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         Australian Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Clothing and modern human behaviour: prehistoric Tasmania as a case study.(Case study): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Ian Gilligan, 2007-10-01
  2. Dolly's Creek: An Archaeology of a Victorian Goldfields Community.(Review): An article from: The Australian Journal of Politics and History by W. Ross Johnston, 2001-09-01
  3. Modelling hunter-gatherer settlement patterns: an Australian case study.(Book Review): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Peter Thorley, 2003-10-01
  4. Sovereign Subjects: Indigenous Sovereignty Matters (Australian Cultural Studies)
  5. Ancient Times - A Quarterly Review of Biblical Archaeology (Volume 2, No 1) by Various, 1957
  6. Landscapes Rock Art and the Dreaming: An Archaeology of Preunderstanding (New Approaches to Anthropological Archaeology) by David Bruno, Bruno David, 2001-07-15
  7. The Lost Legions: Culture Contact in Colonial Australia (Indigenous Archaeologies) by Alistair Paterson, 2007-12-28
  8. Reading Race: Aboriginality in Australian Children's Literature by Clare Bradford, 2001-09-01
  9. Civil Rights: How Indigenous Australians Won Formal Equality by John Chesterman, 2005-07-01
  10. Country, Kin and Culture: Survival of an Australian Aboriginal Community by Claire Smith, 2004-06-01
  11. A Place for Strangers: Towards a History of Australian Aboriginal Being by Tony Swain, 1996-07-30
  12. Australian archaeology in ecological and ethnographic perspective (Series in archaeology) by Richard A Gould, 1973
  13. Proposals for the development of the Australian National Centre for Excellence in Maritime Archaeology (Report) by Jeremy N Green, 1998
  14. The Enduring Past: Archaeology of the Ancient World for Australians

41. Archaeology Graduate Programs In Australia And New Zealand
Roman art and archaeology; Roman ideology ; The archaeology of Anatolia and the Near East; Pompeii; Magic in the ancient world; australian archaeology; Rock Art
http://www.gradschools.com/listings/Australia/archaeology_Australia.html
ARCHAEOLOGY
Graduate Schools in Australia and New Zealand
Sponsoring Institutions:
Center for International Studies
Click here for information on becoming a sponsoring institution
General Listings:
Arcadia University Center for Education Abroad
Graduate Education Abroad in Australia
450 S. Easton Rd.
Glenside, PA 19038 USA
Click to send E-mail to:
Phone:
Fax:

At the graduate level, the Arcadia University Center for Education Abroad offers access to two highly respected Australian universities: Bond University and The Australian National University. Arcadia eliminates the complexities of the overseas graduate application process and will act as your single source for academic advising, application and financial aid processing, housing placement, and complete predeparture planning. Most of these programs can be completed in one year.
Australian National University, The
Archaeology and Palaeoanthropology
Director, International Education Office, Chancelry Annex Canberra, ACT 0200 Australia Click to send E-mail to: Phone: Fax: The Graduate School of The Australian National University is a cosmopolitan academic community, attracting students from many countries and from all parts of Australia. Approximately 1200 graduate students are enrolled in research degrees (PhD or Master). In addition, some 1300 students are enrolled for Master degrees and Graduate Diplomas by coursework, or by a combination of coursework and sub-thesis. Approximately a quarter of all graduate students come from countries other than Australia. Graduate studies are supported by about 1300 academic staff.

42. Underwater Archaeology At Brown
of California (Berkeley), Ph.D. Present research includes nautical archaeology, ethnoarchaeology, australian archaeology, general theory in archaeology.
http://www.brown.edu/Research/Underwater_Archaeology/bfd/
The Department of Anthropology at Brown University offers students an opportunity to study underwater and nautical archaeology at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. Courses are offered within the context of Anthropology and focus on the socio-cultural aspects of seafaring and maritime activities. Students are also encouraged to explore aspects of underwater and nautical archaeology that are of particular interest to them through self-developed Reading and Research courses under the direction of a faculty advisor. There are frequent opportunities to participate in underwater archaeology projects in places like Bermuda, the Dry Tortugas, and Florida. A degree in Anthropology at the appropriate level (BA., MA., Ph.D.) is awarded after having met all departmental requirements.
Related Courses
AN0109 Nautical and Underwater Archaeology, R. Gould
AN0194 Archaeology of Australia and the Pacific, R. Gould
AC0190/S24 America and the Sea, D. Souza
AN1xx (to be determined), The Maritime Archaeology of Colonialism, D. Souza

