopted to mark graves, possibly anticipating the subsequent, culturally important, repatriation of their bones. This paper evaluates the morphology of grave markers from eight northeast Australian sites and considers reasons for the variations. Physical appraisal of each site was undertaken and, where they exist, cemetery records and allied documentation examined. In an unusual departure from the norm the inscriptions on most identified grave markers rarely indicate date of death. The seemingly meticulous attention to grave identification in some areas contrasts with others where markers are absent. This study indicates divergent approaches to identification and recording of individual graves over time and place. Rather than indicating full-fledged ethnogenesis, wherein Australian Chinese developed new cultural practices, these behaviors suggest that ca.1870–1930 was a transitional period, during which extant cultural processes were adapted to meet immediate needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Pursuing the Comparative Analysis of Gold Rush Lives by Tracing Material and Quality-of-Life Trajectories.
- Author
-
Hayes, Sarah
- Subjects
GOLD mining ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUALITY of life ,HISTORY of mines & mineral resources ,GOLD miners - Abstract
The comparative analysis of artifact assemblages is simultaneously enticing and daunting. New research questions can potentially be addressed but a number of limiting factors can hinder the process. The first section of this paper will examine these limitations; the remainder of the paper proposes a model for conducting comparative research via archaeological biography, data mining, and tracing material and quality-of-life trajectories. The model was developed for the Gold Rush Lives project, which seeks to trace how everyday people faired in gold-rush era cities in Victoria, Australia. Drawing from the comparison of two households in Little Lon, Melbourne, the paper will make the case for comparing material trajectories rather than data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Working-Class Consumer Behavior in “Marvellous Melbourne” and Buenos Aires, The “Paris of South America”.
- Author
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Ricardi, Pamela
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,INNER cities ,CITIES & towns ,CONSUMER behavior ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Recent work in Melbourne, including the papers in this volume, has shed new light on the archaeology of this major nineteenth-century urban center. But how does Melbourne compare to other important contemporary cities, particularly those outside the British Empire? This paper compares “Marvellous Melbourne” against the “Paris of South America,” Buenos Aires, with a focus on exploring consumer behavior and transnational trade. Two case studies are considered, Casselden Place (Melbourne) and La Casa Peña (Buenos Aires) and while some differences are encountered, the overall similarity in results points to the interconnectedness of the world during the period under study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Investigating Underfloor and Between Floor Deposits in Standing Buildings in Colonial Australia.
- Author
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Winter, Sean, Green, Jessica, Benfield-Constable, Katie, Romano, B'geella, and Meg Drummond-Wilson
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL archaeology ,DUST ,TAPHONOMY ,FLOORS - Abstract
Archaeological deposits build up inside standing buildings both under and between floors and these have the potential to provide considerable information about human behavior in the past. Under and between floor spaces provide a unique depositional environment that allow the survival of rare and fragile organic materials that typically do not survive in other archaeological contexts, including paper, cardboard, fabric and other fibres, seeds, leather, and human hair and skin cells. However, they require a clear understanding of depositional processes to allow their interpretation. Experimental archaeology was conducted to understand the process of artifact deposition and the interpretation of underfloor deposits in twelve standing buildings in Western Australia. Floors were built and a range of artifacts swept across them to determine how artifacts travelled across floorboards or fell through gaps between boards. Size, shape, and angularity of artifacts were key determinants of the likelihood of deposition. Sweeping activity makes it more likely that material will be deposited around the margins of rooms, and particularly, to either side of doorways. Underfloor deposits excavated from two specific Western Australian buildings, Ellensbrook Homestead, and the York Residency Museum, are interpreted based on the results of these experiments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Other Side of the Coin: Subsurface Deposits at the Former Royal Melbourne Mint.
- Author
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Travers, Ian
- Subjects
HISTORIC buildings ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location ,AIR pollution ,URBAN history ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
The Melbourne branch of the Royal Mint officially opened in 1872. Built on a site that had previously accommodated Melbourne’s original Exhibition Hall, the complex comprised the extant Administration Building and flanking Guardhouses and substantial “operative departments” to the rear. The latter were demolished in the early 1970s but recent investigations have revealed that substantial remains survive. This paper discusses our new appreciation of the Mint’s archaeology – one of an increasing number of Melbourne archaeological sites where subsurface deposits are supplementing our knowledge of places long acknowledged for the importance of their built heritage. The remains reveal important evidence relating to the minting process and responses to industrial urban air pollution in the nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Langlands Iron Foundry, Flinders Street, Melbourne.
- Author
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Myers, Sarah, Mirams, Sarah, and Mallett, Tom
- Subjects
IRON foundries ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location ,HISTORIC gardens ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Langlands Iron Foundry was an early and significant industrial operation in Victoria, responsible for assembling the first iron paddle steamer and making the first locomotive boiler in the colony. Remains of the foundry were uncovered in June 2014 during an archaeological program preceding development of a site in Flinders Street in Melbourne. The site was located on the remains of a garden created by John Batman, one of the two “founders” of Melbourne in 1835 and was superseded by a commercial shipping butcher in 1864. In this paper we present archaeological and historical evidence relating to the garden and iron foundry to illuminate important aspects of working life and conditions in early Melbourne. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The City Revealed: Reflections on 25 Years of Archaeology in Melbourne. Lessons from the Past and Future Challenges.
