References
- Allen, H. 2011 Thomson’s spears. In Y. Musharbash and M. Barber (eds), Ethnography and the Production of Anthropological Knowledge, pp.69–88. Canberra: ANU EPress.
- Allen, H. and K. Akerman 2015 Innovation and change in northern Australian Aboriginal spear technologies. Archaeology in Oceania 50:83–92.
- Allen, H. and S. Brockwell n.d. Report on the Wooden Artefacts from Anbangbang 1 and Djuwarr 1, Kakadu National Park. Unpublished Report to the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin.
- Altman, J. and N. Peterson 1988 Rights to game and rights to cash among contemporary Australian hunter-gatherers. In T. Ingold, D. Riches and J. Woodburn (eds), Hunters and Gatherers, pp.75–149. Oxford: Berg.
- Attenborough, D. 1963 Quest under Capricorn. London: Lutterworth Press.
- Basedow, H. 1925 The Australian Aboriginal. Adelaide: F.W. Preece.
- Bourke, P., S. Brockwell, P. Faulkner and B. Meehan 2007 Climate variability in the mid- to late-Holocene Arnhem Land region, north Australia: Archaeological archives of environmental and archaeological change. Archaeology in Oceania 42(3):91–101.
- Bowen, G. 1996 Culture Shock: The Prehistory of the Magela Floodplain, Kakadu National Park, and its Implications for Analogy. Unpublished MA thesis, Northern Territory University, Darwin.
- Brandl, E.J. 1973 Australian Aboriginal Paintings in Western and Central Arnhem Land. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
- Chaloupka, G. 1982 Burrunguy: Nourlangie Rock. Darwin: Northart.
- Chaloupka, G. 1993 Journey in Time. Kew: Reed.
- Clarke, A. 1985 A preliminary archaeobotanical analysis of the Anbangbang 1 site. In R. Jones (ed.), Archaeological Research in Kakadu National Park, pp.77–96. Special Publication 13. Canberra: Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service.
- Clarke, A. 1989 Macroscopic plant remains. In W. Beck, A. Clarke and L. Head (eds), Plants in Australian Archaeology, pp.54–89. Tempus Volume 1. St Lucia: University of Queensland.
- Clarkson, C., Z. Jacobs, B. Marwick, R. Fullagar, L. Wallis, M. Smith, R.G. Roberts, E. Hayes, K. Lowe, X. Carah, S.A. Florin, J. McNeil, D. Cox, L.J. Arnold, Q. Hua, J. Huntley, H.E.A. Brand, T. Manne, A. Fairbairn, J. Shulmeister, L. Lyle, M. Salinas, M. Page, K. Connell, G. Park, K. Norman, T. Murphy and C. Pardoe 2017 Human occupation of northern Australia by 65,000 years ago. Nature 547(7663):306–310.
- Cundy, B.J. 1989 Formal Variation in Australian Spear and Spearthrower Technology. Oxford: BAR International Series 546.
- David, B., P.S.C. Taçon, J-J. Delannoy and J.-M. Geneste (eds), 2017 The Archaeology of Rock Art in Western Arnhem Land. Terra Australis 47. Canberra: ANU Press.
- Davidson, D.S. 1934 Australian spear-traits and their derivations. Journal of the Polynesian Society 43:143–162.
- Denham, T., J. Atchison, J. Austin, S. Bestel, D. Bowdery, A. Crowther, N. Dolby, A. Fairbairn, J. Field, A. Kennedy, C. Lentfer, C. Matheson, S. Nugent, J. Parr, M. Prebble, G. Robertson, J. Specht, R. Torrence, H. Barton, R. Fullagar, S. Haberle, M. Horrocks, T. Lewis and P. Matthews 2009 Archaeobotany in Australia and New Guinea: Practice, potential and prospects. Australian Archaeology 68(1):1–10.
- Dilkes-Hall, I.E., S. O’Connor and J. Balme 2019 People-plant interaction and economic botany at Carpenter’s Gap 1, south central Kimberley. Australian Archaeology 85(1):30–47.
- Evans, N. and R. Jones 1997 The cradle of the Pama-Nyungans. In P. McConvell and N. Evans (eds), Archaeology and Linguistics, pp.385–418. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
- Florin, S.A., A.S. Fairbairn, M. Nango, D. Djandjomerr, B. Marwick, R. Fullagar, M. Smith, L.A. Wallis and C. Clarkson 2020 The first Australian plant foods at Madjedbebe, 65,000-53,000 years ago. Nature Communications 11(1):924.