43. Bruno David Research Interests/9 - Arts - Monash University
australian archaeology. ·; in press. B. David. B. David. Review of M. Shanks C. Tilley s Reconstructing the Past . australian archaeology 42 6970.
http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/ges/who/bruno/bruno9.html
Method and theory in archaeology
  • in press. B. David. Review of C. Carr and J.E. Neitzel's (eds) 'Style, Society, and Person: Archaeological and Ethnological Perspectives'. Australian Archaeology. · in press. B. David. Review of P. Ucko's (ed.) 'Theory in Archaeology: a World Perspective'. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. · 1995. B. David. Review of C. Tilley's (ed.) 'Reading Material Culture'. Australian Archaeology 40: 71. · 1989. B. David. Review of I. Hodder's 'Reading the past'. Australian Archaeology 28: 155-8. · 1984. B. David. Man [sic] versus Dingo. Cultural Resource Management Monograph 5. Department of Community Services, Brisbane.

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44. Australian Museum - Dig Around At The Australian Museum During National Archaeol
National Archaeology Week aims to increase public awareness of australian archaeology and the work of Australian archaeologists both at home and abroad.
http://www.austmus.gov.au/display.cfm?id=1760

45. Archaeology Teaching And Learning: An Australian Perspective
This was the first time in australian archaeology that all our different associations and industry groups got together in one place for a conference, which is
http://hca.ltsn.ac.uk/archaeology/confprocs/TAG03-SarahColley.php
HCA-LTSN Subject Centre. Part of the Higher Education Academy
Home Archaeology Confprocs Current Page Go Directly to: Search Our Site Site of the Month Spartacus Educational
LTSN Generic Centre
This site is best viewed with:
Archaeology Teaching and Learning: an Australian Perspective
back Dr. Sarah Colley, University of Sydney, Australia. This paper is available for download in the following formats: So what I'm going to talk about today is a little bit about the outcomes of our own workshop. Another interesting area is the employment of the attendees (Figure 4). I draw attention here to the very small number of consultant archaeologists that were at the workshop. They clearly do 90% of archaeological fieldwork in Australia due to heritage legislation. Sydney is a centre, a hub of archaeological practice, very important in the consultancy business. Delegates from Sydney and New South Wales were most heavily represented, and we had people from all the other states and one person came from New Zealand (Figure 5). I think also you have to realise in a country the size of Australia the distances people have to travel.  Just getting people there is hard, paying for airfares etc. We're a very small profession in Australia. I've been reading some of the UK reports, and my understanding is that there's about 2,500 archaeologists? We don't have accurate figures in Australia for the number of archaeologists. There was a survey done in 1990 that recorded 350 people in archaeology. I think it's more than that. But it's very tiny (figure 6). We have limited regulations and practice/standards, heritage legislation works at state level mainly.

46. Science Finkel 280 (5368) 1343
australian archaeology University Funding Feels Big Chill. But australian archaeology faces an equally dire threat today s tight fiscal climate.
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/280/5368/1343?ck=nck

47. ANTIQUITY: Early Human Occupation Of Northern Australia: Archaeology And Thermol
Bowdler, S. 1991. Some sort of dates at Malakunanja II a reply to Roberts et al., australian archaeology 32 5051. Bradshaw, E. 1986.
http://intarch.ac.uk/antiquity/fullagar.html
Early human occupation of northern Australia: archaeology and thermoluminescence dating of Jinmium rock-shelter, Northern Territory
The nature and date of the human colonization of Australia remains a key issue in prehistory at the world scale, for a sufficiently early presence there indicates either Homo sapiens sapiens arriving precociously in a place remote from a supposed African origin, or a greater competence in sea-crossing than has been expected of archaic humans. Stratigraphic integrity, the new science of luminescent dating and the recognition of worked stone and of rock-engraving are immediate issues in this report from far northwestern Australia. et al. cf. White 1994). Discussion of the archaeological evidence has focussed on methods of dating, in particular luminescence and radiocarbon dating. A date of about 40,000 b.p. is favoured by those who prefer the radiocarbon chronology, while others argue that luminescence dating of several Australian sites suggests an initial colonization between 50,000 and 60,000 years ago (Roberts et al.