- Author
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Smith, Jeremy
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,HISTORIC sites ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,HISTORY - Abstract
In 2016, the 150th historical archaeology project was conducted in the central city area of Melbourne. Almost all of these investigations have been undertaken since the introduction of the Victorian
Heritage Act 1995 . With the Act recently under review, it is timely to look back on the lessons learned by heritage managers and archaeologists over the last 25 years. It is also an opportunity to review current practices to ensure that future site investigations are conducted efficiently and achieve meaningful outcomes. How can information obtained from the previous 150 projects inform and enhance the research frameworks of future work? What can we learn about Melbourne’s historical archaeology that we do not already know? How can community benefits be optimized? This paper will evaluate the successes and failures associated with the implementation of historical archaeology legislation in an urban setting and consider how the past 25 years of archaeology in the city can inform our approach to future opportunities in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Bottle Merchants at A’Beckett Street, Melbourne (1875–1914): New Evidence for the Light Industrial Trade of Bottle Washing.
- Author
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Ellis, Adrienne and Woff, Bronwyn
- Subjects
BOTTLE industry ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,GLASS bottles ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages ,AUSTRALIAN history ,NINETEENTH century - Abstract
Glass bottles were a valuable commodity in colonial Australia, and the commercial reuse of these vessels ensured that they were used to their full potential. The 2009 excavations at 19–37 A’Beckett Street, Melbourne, uncovered architectural features and occupation deposits associated with four bottle merchant businesses operating from Lot 35–37 between 1875 and 1914, providing a rare opportunity to study this little-known but significant light industrial trade. This paper draws on archaeological data from 35–37 A’Beckett Street to examine the role of bottle merchants and marine store dealers in nineteenth-century Melbourne. It also seeks to determine an archaeological signature for bottle merchants through comparison with other contemporary sites, and briefly touches on the implications of bottle reuse when identifying patterns of consumption in archaeological assemblages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Mission-Based Indigenous Production at the Weipa Presbyterian Mission, Western Cape York Peninsula (1932–66).
- Author
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Morrison, Michael, McNaughton, Darlene, and Shiner, Justin
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,FOOD production ,HONEY - Abstract
Previous research on remote nineteenth-and early twentieth-century Indigenous missions in northern and central Australia point to their often tenuous existence and the complex nature of engagements between Christian Missionaries and Indigenous people. This paper explores the contribution and significance of Indigenous production of wild foods in the context of one such settlement located at Weipa on Cape York Peninsula, north eastern Australia. It is premised on the assertion that investigation of the economies of these often remote settlements has the potential to reveal much about the character of cross-cultural engagements within the context of early mission settlements. Many remote missions had a far from secure economic basis and were sometimes unable to produce the consistent food supplies that were central to their proselytizing efforts. In this paper it is suggested that Indigenous-produced wild foods were of significant importance to the mission on a day-to-day basis in terms of their dietary contribution (particularly in terms of protein sources) and were also important to Indigenous people from a social and cultural perspective. We develop this argument through the case study of culturally modified trees that resulted from the collection of wild honey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. An Irregular and Inconvenient Pile of Buildings: The Destitute Asylum of Adelaide, South Australia and the English Workhouse.
- Author
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Susan Piddock
- Subjects
ASYLUMS (Institutions) ,EXCAVATION ,TUNNEL design & construction - Abstract
The Destitute Asylum of Adelaide, South Australia, was the subject of a rescue excavation in 1983. This paper seeks to explore the possibilities for further archaeological research that can arise from a reconsideration of reports generated by such excavations. Using documents, plans, photographs, and the Asylum buildings as material culture in much the same way as artifacts are used, the research focuses on the questions of space and room use within the Destitute Asylum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Unearthing Barrow Island's Past: The Historical Archaeology of Colonial-Era Exploitation, Northwest Australia.
- Author
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Paterson, Alistair
- Subjects
HISTORY of colonization ,COLONIES ,EXPLOITATION of humans ,PEARLS ,ARCHIPELAGOES ,HISTORY - Abstract
The 'modern world' of recent centuries is characterized by colonialism and imperialism, greater instances of cultural encounter and competition, increasing global connectivity, and the enhanced movement of resources and people especially for their labor (Falk 1991; Orser 1996). Northwest Australia provides important insight into these elements of modernity, as a region where the capitalist production of resources for international markets followed British colonization and relied on forms of non-European labor, both Indigenous Australian and Asian. This paper describes Barrow Island in the Northwest Australian maritime desert where archaeological research at recently discovered historic settlements indicates the deliberate translocation of Aboriginal people to the island presumably by white pearlers. The sites provide new information regarding commercial extractive industries, particularly the colonial pearl fisheries and their multicultural and exploitative nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. I Rode through the Desert: Equestrian Adaptations of Indigenous Peoples in Southern Hemisphere Arid Zones.
