Oldest known evidence of Aboriginal settlement in arid Australia found in Flinders Ranges rock shelter

Giles Hamm

Giles Hamm Source: Giles Hamm

The chance discovery of a rock shelter in the Flinders Ranges has unearthed one of the most important prehistoric sites in Australia. The site, known as Warratyi, shows Aboriginal Australians settled the arid interior of the country around 49,000 years ago - some 10,000 years earlier than previously thought. The shelter, about 550 kilometres north of Adelaide, also contains the first reliably dated evidence of human interaction with megafauna. Artefacts excavated at the site also push back the earliest-known dates on the development of key bone and stone axe technologies and the use of ochre in Australia. More in this report by Themi Kallos, based on an ABC article.


 






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