48. Bibliography Of Torres Strait: Archaeology
Carter, M. (2001). New evidence for the earliest human occupation of Torres Strait, northeastern Australia. australian archaeology 52 5052.
http://www.uq.edu.au/ATSIS/tsbibliography/archaeology.html
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... Resources Bibliography of Torres Strait Bibliography of Torres Strait Compiled by Anna Shnukal, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit, University of Queensland.
Archaeology
Bibliographies Books Booklets Catalogues Book sections Articles Reports Theses ... Bibliography of Torres Strait Home Page
Books
Flood, J. (1999). Archaeology of the Dreamtime: the story of prehistoric Australia and its people . Rev. ed. Pymble, NSW: Angus and Robertson. Mulvaney, J. and J. Kamminga (1999). Prehistory of Australia . St Leonards, NSW: Allen and Unwin. Walker, D. ed. (1972). Bridge and barrier: the natural and cultural history of Torres Strait . Canberra: Department of Biogrography and Geomorphology, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.
Book sections
Barham, A. J. (2000). Late Holocene maritime societies in the Torres Strait islands, northern Australia - cultural arrival or cultural emergence?

49. LaTrobe Archaeology - Dr David Frankel
University, Canberra, pp. 13846. 1998 Review The Rocks Life in early Sydney, G. Karskens , australian archaeology 46, pp. 54-56.
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/archaeology/depinfo/staffdir/lydon.html
The University Faculties Campuses Research ... International

Dr Jane Lydon
Martin Building Room 158
Phone 9479-2806
j.lydon@latrobe.edu.au
Jane Lydon has worked as a historical archaeologist on numerous sites and projects around Australia, including the Rocks area of Sydney where she was employed between 1990-93 by the Sydney Cove Authority, the Museum of Sydney on the site of First Government House prior to its opening in 1995, and the Kingston and Arthur's Vale Historic Area of Norfolk Island (1997-98). She has also worked in the private sector and for government agencies including the Victorian Archaeological Survey and the Australian Heritage Commission. She completed her MA in 1996 at the Australian National University, winning the Crawford Prize for best MA thesis submitted in that year. She received her doctorate from ANU in 2001, an investigation of nineteenth-century Aboriginal-white relations at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station near Healesville, Victoria. Appointed to La Trobe in mid 2000, she combines teaching public archaeology and cultural heritage management with her research interests in cross-cultural exchange. She has recently been awared an ARC Grant for three years to work on a project at Ebenezer Mission.

50. LaTrobe Archaeology - Dr Susan Lawrence
1999 The Role of Material Culture in australian archaeology, Australasian Journal of Historical Archaeology 16815. 1999 Towards
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/archaeology/depinfo/staffdir/lawrence.html
The University Faculties Campuses Research ... International
Department of Archaeology
Dr Susan Lawrence
Martin Building Room 164
Phone 9479-1790
s.lawrence@latrobe.edu.au
Australasian Historical Archaeology , co-edited The Archaeology of Whaling in Southern Australia and New Zealand (1998) with Mark Staniforth. Her book on the archaeology of the gold fields has recently been published by Melbourne University Press Current Research Projects The Archaeology of Whaling in Southern Australia and New Zealand (AWSANZ) Some related publications: S. Lawrence, in press, Whaling in the South Seas: Archaeological Evidence of Australia's First Industry, Mains'l Haul: A Journal of Pacific Maritime History , 36(4). (expected 2002). S. Lawrence, 2001, Foodways on a Colonial Whaling Station: Archaeological and Historical Evidence for Diet in Nineteenth Century Tasmania. Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society S. Lawrence and C. Tucker, in press, Sources of Meat in Colonial Diets: Faunal Evidence from a Nineteenth-Century Tasmanian Whaling Station

51. Archaeological Institute Of America
National Archaeology Week 16 23 May 2004 The 2nd annual National Archaeology Week aims to increase public awareness of australian archaeology and the work of
http://www.archaeological.org/webinfo.php?page=10158&entry=273&search_type=confe