- Author
-
Mitchell, Peter
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples ,HORSES -- History ,ARID regions animals ,COLUMBIAN Exchange ,DESERTS ,DESERT ecology - Abstract
One of the most profound consequences of the 'Columbian exchange' set in motion by Europe's fifteenth- to nineteenth-century expansion overseas was the introduction of the horse to parts of the world where it had previously been absent. Alongside the internationally well-known Plains of North America, these regions included several southern hemisphere drylands: Patagonia; the Karoo and Kalahari of southern Africa; and the deserts of Australia. This paper explores the equestrian adaptations developed by the Indigenous inhabitants of these three areas and tries to explain the variability apparent in the speed and consequences of their adoption of the horse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. 'Born to be a Stoway': Inscriptions, Graffiti, and the Rupture of Space at the North Head Quarantine Station, Sydney.
- Author
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Clarke, Anne and Frederick, Ursula
- Subjects
GRAFFITI ,QUARANTINE ,INSCRIPTIONS ,PUBLIC health ,HISTORY - Abstract
Quarantine was used by British colonial authorities and later by Australian governments to manage and control the introduction of infectious diseases. Facilities at North Head, Manly, New South Wales, were initially built as a specialist institution but as the need for mass quarantine declined over time, the site was used for other forms of social regulation and welfare. This paper explores an enduring tradition of memorialization, commemoration, and in some instances, resistance to the conditions of isolation and confinement found in the mark-making practices of people held at the Quarantine Station from the 1830s to the 1970s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Quarantine Matters: Colonial Quarantine at North Head, Sydney and Its Material and Ideological Ruins.
- Author
-
Longhurst, Peta
- Subjects
19TH century imperialism ,QUARANTINE ,PUBLIC health ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages ,HISTORY - Abstract
Australia's quarantine regulations have their roots in colonial practice. This paper is concerned with the 'matter' of quarantine-its location, spatialization, and materialization-and the ways in which it contributed to the colonial agenda. Through an exploration of Sydney's North Head Quarantine Station, quarantine is shown to be a technology through which the colony and the continent were framed as simultaneously pure and vulnerable. These colonial roots of quarantine practice are then brought back to the present, drawing on Stoler's (2008) concept of 'imperial debris' to contemplate the contemporary ruins, both material and ideological, of colonial quarantine practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Integrating Stable Isotope and Zooarchaeological Analyses in Historical Archaeology: A Case Study from the Urban Nineteenth-Century Commonwealth Block Site, Melbourne, Australia.
- Author
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Guiry, Eric, Harpley, Bernice, Jones, Zachary, and Smith, Colin
- Subjects
STABLE isotopes ,ANIMALS ,ANIMAL culture ,ANIMAL industry ,DOMESTIC animals ,HUMAN-animal relationships -- History ,ZOOARCHAEOLOGY ,AUSTRALIAN history ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper presents the first use of bone collagen stable isotope analyses for the purpose of reconstructing historical animal husbandry and trade practices in Australia. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of 51 domesticate and commensal specimens demonstrate that meats consumed at the mid to late nineteenth-century Commonwealth Block site in Melbourne derived from animals with a diverse range of isotopic signatures. Potential factors contributing to this diversity including animal trade and variability in local animal husbandry practices are discussed. From these results we suggest that stable isotope-based paleodietary reconstructions have significant potential to illuminate a variety of human-animal relations in Australia's historical period as well as other New World contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Doing Business: Chinese and European Socioeconomic Relations in Early Cooktown.
- Author
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Rains, Kevin
- Subjects
CHINESE people ,HISTORY of material culture ,ECONOMIC activity ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,HISTORY ,ETHNIC relations - Abstract
This paper is an historical archaeological examination of the socioeconomic relations of the Chinese and European communities of Cooktown in north Queensland during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It looks at the social landscape and production, exchange and consumption of material culture to show that the Chinese were not a disengaged group, as depicted in conventional understandings of colonial life, but integral to the town's socioeconomic fabric. This close relationship arose out of a process of negotiation between Chinese and Europeans which responded to the strengths, weaknesses and resources of their individual business networks, and the particular conditions of Cooktown's frontier environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Under the Boards: Archaeological Site Formation Processes at the Commissariat Store, Brisbane.
- Author
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Murphy, Karen
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,RETAIL stores ,FLOODS ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,HISTORY - Abstract
The study of archaeological site formation processes, although routinely undertaken for prehistoric sites, is only carried out in historical archaeology in a limited way. Understanding the processes which formed the archaeological record of a site is an important first step towards developing justifiable inferences about past behavior and past societies regardless of the age of the site. This paper identifies and examines the cultural and non-cultural processes that formed the archaeological record at the Commissariat Store, Brisbane. The history of the site, from its construction in 1829 as part of the Moreton Bay penal settlement to the present, is examined and the expected impacts and processes on the archaeological record are identified. Archaeological evidence from the salvage excavation of the site undertaken in 1978 and 1979 is analyzed to identify the cultural and non-cultural site formation processes. This study identifies the presence of cultural formation processes including discard, loss, abandonment and re-use from an examination of the historical and archaeological evidence. Non-cultural formation processes at work in the site include faunalturbation, floralturbation, flooding, and aquaturbation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Mount Shamrock: A Symbiosis of Mine and Settlement.