- Foley, D. 1985 Faunal analysis of Anbangbang 1 and Djuwarr 1. In R. Jones (ed.), Archaeological Research in Kakadu National Park, pp.97–102. Special Publication 13. Canberra: Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service.
- Franklin, D. 2008 Taxonomic interpretations of Australian native bamboos. Telopea 12(2):179–191.
- Fullagar, R., B. Meehan and R. Jones 1999 Residue analysis of ethnographic plant-working and other tools from northern Australia. In P. Anderson (ed.), Prehistory of Agriculture, pp.15–25. Monograph 40. Los Angeles: Institute of Archaeology, University of California.
- Gunn, R., B. David, R. Whear, D. James, F. Petchey, E. Chalmin, G. Castets, B. Barker, J.-M. Geneste and J.-J. Delannoy 2017 Postcards from the outside: European contact rock art imagery and occupation on the southern Arnhem Land plateau, Jawoyn lands. In B. David, P.S.C. Taçon, J.-J. Delannoy and J.-M. Geneste (eds), The Archaeology of Rock Art in Western Arnhem Land, Australia, pp.165–196. Terra Australis 47. Canberra: ANU Press.
- Hayward, J. 2016 A mutual correspondence? Comparing the rock art of west Arnhem Land with the South Australian Museum’s Australian Aboriginal material culture collection. Journal of the Anthropological Society of South Australia 40:1–34.
- Hiscock, P. 1999 Holocene coastal occupation of western Arnhem Land. In J. Hall and I.J. McNiven (eds), Australian Coastal Archaeology, pp.91–103. Canberra: ANH Publications, Australian National University.
- Hiscock, P. 2008 Archaeology of Ancient Australia. London: Routledge.
- Hodgson, R. 1994 Alligator Rivers Region Aboriginal Artefacts in the Possession of Australian and Overseas Museums. Unpublished Report to the Australian Nature Conservation Authority, Darwin.
- Hodgson, R. 1995 Variation in the Aboriginal Material Culture of the Alligator Rivers Region. Unpublished MA thesis, Northern Territory University, Darwin.
- Hough, W. 1890 Aboriginal fire-making. American Anthropologist A3(4):359–372.
- Hugo, D. 1983 Fishing Technology from the Donald Thomson Collection. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Queensland, St Lucia.
- Jones, R. and I. Johnson 1985a Rockshelter excavations: Nourlangie and Mt Brockman Massifs. In R. Jones (ed.), Archaeological Research in Kakadu National Park. pp.39–76. Special Publication 13. Canberra: Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service.
- Jones, R. and I. Johnson 1985b Deaf Adder Gorge: Lindner Site, Nauwalabila 1. In R. Jones (ed.), Archaeological Research in Kakadu National Park, pp.165–224. Special Publication 13. Canberra: Australian National University.
- Kamminga, J. and H. Allen 1973 Report of the Archaeological Survey. Canberra: Alligator Rivers Environmental Fact-Finding Study.
- Langley, M. 2018 Establishing a typology for Australian pointed bone implements. Australian Archaeology 84(2):164–180.
- Langley, M.C., I.E. Dilkes-Hall, J. Balme and S. O’Connor 2016 A boomerang fragment from Riwi Cave. Australian Archaeology 82(2):106–122.
- Langley, M.C., R. Whitau, I.E. Dilkes-Hall, M. Smith and S. O’Connor 2019 A spearthrower butt from Widgingarri. Australian Archaeology 85(1):102–107.
- Leichhardt, L. 1847 Journal of an Overland Expedition in Australia. London: T. and W. Boone.
- May, S.K., J. Gumbuwa Maralngurra, I.G. Johnston, J. Goldhahn, J. Lee, G. O’Loughlin, K. May, C. Ngalbarndidj Nabobbob, M. Garde and P.S.C. Taçon 2019 ‘This is my father’s painting’: A first-hand account of the creation of the most iconic rock art in Kakadu National Park. Rock Art Research 36:199–213.
- May, S.K., J. Huntley, M. Marshall, E. Miller, J.A. Hayward, A. Jalandoni, J. Goldhahn, I.G. Johnston, J. Lee, G. O’Loughlin, K. May, I.D. Sanz and P.S.C. Taçon 2020 New insights into the rock art of Anbangbang Gallery, Kakadu National Park. Journal of Field Archaeology 45(2):120–134.
- May, S.K. and T. Jones 2015 Current themes in the study of material culture in the rock art of northern Australia. The Artefact 38:3–7.