52. JCU - FAESS - Ms Melissa Carter
Interests. PreEuropean archaeology of Torres Strait; australian archaeology; Origins and development of horticulture; australian archaeology 5250-52. 1999.
http://www.faess.jcu.edu.au/saas/staff/melissa.carter.html
@import /* hide from IE5 */ url("http://www.jcu.edu.au/includes/styles/JCUstyles.css"); Web Sitemap Search A-Z Index Contacts ... Campus Maps Quick Links Information For Prospective Students International Students Current Students Alumni Visitors Staff Jobs at JCU Information About The University Research Faculties and Divisions Library and Computing Services
Faculty of Arts, Education and Social Sciences
About the School Staff Disciplines Postgraduate Students External Subjects International Students Maritime Archaeology Coursework Masters Archaeology Field Schools ... Postgraduate Students
Ms Melissa Carter
PhD Student Archaeology Uni Address: Room SS 021, Social Sciences, Douglas Campus Postal Address: School of Anthropology and Archaeology, James Cook University, Townsville, 4811. Australia. Phone: +61 7 4781-5129
Fax: +61 7 4781-4045
Email: Melissa.Carter@jcu.edu.au BA(Hons) Interests
  • Pre-European archaeology of Torres Strait
  • Australian archaeology
  • Origins and development of horticulture
  • Coastal site formation processes
  • Torres Strait customary trade and exchange networks
  • Pottery and Papuan trade
    Thesis Topic
    The Archaeology of Human Settlement and Subsistence on the Murray Islands, Eastern Torres Strait, Northeastern Australia
  • 53. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: World Archaeology
    research, palaeontology, world archaeology DeweyClass 930 ResourceType journal Location usa Last checked 20001012 australian archaeology Collection of
    http://bubl.ac.uk/link/w/worldarchaeology.htm
    BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
    World archaeology
    A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • Archaeology Data Service
  • Archaeology of Teotihuacan, Mexico
  • Archaeology on the Net
  • ArchaeoPress ...
  • World Monuments Fund 100 Most Endangered Sites Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    Archaeology Data Service
    Aims to collect, describe, catalogue, preserve, and provide user support for digital resources that are created as a product of archaeological research. Part of the Arts and Humanities Data Service, based at the University of York.
    Author: Archaeology Data Service
    Subjects: archaeology research, british archaeology links, world archaeology
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    institution
    Location: uk
    Last checked:
    Archaeology of Teotihuacan, Mexico
    Provides general information about the ancient city of Teotihuacan, access to the Internet Journal for Teotihuacan Archaeology and Iconography, and excavation reports from sites such as the Feathered Serpent Pyramid and the Pyramid of the Moon.
    Author: Saburo Sugiyama, Arizona State University, Dept. of Anthropology
  • 54. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Australia
    Government Subjects australia DeweyClass 351.94 ResourceType government Location australia Last checked 20000822 australian archaeology Collection of
    http://bubl.ac.uk/link/a/australia.htm
    BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
    Australia
    A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • About Australia
  • All Australian
  • Australia Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
  • Australia: Government of the Commonwealth of Australia ...
  • World Upside Down - Australia 1788-1830 Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    About Australia
    A guide and travelogue for visitors to Australia, with information about its people, culture, commerce and the Australian lifestyle. Includes travel, shopping, lifestyle, business and news resources.
    Author: Cardline Pty. Ltd
    Subjects: australia, australian business, australian culture
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    promotion
    Location: australia
    Last checked:
    All Australian
    Collection of information about Australia including the constitution, national anthem, the system of government, Aborigines, songs and poetry, famous Australians, and common slang expressions.
    Author: All Australian
    Subjects: australia
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    documents Location: australia Last checked:
    Australia Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
    Detailed assessment of human rights practices in Australia. Topics assessed include torture, arbitrary detention or exile, fair public trial, freedom of speech and press, freedom of assembly, movement and religion; democratic rights, worker rights, and discrimination based on race, sex, religion, disability, language, or social status.
  • 55. Ink
    National Archaeology Week, May 1623, aims to increase public awareness of australian archaeology and the work of Australian archaeologists at home and abroad
    http://thecouriermail.com.au/extras/headstart/activities_arch/archaeology week_2
    FOCUS
    National Archaeology Week
    Edited by Reg Anderson
    The activities below are for classroom use and for individual student’s information and assignments. Additional information on this topic was published in The Courier-Mail Headstart section on Tuesday, 4 May 2004.
    Discussion The Past Comes Alive Archaeologists uncover the mysteries of the past, and they have made many amazing discoveries in Queensland. National Archaeology Week ( www.archaeologyweek.com National Archaeology Week, May 16-23, aims to increase public awareness of Australian archaeology and the work of Australian archaeologists at home and abroad, and to promote the importance of protecting Australia's unique archaeological heritage. An exciting nationwide program of events and activities is planned, including public talks, demonstration excavations, tours and displays. For more details visit the website at www.archaeologyweek.com