- Author
-
Mate, Geraldine
- Subjects
GOLD miners ,GOLD mining ,LANDSCAPES ,GROUP identity ,HISTORY - Abstract
Mount Shamrock township was one of the earliest gold mining towns in the Upper Burnett district of Queensland, Australia. A study of the township and associated industrial area demonstrates the integration of town and mine in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This paper examines the relative permanence of the mining settlement and reveals a multifaceted landscape influenced not only by miners but by the women, children and other non-mining residents operating within distinct social and administrative frameworks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Landscapes of Redemption: Tracing the Path of a Convict Miner in Western Australia.
- Author
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Gibbs, Martin
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,FORMERLY incarcerated people ,LANDSCAPE archaeology ,CULTURAL landscapes ,MINERAL industries ,AUSTRALIAN history, 1788-1900 ,BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) - Abstract
This paper presents alternative readings of the archaeology of a series of nineteenth-century industrial and convict sites in the midwest region of Western Australia. In particular it employs the biography of Joseph Horrocks a former convict turned mine manager, to reinterpret the relationship between these places, considering the agency of the individual and suggesting how his experiences at some sites may have influenced him to attempt to create an idealised industrial settlement aimed at assisting with the reform of convicts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Lining the Path: A Seascape Perspective of Two Torres Strait Missions, Northeast Australia.
- Author
-
Ash, Jeremy, Manas, Louise, and Bosun, David
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,IMPERIALISM ,MARITIME history ,COLONIAL administration ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations - Abstract
This paper compares the socio-spatial characteristics of two missions dating from different periods in Torres Strait, northeastern Australia. It builds upon previous archaeological research which correlates settlement-subsistence systems with the seascape cosmologies of marine specialists. Against the backdrop of profound changes in colonial governance and religious commitment (from mission to church) from the late nineteenth to mid twentieth centuries, we map the changing structure of two Torres Strait missions, and reflect upon these changes relative to lived sea-space. We use this approach in the belief that “local” histories provide meaningful context to broader colonial narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Identifying Domination and Resistance Through the Spatial Organization of Poonindie Mission, South Australia.
- Author
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Griffin, Darren
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,CULTURAL relations ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,CAPITALISM ,IMPERIALISM - Abstract
One of the spaces where the interactions between Indigenous and non-Indigenous groups during the period of contact and cross-cultural interaction took place around the world, was at missions. In Australia, missions were founded, rearranged and closed down over a period of time in which the attitudes of Indigenous and non-Indigenous groups and official Government policy towards contact relationships were continually changing. By analyzing the use of these contested spaces at Australian Missions by both groups, archaeologists can begin to understand how the new relationships between these groups were negotiated, contested and played out over time. This paper analyses the use of space, using the theoretical frameworks of the archaeologies of capitalism, at Poonindie Mission in South Australia, which was established by the Anglican Church with support from the colonial government and operated between 1850 and 1896. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Domains and the Intercultural: Understanding Aboriginal and Missionary Engagement at the Mornington Island Mission, Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia from 1914 to 1942.
- Author
-
Dalley, Cameo and Memmott, Paul
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,ENGAGEMENT (Philosophy) ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,CULTURAL relations - Abstract
The Mornington Island Mission in the Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia, was a site of historical engagement between Aboriginal people and missionaries. In this paper, we apply the theoretical concepts of “domains” and the “intercultural” to the investigation of this engagement between 1914 and 1942, when the mission was overseen by the Reverend Robert Wilson. Through the examination of the removal of Aboriginal children, the establishment of a mission compound and Aboriginal camp and the inclusion of Aboriginal adults into the mission compound through production and economy, we show how mutually constituted domains operated. At the same time, the interaction between Aboriginal adults and children with missionaries within these domains was increasingly intercultural in nature. Thus, both “domains” and the “intercultural” are shown to have relevance to the historical case study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Missionization in New Zealand and Australia: A Comparison.
- Author
-
Middleton, Angela
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,HISTORY of imperialism ,EVANGELICAL Revival ,MISSIONARIES ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
This paper discusses missionization in New Zealand and Australia during the nineteenth century. Despite sharing aspects of colonial history and a geographical proximity in the South Pacific, the development of missions in both countries was disparate, leading to two very different types of missions, types I have identified as the “household” mission in New Zealand and the “institutional” mission in Australia. In both types common themes can be found, concerned with the “civilizing mission,” domesticity, and gender roles. These two types of missions were replicated in other parts of the globe, such as North America and the Pacific. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Archaeologies of Cultural Interaction: Wybalenna Settlement and Killalpaninna Mission.
- Author
-
Birmingham, Judy and Wilson, Andrew
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,CULTURAL relations ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,SOCIAL archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,COLONIZATION - Abstract
This paper compares two contrasting Australian case studies in the archaeology of Indigenous-European interaction: one mission-like in its intent, the Aboriginal Settlement for Tasmanian Aborigines at Wybalenna on Flinders Island in the Bass Strait (1833–47), the other the Lutheran mission at Lake Killalpaninna (1867–1928) investigated by the Central Australia Archaeology Project (CAAP). Each of the two case studies adopted different strategies of investigation. Wybalenna was a small excavation while Killalpaninna was an extensive surface survey. Both studies reveal diversity in the range of responses to a missionizing program, providing evidence of agency in the formation of the archaeological record. They demonstrate the value of the material evidence and the significance of archaeology in contributing to a more sensitive understanding of the interaction process by providing an alternative to textual sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Exploring the Archaeology of the Modern City: Issues of Scale, Integration and Complexity.
