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Intensification, population and social change in Southeastern Australia: the skeletal evidence
Steve Webb, Australian National University

DATE: January 1984
SOURCE: Aboriginal History, Vol. 8, No. 1-2, pp. 154-172

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ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT:
Webb, S. G. (1984) Intensification, population and social change in Southeastern Australia: the skeletal evidence

Published in Aboriginal History, Vol. 8, No. 1-2, pp. 154-172, I.S.S.N. 0314-8769.

Reproduced with permission.

Copyright © Aboriginal History Inc., Canberra, 1984.

ABSTRACT:

Extract:

Previously, insights into past societies have nearly always been achieved through archaeological investigation, but by studying skeletal rather than cultural remains it is possible to make substantial additions to this knowledge. This is especially so in regard to the evaluation of environmental pressures exerted on individuals living a hunter-gatherer lifestyle. Such biological studies also add further dimensions to the investigation of prehistory. It is, after all, people, not their tools and chattels, that suffer the vagaries of the environment in which they live, and these vagaries are often reflected in the form of diagnosable traits within the skeleton.