Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/130195
Citations
Scopus Web of Science® Altmetric
?
?
Type: Journal article
Title: 50 years and worlds apart: rethinking the Holocene occupation of Cloggs Cave (East Gippsland, SE Australia) five decades after its initial archaeological excavation and in light of GunaiKurnai world views
Author: David, B.
Fresløv, J.
Mullett, R.
Delannoy, J.J.
McDowell, M.
Urwin, C.
Mialanes, J.
Petchey, F.
Wood, R.
Russell, L.
Arnold, L.J.
Stephenson, B.
Fullagar, R.
Crouch, J.
Ash, J.
Berthet, J.
Wong, V.N.L.
Green, H.
Citation: Australian Archaeology, 2021; 87(1):1-20
Publisher: Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Issue Date: 2021
ISSN: 0312-2417
2470-0363
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Bruno David, Joanna Fresløv, Russell Mullett, Jean-Jacques Delannoy, Matthew McDowell, Chris Urwin ... et al. (GunaiKurnai Land and Waters Aboriginal Corporation)
Abstract: In this paper we report on new research at the iconic archaeological site of Cloggs Cave (GunaiKurnai Country), in the southern foothills of SE Australia’s Great Dividing Range. Detailed chronometric dating, combined with high-resolution 3D mapping, geomorphological studies and archaeological excavations, now allow a dense sequence of Late Holocene ash layers and their contents to be correlated with GunaiKurnai ethnography and current knowledge. These results suggest a critical re-interpretation of what the Old People were, and were not, doing in Cloggs Cave during the Late Holocene. Instead of a lack of Late Holocene cave occupation, as previously thought through the conceptual lens of ‘habitat and economy’, Cloggs Cave is now understood to have been actively used for special, magical purposes. Configured by local GunaiKurnai cosmology, cave landscapes (including Cloggs Cave's) were populated not only by food species animals, but also by ‘supernatural’ Beings and forces whose presence helped inform occupational patterns. The profound differences between the old and new archaeological interpretations of Cloggs Cave, separated by five decades of developing archaeological thought and technical advances, draw attention to archaeological meaning-making and highlight the significance of data capture and the pre-conceptions that shape the production of archaeological stories and identities of place.
Keywords: Capta; caves; Cloggs Cave; East Gippsland; explanatory frameworks; GunaiKurnai; habitat and economy; standing stones
Description: Published online: 05 Jan 2021
Rights: © 2020 Australian Archaeological Association Inc.
DOI: 10.1080/03122417.2020.1859963
Grant ID: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/CE170100015
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2020.1859963
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 8
Geology & Geophysics publications

Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.