- Author
-
Tim Murray and Penny Crook
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,BUILDINGS - Abstract
Historical archaeologists have advocated the need to explore the archaeology of the modern city using several different scales or frames of reference—the household and the district being the most common. In this paper, we discuss the value of comparisons at larger scales, for example between cities or countries, as a basis for understanding archaeology of the modern western city. We argue that patterns of similarity and dissimilarity detected at these larger scales can (and should) become part of our interpretive and explanatory armoury, when it comes to understanding patterns and processes at smaller scales. However, we also believe that these larger scale enquiries do not by any means exhaust (or diminish the importance of) the site- or household-specific questions that continue to demand adequate answers. By reporting some of the thinking behind the work that has been done in Melbourne, Sydney and shortly to begin in London, we seek to more clearly establish the value of this broader comparative agenda in urban historical archaeology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Flaked Glass Artifacts from Nineteenth–Century Native Mounted Police Camps in Queensland, Australia.
- Author
-
Perston, Yinika, Wallis, Lynley A., Burke, Heather, McLennan, Colin, Hatte, Elizabeth, and Barker, Bryce
- Subjects
CAMP sites ,GLASS ,NORMATIVITY (Ethics) ,POLICE ,PARAMILITARY forces ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages - Abstract
The invasion of the Australian continent by Europeans caused massive disruptions to Indigenous cultures and ways of life. The adoption of new raw materials, often for the production of "traditional" artifact forms, is one archaeological indicator of the changes wrought by "colonization." Two camp sites associated with the Queensland Native Mounted Police (NMP), a punitive paramilitary government force that operated through the latter half of the nineteenth century in the northeastern part of the continent, contain abundant flaked glass artifacts. These were undoubtedly manufactured by the Aboriginal men who were employed as troopers in the NMP, and/or their wives and children. Produced using traditional stone working techniques applied to a novel raw material, these artifacts are a tangible demonstration of the messy entanglements experienced by people living and working in this particular — and in some ways unique — cross-cultural context. For the Aboriginal troopers stationed in alien landscapes, the easy accessibility of glass afforded a means by which they could maintain cultural practices and exert independence from their employers, unencumbered by traditional normative behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Kaparlgoo Blue: On the Adoption of Laundry Blue Pigment into the Visual Culture of Western Arnhem Land, Australia.
- Author
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Miller, Emily, May, Sally K., Goldhahn, Joakim, Taçon, Paul S. C., and Cooper, Victor
- Subjects
VISUAL pigments ,VISUAL culture ,WESTERN civilization ,BASKET making ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,ROCK art (Archaeology) - Abstract
It has been argued that laundry blue (whitener) was introduced into western Arnhem Land in the second half of the 1920s by missionaries, where it was used by Aboriginal people in rock art and on a variety of objects. Recent examination of museum collections acquired from the Northern Territory Native Industrial Mission at Kapalga in today's Kakadu National Park, shows that the introduction of laundry blue into local Aboriginal artistic practices was earlier, around 1900. We discuss two examples of objects painted with laundry blue, a fibre basket and a bark belt, as well as broader ethnographic evidence relating to the significance of the color blue. We argue that the use of laundry blue is not only the result of access to an exotic new color but also has links to existing cultural beliefs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. An Overview of Historical Archaeology in Queensland, Australia.
- Author
-
Harvey, Cameron
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL archaeology , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *CULTURAL property , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *MATERIAL culture , *HISTORY - Abstract
The ability of historical archaeology to make a significant contribution to our understanding of Queensland's recent past is hindered by factors including few practitioners, limited publications about historical archaeological research and a need to establish its relevance beyond the archaeological community. There exists great opportunities in Queensland for researchers to explore a diverse range of research topics of which only some are beginning to be investigated through historical archaeological enquiry. This paper investigates the current state of the discipline in Queensland, the challenges practitioners face today and into the future, and the avenues down which historical archaeologists may make significant contributions to our understanding of Queensland's recent past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Melbourne: The Archaeology of a World City.
- Author
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Lawrence, Susan and Davies, Peter
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,URBAN history ,METROPOLITAN areas ,PUBLIC health ,HISTORY - Abstract
Reviewing the results of several decades of excavation in the center of Melbourne, Australia, provides the opportunity to reflect on what archaeological evidence has to contribute to understandings of the colonial city. The city has been shaped by its role as a colonial entrepot, a gold rush port, and a nineteenth-century metropolitan center. Its rich archaeological record derives from the intersection of heritage controls and a development boom. Data from archaeological excavations drives new perspectives on Melbourne itself, revealing a city intimately connected with the gold rush boom that fuelled its growth. Archaeological data also shed light on the specific and distinctive historical circumstances that influenced the development of cities established in the nineteenth century, including transnational migration and trade along with emerging concerns over public health and sanitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A Golden Opportunity: Mayor Smith and Melbourne’s Emergence as a Global City.
