First Occupation of Australia Pushed Back 10,000 Years

News July 19, 2017

(Dominic O’Brian, Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation)
SHARE:
Australia Madjedbebe shelter
(Dominic O’Brian, Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation)

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON—According to a report in The Sydney Morning Herald, humans first traveled to Australia at least 65,000 years ago, or about 10,000 years earlier than previously thought. An international team of scientists, including Ben Marwick of the University of Washington and Chris Clarkson of the University of Queensland, excavated Madjedbebe, an ancient campsite located beneath a sandstone rock shelter in Kakadu National Park in the Northern Territory. They found perfectly preserved stone axes with polished and sharpened edges up against the back wall of the shelter. “There was one on the surface, another further down that we dated at 10,000 years,” Clarkson said. “Then there were quite a few further down still which [we] were able to date at 35,000 to 40,000 years, and finally one at 65,000 years, surrounded by a whole bunch of stone flakes.” The layers were dated with single-grain optically-stimulated luminescence dating techniques. The team also recovered seed-grinding tools, a midden of sea shells and animal bones, and a large amount of ground ochre. The new dates also suggest that humans and megafauna such as the Diprotodon shared the environment for some 20,000 years. It had been thought that the arrival of humans in Australia triggered the extinction of the continent’s megafauna. To watch a video about Australian rock art, go to "The Rock Art of Djulirri."

  • Features May/June 2017

    The Blackener’s Cave

    Viking Age outlaws, taboo, and ritual in Iceland’s lava fields

    Read Article
    (Photo: Samir S. Patel)
  • Features May/June 2017

    After the Battle

    The defeat of a Scottish army at the 1650 Battle of Dunbar was just the beginning of an epic ordeal for the survivors

    Read Article
    (Mary Evans Picture Library / Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Letter from Greenland May/June 2017

    The Ghosts of Kangeq

    The race to save Greenland’s Arctic coastal heritage from a shifting climate

    Read Article
    (Photo: R. Fortuna, National Museum of Denmark 2016)
  • Artifacts May/June 2017

    Maya Jade Pectoral

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Toledo Regional Archaeological Project, UCSD)