Potential submerged Aboriginal archaeological sites in South West Arm, Port Hacking, New South Wales, Australia

Author:

Nutley David M.1,Coroneos Cosmos2,Wheeler James3

Affiliation:

1. Comber Consultants, 76 Edwin Street North, Croydon, NSW 2193, Australia

2. Cosmos Archaeology, PO Box 42 Condong, NSW 2484, Australia

3. Archaeological and Heritage Management Solutions Pty Ltd, 2/35 Hope Street, Brunswick VIC 3056, Australia

Abstract

AbstractSealed, submerged palaeoenvironmental deposits date the time range for lithic technologies and enable inferences about cultural change – potentially more accurately than radiometric methods. Sea-level rises triggered by global warming reduce available land, and change the availability of flora, fauna, geological resources, rivers and wetlands. Australian archaeological studies on human adaptation to climate change focus mainly on terrestrial sites, coastal intensification and the few archaeological sites that were not inundated.The South West Arm project at Port Hacking, south of Sydney, looks at the potential for rock shelters to survive inundation and expand the sites available for studying human adaption to climate change.Site prediction was based on recorded terrestrial rock-shelter landforms at South West Arm. Underwater surveys were conducted by divers who located, photographed and mapped similar formations. No excavation was conducted.The pre-disturbance survey examined approximately 1800 m of seabed, between water depths of 0 and 9 m, primarily along the eastern shoreline of South West Arm where the seabed emulates the steep slope, with sandstone rock outcrops that form terraces and rock overhangs above water.Twelve submerged rock overhangs were recorded and confirmed the potential for rock-shelter sites to survive the process of inundation.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference78 articles.

1. Attenbrow V. J. (2002) Sydney's Aboriginal Past: Investigating the Archaeological and Historic Records (UNSW Press, Sydney).

2. Fishing in Port Jackson, New South Wales–more than met the eye

3. Archaeology of the continental shelf: Marine resources, submerged landscapes and underwater archaeology

4. Barrett D. H. , ed (1997) Crawford's Mariners Atlas. Apollo Bay to Jervis Bay (Crawford House Publishing, Bathurst, NSW).

5. Barrington G. (1802) The History of New South Wales, including Botany Bay, Port Jackson, Parramatta, Sydney and all its Dependencies (Paternoster Row, London) Project Gutenberg Australia eBook. eBook No. 1203391h.html, updated September 2012 [accessed 12 March 2013].

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