- May, S.K., D. Shine, D. Wright, T. Denham, P.S.C. Taçon, M. Marshall, I.D. Sanz, F. Prideaux and S.P. Stephens 2017 The rock art of Ingaanjalwurr, western Arnhem Land, Australia. In B. David, P.S.C. Taçon, J.-J. Delannoy and J.-M. Geneste (eds), The Archaeology of Rock Art in Western Arnhem Land, Australia, pp.51–68. Terra Australis 47. Canberra: ANU Press.
- Meehan, B. 1977 Man does not live by calories alone: The role of shellfish in a coastal cuisine. In J. Allen, J. Golson and R. Jones (eds), Sunda and Sahul, pp.493–531. London: Academic Press.
- Nugent, S. 2015 Sticks and Stones: A Functional Analysis of Aboriginal Spears from Northern Australia. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Queensland, St Lucia.
- Roberts, R.G., R. Jones, N.A. Spooner, M.J. Head, A.S. Murray and M.A. Smith 1994 The human colonization of Australia: Optical dates of 53,000 and 60,000 years bracket human arrival at Deaf Adder Gorge, Northern Territory. Quaternary Science Reviews 13(5-7):575–584.
- Russell-Smith, J. 1985 Studies in the jungle. In R. Jones (ed.), Archaeological Research in Kakadu National Park, pp.241–268. Special Publication 13. Canberra: Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service.
- Schrire, C. 1982 The Alligator Rivers: Prehistory and Ecology in Western Arnhem Land. Terra Australis 7. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.
- Shine, D., P. Hiscock and T. Denham 2016 The archaeology of Ingaanjalwurr rockshelter in Manilikarr Country, western Arnhem Land. Australian Archaeology 82(1):67–75.
- Shine, D., M. Marshall, D. Wright, T. Denham, P. Hiscock, G. Jacobsen and S.-P. Stephens 2015 The archaeology of Bindjarran rockshelter in Manilikarr Country, Kakadu National Park, Northern Territory. Australian Archaeology 80(1):104–111.
- Shine, D., D. Wright, T. Denham, K. Aplin, P. Hiscock, K. Parker and R. Walton 2013 Birriwilk rockshelter: A mid- to late- Holocene site in Manilikarr Country, southwest Arnhem Land, Northern Territory. Australian Archaeology 76(1):69–78.
- Specht, R. 1958 An introduction to the ethnobotany of Arnhem Land. In R. Specht and C. Mountford (eds), Records of the American-Australian Scientific Expedition to Arnhem Land, pp.479–503. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
- Spencer, B. 1914 Native Tribes of Northern Australia. London: Macmillan.
- Spencer, B. 1928 Wanderings in Wild Australia. London: Macmillan.
- Taçon, P.S.C. 1989 Art and the essence of being: Symbolic and economic aspects of fish among the people of western Arnhem Land. In H. Morphy (ed.), Animals into Art, pp.237–250. London: Unwin Hyman.
- Taçon, P.S.C. and C. Chippindale 1994 Australia’s ancient warriors. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 4(2):211–248.
- Taçon, P.S.C. and C. Chippindale 2008 Changing places: Ten thousand years of north Australian rock-art transformation. In D. Papagianni, H. Maschner and R. Layton (eds), Time and Change: Archaeological and Anthropological Perspectives on the Long-Term in Hunter-Gatherer Societies, pp.73–94. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
- Thomson, D. 1937 Unpublished Field Notes. Folder 110, Thomson Collection, Museum Victoria.
- Tindale, N.B. 1925 Natives of Groote Eylandt and of the west coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria. Records of the South Australian Museum 3:61–102, 103-134.
- Wesley, D. and T. Jones n.d. Where’s the Stone Tool Revolution? The Representation of Lithic Technologies in Mid to Late Holocene Rock Art of Arnhem Land. Typescript.
- Wesley, D., T. Jones and R. Whitau 2017 People and fish: Late Holocene rock art at Wulk Lagoon, Arnhem Land. In B. David, P.S.C. Taçon, J.-J. Delannoy and J.-M. Geneste (eds), The Archaeology of Rock Art in Western Arnhem Land, Australia, pp.21–50. Terra Australis 47. Canberra: ANU Press.
- Whitau, R. 2018 Late Quaternary Human-Environment Interaction in Bunuba and Gooniyandi Country, Western Australia. Unpublished PhD thesis, Australian National University, Canberra.
- Whitau, R., D. Vannieuwenhuyse, E. Dotte-Sarout, J. Balme and S. O'Connor 2018 Home is where the hearth is: Anthracological and microstratigraphic analyses of Pleistocene and Holocene combustion features, Riwi Cave (Kimberley, Western Australia). J Archaeol Method Theory 25(3):739–776.
- White, [Schrire]C. 1967 The prehistory of the Kakadu people. Mankind 6(9):426–431.