Centre for Rock Art Research + Management, Faculty of Arts, Business, Law and Education, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia.
Archaeology Department, Faculty of Arts, Business, Law and Education, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia.
PLoS One. 2018 Sep 19;13(9):e0202511. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202511. eCollection 2018.
The re-excavation of Karnatukul (Serpent's Glen) has provided evidence for the human occupation of the Australian Western Desert to before 47,830 cal. BP (modelled median age). This new sequence is 20,000 years older than the previous known age for occupation at this site. Re-excavation of Karnatukul aimed to contextualise the site's painted art assemblage. We report on analyses of assemblages of stone artefacts and pigment art, pigment fragments, anthracology, new radiocarbon dates and detailed sediment analyses. Combined these add significantly to our understanding of this earliest occupation of Australia's Western Desert. The large lithic assemblage of over 25,000 artefacts includes a symmetrical geometric backed artefact dated to 45,570-41,650 cal. BP. The assemblage includes other evidence for hafting technology in its earliest phase of occupation. This research recalibrates the earliest Pleistocene occupation of Australia's desert core and confirms that people remained in this part of the arid zone during the Last Glacial Maximum. Changes in occupation intensity are demonstrated throughout the sequence: at the late Pleistocene/Holocene transition, the mid-Holocene and then during the last millennium. Karnatukul documents intensive site use with a range of occupation activities and different signalling behaviours during the last 1,000 years. This correlation of rock art and occupation evidence refines our understanding of how Western Desert peoples have inscribed their landscapes in the recent past, while the newly described occupation sequence highlights the dynamic adaptive culture of the first Australians, supporting arguments for their rapid very early migration from the coasts and northern tropics throughout the arid interior of the continent.
卡纳图库尔(蛇谷)的再发掘为人类在澳大利亚西部沙漠的居住时间提供了 47830 年前(模拟中值年龄)的证据。这一新的年代序列比该遗址之前已知的居住年代早了 2 万年。卡纳图库尔的再发掘旨在为该遗址的绘画艺术组合提供背景信息。我们报告了石器工具和颜料艺术、颜料碎片、植物考古学、新的放射性碳测年和详细沉积物分析的分析结果。这些结果结合起来,大大增加了我们对澳大利亚西部沙漠最早人类居住的理解。超过 25000 件石器工具的大型石器工具组合中,有一件对称几何形的石器工具可追溯到 45570-41650 年前。该组合还包括其他证据,表明在其最早的居住阶段就已经使用了安装技术。这项研究重新校准了澳大利亚沙漠核心地区最早的更新世居住时间,并证实了人类在末次冰期盛期仍留在这个干旱区。在整个序列中都显示出居住强度的变化:在更新世晚期/全新世过渡时期、全新世中期以及在最后一千年。卡纳图库尔记录了在过去 1000 年中,该遗址的一系列密集的居住活动和不同的信号行为。这种岩画和居住证据的相关性,使我们更好地理解了西部沙漠地区的人们如何在最近的历史时期在他们的景观上留下印记,而新描述的居住序列则突出了第一批澳大利亚人的动态适应性文化,支持了他们从沿海和北部热带地区迅速向整个大陆干旱内陆迁移的论点。