    56. Laurajane Smith
    2000 with A. van der Meer Viewing Riversleigh as a Cultural Landscape. australian archaeology, 5164; 2000 A history of Aboriginal
    http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/arch/staff/Smith.htm
    York Home Arch Home Arch Staff Res ... References
    Laurajane Smith
    Interests
      Laurajane Smith BA PhD (Sydney) GradDip HEd.(UNSW) is co-director of studies in the Masters in Archaeological Heritage Management. Her research interests include the politics of heritage management, the intersection of archaeological and management practices on areas of public policy and the cultural politics of identity, community involvement in heritage management and research, heritage tourism, archaeological ethics, archaeological theory in general and feminist archaeology in particular.
      Prior to her arrival in York Laurajane taught both Indigenous Studies and Cultural Heritage Management at the University of New South Wales, Sydney. She also directed her own cultural heritage consultantancy business for a number of years in south-eastern Australia.
    References
    • 2003 (with A. Morgan and A. van der Meer) Community Driven Research in Cultural Heritage Management: The Waanyi Women's History Project. International Journal of Heritage Studies 2001: Archaeology and the Governance of Material Culture: A case study from south-eastern Australia.

    57. Independent Publishers Group
    This bold and rigorous examination of the popular, cultural, and political aspects of the development of australian archaeology draws on a wide variety of
    http://www.ipgbook.com/showbook.cfm?bookid=0522850200

    58. If I Understand The Concept Of This Page Correctly, It Is To Deal With The Origi
    1979. The potential of rock patination analysis in australian archaeology Part 1. The Artefact 4 14-38. 1980. australian archaeology 29 9-16. 1990a.
    http://www.semioticon.com/people/Bednarik_biblio.htm
    Selected publications (in all about 1000 publications, in 32 languages): Die Grabungen in der Promenadensteighöhle (1961-1964). Die Höhle 1973. Wohnhöhlen bei Tom Price (Nordwest-Australien). Die Höhle A survey of prehistoric sites in the Tom Price Region, northwestern Australia. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 1979. The potential of rock patination analysis in Australian archaeology - Part 1. The Artefact 1980. The potential of rock patination analysis in Australian archaeology - Part 2. The Artefact 1984a. The nature of psychograms. The Artefact Die Bedeutung der paläolithischen Fingerlinientradition. Anthropologie 1985. Parietal finger markings in Australia. Bollettino del Centro Camuno di Studi Preistorici 1987a. No pictographs at end of Rochester Creek rainbow. La Pintura Engramme und Phosphene. Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 1989a. On the Pleistocene settlement of South America. Antiquity 1989b. Perspectives of Koongine Cave and scientistic archaeology. Australian Archaeology 1990a. On neuropsychology and shamanism in rock art. Current Anthropology 1990b. On the cognitive development of hominids.

    59. Research @ UOW - Quaternary Environments Research Centre - 1998 Publications Dat
    Megafauna A reappraisal’, Sanja van Huet, Rainer Grun, Colin MurrayWallace, Nicola Redvers-Newton, J Peter White, australian archaeology, Volume 46
    http://www.uow.edu.au/research/staff/98pubqerc.html
    All of UOW Arts Commerce Creative Arts Education Engineering Informatics Law Science Media/News Careers Staff website IT Services Research UniCentre URAC UOW Home Research at UOW Staff Publications Collection ... 1998 Publications List Research Services Grants and Funding Opportunities Publications Collection Research Ethics and Biosafety Research Student Centre Current Students Prospective Students HDR Supervision Scholarships Innovation and Commercialisation Intellectual Property Management CRC Management Innovation Campus University in the Brewery General Information Staff at a Glance UoW Research Profile Contact our Experts Research Strengths ... Research Committees
    1998 Publications Data
    Quaternary Environments Research Centre
    Book Chapters
    Under Bungonia , Oak Flats, NSW, JB Books, pp Under Bungonia , Oak Flats, NSW, JB Books, pp
    Journal Articles
    Australian Archaeology Volume 46, Canberra, ACT, Australian Archaelogical Association

    60. AusAnthrop: Australianistes Francophones
    P., 1995, Book Review K. Khan Catalogue of the Roth Collection of Aboriginal Artefacts from North Queensland, Volume 1, australian archaeology, 40, p. 69-70
    http://www.ausanthrop.net/resources/francophones.php?id=4

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