- Author
-
Hayes, Sarah
- Subjects
MIDDLE class ,COLONIES ,MATERIAL culture ,POLITICIANS ,HISTORY - Abstract
In the earliest decades of the settlement of Melbourne, people’s backgrounds and origins were hazy and unknown, allowing a golden opportunity to reinvent and reprise not just individual wealth and success but also, consequently, the nature of society. At the same time, Melbourne was emerging as a truly global colonial city. Within this context, John Thomas Smith was making a rapid progression from son of a convict shoemaker to middle-class mayor of Melbourne. Such dramatic social mobility was a uniquely colonial phenomenon and material culture had a vital role to play in the renegotiation of Melbourne’s middle class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Introduction: The Archaeology of “Marvellous Melbourne”.
- Author
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Lawrence, Susan, Davies, Peter, and Smith, Jeremy
- Subjects
GOLD mining ,URBAN history ,METROPOLITAN areas ,URBAN growth ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Melbourne was a major global city in the nineteenth century. Founded by pastoralists in 1835, the settlement grew explosively following the discovery of gold in 1851, and within a decade the population had reached half a million people. New settlers and new wealth brought a boom in housing construction, manufacturing, civic institutions, and transport and communication infrastructure, as the city became the leading urban center in Australasia. The structure and fabric of the city today expresses much of its colonial development, when “Marvellous Melbourne” was among the most remarkable metropolitan centers in the Asia-Pacific region. In the last ten years, the intersection of more rigorous heritage protection and a boom in large-scale urban development means that there has been a fluorescence of historical archaeological work carried out in Melbourne, especially in the central business district. We draw upon this extensive archive of material to highlight the results of major archaeological discoveries that have occurred in recent years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Symbols of Power: The Firearm Paintings of Madjedbebe (Malakunanja II).
- Author
-
May, Sally, Wesley, Daryl, Goldhahn, Joakim, Litster, Mirani, and Manera, Brad
- Subjects
ROCK art (Archaeology) ,FIREARMS in art ,ABORIGINAL Australian painting ,ABORIGINAL Australian art ,MATERIAL culture ,ACCULTURATION - Abstract
Depictions of firearms in Australian Aboriginal rock art provide a unique opportunity to archaeologically explore the roles that this type of material culture played in times of culture contact. From the earliest interactions with explorers to the buffalo shooting enterprises of the twentieth century-firearms played complex and shifting roles in western Arnhem Land Aboriginal societies. The site of Madjedbebe (sometimes referred to as Malakunanja II in earlier academic literature) in Jabiluka (Mirarr Country), offers the opportunity to explore these shifting roles over time with an unprecedented 16 paintings of firearms spanning the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This rock art provides evidence for early firearms as objects of curiosity and threat to local groups, as well as evidence for later personal ownership and use of such weaponry. Moreover, we argue that the rock art suggests increasing incorporation of firearms into traditional cultural belief and artistic systems over time with Madjedbebe playing a key role in the communication of the cultural meanings behind this new subject matter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Ghosts of Sorrow, Sin and Crime: Dark Tourism and Convict Heritage in Van Diemen's Land, Australia.
- Author
-
Casella, Eleanor and Fennelly, Katherine
- Subjects
DARK tourism ,TOURISM ,PRISONERS ,TRANSPORT of prisoners ,20TH century Australian history ,AUSTRALIAN history ,NINETEENTH century - Abstract
Established as a British imperial penal colony, Van Diemen's Land received approximately 75,000 convicts before cessation of convict transportation in 1853. A vast network of penal stations and institutions were created to accommodate, employ, administer, and discipline these exiled felons. Popular interpretations of Australia's convict past highlight dynamics of shame, avoidance and active obliteration that characterized Australia's relationship to its recent convict past. Yet, closer examination of these colonial institutions suggests a far more ambivalent relationship with this 'dark heritage,' evidenced by continuous tourism and visitation to these places of pain and shame from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A Context for Concealment: The Historical Archaeology of Folk Ritual and Superstition in Australia.
- Author
-
Burke, Heather, Arthure, Susan, and Leiuen, Cherrie
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,RITES & ceremonies ,SUPERSTITION ,AUSTRALIAN history ,HISTORY - Abstract
Are there traditions of folk ritual practice in Australian historical contexts, and are they observable in the archaeological record? Studies from the US and UK have documented a range of practices suggesting the persistence of British and European traditions of folk magic well into the twentieth century and previous historical work has identified numerous examples of ritual concealments in Australian buildings. In examining over 4,500 Australian historical archaeological sources, however, we found very few examples of possible folk ritual practices. This raises the question of why such practices are not being captured by current archaeological recording methods. As counterpoint, a general model is constructed from US, UK and Australian work that raises intriguing possibilities for the situating of superstitious behavior in Australian historical archaeology, including the contexts in which people might be more prone to practise such behaviors and how they might be materially identifiable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Understanding Cultural History Using Ground-Penetrating Radar Mapping of Unmarked Graves in the Mapoon Mission Cemetery, Western Cape York, Queensland, Australia.
- Author
-
Sutton, Mary-Jean and Conyers, Lawrence
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,INTERMENT ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,GROUND penetrating radar ,CEMETERIES ,CULTURAL property ,CHRISTIAN missions - Abstract
The Mapoon Mission Cemetery in Cape York, Queensland contains unmarked pre-contact burials with potential national heritage values, despite a lack of formal recognition and protection through State and National heritage listings. Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) showed great potential as a non-intrusive technique to identify over 120 potential unmarked graves and understand mortuary practices at the Cemetery. When integrated with written and oral histories, such information provided new insights into the cultural history of this region, particularly the continuity of Aboriginal occupation and changes in mortuary practices since the establishment of the Mapoon Mission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Caboonbah: The Archaeology of a Middle Class Queensland Pastoral Family.
- Author
-
Terry, Linda
- Subjects
COUNTRY life ,RURAL waste management ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,MIDDLE class ,HISTORY - Abstract
Pastoralism was the mainstay of the developing economy of Queensland. The men and women who owned the pastoral properties were mainly from upper and middle class English and Scottish families. One such family, the Somersets, occupied Caboonbah, a pastoral property in the Brisbane Valley of Queensland in the late nineteenth and the early twentieth century. Excavation of the rubbish gully associated with the homestead provided material evidence of how this family adhered to the tenets of middle class family life while living in an isolated rural area and contending with the fluctuating fortunes of life on the land. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Economy and Respectability: Textiles from the North Brisbane Burial Ground.
- Author
-
Prangnell, Jonathan and McGowan, Glenys
- Subjects
BURIAL clothing ,CEMETERIES ,TEXTILES ,INTERMENT ,COFFINS ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Textile remains were discovered during a salvage excavation at the site of the North Brisbane Burial Ground, a nineteenth-century cemetery in the city of Brisbane, Australia. Ninety-six textile samples were collected at excavation, comprising 39 twill weaves, 17 tabby weaves, one haircord weave, one satin weave, three knitted fabrics, one piece of felt and 34 masses of loose wool packing. Most of the woven textiles recovered were coffin coverings or coffin linings. Similarly, the majority of non-woven textile samples were also associated with coffins and their dressing. Five of the identified textiles were likely to have been fragments of garments worn by the deceased. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Fences, Boats and Teas: Engendering Patient Lives at Peel Island Lazaret.
- Author
-
Youngberry, April and Prangnell, Jonathan
- Subjects
HANSEN'S disease patients ,HOSPITALS ,AGENT (Philosophy) ,GENDER ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,MEDICAL care ,HISTORY - Abstract
Within institutions, a separate social world comes into existence. Gender is a crucial shaper of relations in this new world, defining status, relationships to others and personal identity. Understanding the gendered conditions of, and responses to, institutional care is an important social contribution of historical archaeology to contemporary society. Research on the Peel Island Lazaret in Moreton Bay, Queensland, uses a model for engendering archaeology, with modifications pertinent to historical archaeology. Analysis builds on the work of others who have investigated the ways in which men and women of the confined and confining classes experienced institutions and interacted with each other. This study also extends beyond these approaches in exploring the areas of 'interpersonal agency' and relationship building, and the ways in which disadvantage minimization was mediated by the structuring principle of gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. What's in a Name? Beyond The Mary Watson Stories to a Historical Archaeology of Lizard Island.
- Author
-
Waterson, Paddy, Waghorn, Anita, Swartz, Julie, and Brown, Ross
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,TREPANG ,TREPANG fisheries ,HISTORY - Abstract
Preliminary historical archaeological research on Lizard Island in far north Queensland is enabling the Queensland Government to develop more effective management strategies for on-site interpretation of the historical precinct of Watsons Bay. Although popularly associated with the north Queensland colonial heroine Mary Watson, the Bay can now be understood as a large multilayered cultural landscape with meaning to a wide variety of groups. The common aspects of the three known beche-de-mer operations that occupied the Bay between 1860 and 1881 and the nature of the emerging archaeological record afford many opportunities for scaled archaeological research. It further highlights aspects of historical archaeological theory and the relationship between the discipline and the historical record. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Household Archaeology, Lifecycles and Status in a Nineteenth-Century Australian Coastal Community.
- Author
-
Prossor, Lauren, Lawrence, Susan, Brooks, Alasdair, and Lennon, Jane
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLD archaeology ,HOUSEHOLDS ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages ,HOME furnishings ,CERAMICS ,FAMILY size ,SOCIAL status ,LIFE cycles (Biology) - Abstract
The analysis of a ceramic assemblage from a late nineteenth-century site in a coastal town near Melbourne, Australia, is used to explore issues relating to household cycles and comparative status. Acquisition of household goods closely matches the stages of growth and decline in family size and the nature of the assemblage has directed further research into the relative status of the family. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Poverty in the Modern City: Retrospects and Prospects.
- Author
-
Murray, Tim
- Subjects
URBAN poor ,CITIES & towns ,POVERTY ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages ,ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,HISTORY - Abstract
The outcome of over fifteen years research on large urban assemblages from the Australian cities of Sydney and Melbourne is discussed in terms of approaches to the archaeology of the modern city as they have evolved over the period. To better understand the archaeology of urban poverty we require innovations in both methods and ideas, the most far-reaching being a transnational archaeology of urban poverty founded on the analysis of migration, consumption and class formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Poverty in Depth: New International Perspectives.
- Author
-
Giles, Kate and Jones, Sarah
- Subjects
URBAN poor ,SLUMS ,HOUSING ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,AUSTRALIAN history ,HISTORY - Abstract
This volume on the archaeology of urban poverty arises from a three-day symposium hosted by York Archaeological Trust and the University of York in July 2009 to establish the wider intellectual framework for the investigation of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century archaeology of the Hungate neighborhood of York. In this opening article, the trajectory of medieval and post-medieval archaeology in Britain is contrasted with historical archaeology in the United States and Australia, and the influence of the pre-modern history of the Hungate neighborhood on its development since 1800 is explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Poverty in Depth: a New Dialogue.
- Author
-
Walker, John, Beaudry, Mary, and Wall, Diana
- Subjects
POVERTY ,HOUSING ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,SLUMS ,HISTORY ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This reflective piece draws together the themes and issues presented within the volume, exploring historic and contemporary definitions and attitudes towards poverty and their implications of the archaeological study of 'slum' neighborhoods. It compares and contrasts the individual case studies from York and Manchester with investigations in America and Australia, drawing attention to the differences between them. Suggestions are made for future investigations, particularly in the potential for further comparative work at an international level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Destitute Women and Smoking at the Hyde Park Barracks, Sydney, Australia.
- Author
-
Davies, Peter
- Subjects
WOMEN immigrants ,POOR women ,INSTITUTIONALIZED persons ,SMOKING ,PIPE smokers ,IMMIGRANTS ,ASYLUMS (Institutions) ,PUBLIC institutions ,TOBACCO pipes - Abstract
The Hyde Park Barracks in Sydney, Australia, was established in 1819 to accommodate male convicts, but in later years the building served as a depot for immigrant women (1848-86) and as an asylum for destitute women (1862-86). The occupation of the latter group in particular resulted in the loss of large numbers of clay tobacco pipes under the floorboards. The quantity and distribution of the pipes is used here to examine smoking behavior among the destitute female inmates, and to assess their relationships with each other and the institution in which they were confined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. From Mission to Maynggu Ganai: The Wellington Valley Convict Station and Mission Site.
- Author
-
Ireland, Tracy
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,CULTURAL relations ,WIRADJURI (Australian people) ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,HISTORIC sites - Abstract
The Wellington Valley Convict Station and Mission site, now known as Maynggu Ganai Historic Site (meaning “people’s land” in local Wiradjuri language), contains the archaeological remains of the convict agricultural station that was established in 1823. The site, subsequently taken over by the Anglican Church Missionary Society as a mission to the Wiradjuri, operated from 1832 to 1844. Drawing upon archaeological survey, the extraordinary historical archive associated with this site, and an analysis of community consultative research, this article explores the role of this site in colonial cultural exchange, as well as the contemporary cultural meanings of this history and its physical remains for the community today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Memories of the Past, Visions of the Future: Changing Views of Ebenezer Mission, Victoria, Australia.
- Author
-
Lydon, Jane and Burns, Alan
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,ABORIGINAL Australians ,IMPERIALISM ,PRESERVATION of historic sites ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL surveying - Abstract
Former missions and reserves occupy an increasingly important place in Australian Aboriginal heritage, as sites of recent memory, ancestral resting-places, and the foci of social action in the present. Since the 1970s heritage managers have drawn heavily upon archaeological research in reclaiming places such as Ebenezer Mission for Aboriginal descendants as well as the non-Aboriginal community. This program of research and conservation has been shaped by Aboriginal memories and values that express the community’s self-understandings and its hopes for the future, in a process that reveals the relationship between tangible and intangible aspects of the past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Wreck of the Ex-Slaver James Matthews.
- Author
-
Graeme Henderson
- Subjects
SHIPWRECKS ,SLAVE traders ,SLAVERY - Abstract
Abstract This contribution presents the progress of investigations into the wreck of the ex-slave ship James Matthews, wrecked off Western Australia in 1841. The James Matthews wreck site preserves many elements of the vessel’s structure, with the result that the basic architecture of an actual transport vehicle of the Middle Passage has been recorded in detail and can be analyzed in depth by maritime archaeologists working in tandem with naval architects. The discovery of the James Matthews wreck has made possible cross-disciplinary research of a type not previously feasible for the illegal period of slavery in the Atlantic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Old Kinchega Homestead: Doing Household Archaeology in Outback New South Wales, Australia.
- Author
-
Penelope M. Allison
- Subjects
SOCIAL engineering (Political science) ,DOCUMENTARY evidence ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
The Kinchega Pastoral Station in western New South Wales, Australia, was one of the earliest and largest in the area. A study of one of the station's homestead is demonstrating how the integration and negotiation of material and documentary evidence produces information on domestic behavior in rural Australia in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and highlights the activities of women and children in an environment whose history has been dominated by the exploits of men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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