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  • A Community Bioarchaeology Project in the Flinders Group, Queensland, Australia

    Author(s)
    Adams, S
    Collard, M
    Williams, D
    Flinders, C
    Wasef, S
    Westaway, MC
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Wasef, Sally
    Williams, Doug G.
    Adams, Shaun
    Year published
    2020
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Bioarchaeological research in Australia has lagged behind that in other regions due to understandable concerns arising from the disregard of Indigenous Australians rights over their ancestors’ remains. To improve this situation, bioarchaeologists working in Australia need to employ more community-oriented approaches to research. This paper reports a project in which we employed such an approach. The project focused on burials in the Flinders Group, Queensland. Traditional Owners played a key role in the excavations and helped devise analyses that would deliver both scientific contributions and socially relevant outcomes. The ...
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    Bioarchaeological research in Australia has lagged behind that in other regions due to understandable concerns arising from the disregard of Indigenous Australians rights over their ancestors’ remains. To improve this situation, bioarchaeologists working in Australia need to employ more community-oriented approaches to research. This paper reports a project in which we employed such an approach. The project focused on burials in the Flinders Group, Queensland. Traditional Owners played a key role in the excavations and helped devise analyses that would deliver both scientific contributions and socially relevant outcomes. The fieldwork and laboratory analyses yielded a number of interesting results. Most significantly, they revealed that the pattern of mortuary practices recorded by ethnographers in the region in the early 20th century—complex burial of powerful people and simple interment of less important individuals—has a time depth of several hundred years or more. More generally, the project shows that there can be fruitful collaboration between archaeologists and Indigenous communities in relation to the excavation and scientific analysis of Aboriginal ancestral remains.
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    Journal Title
    Archaeologies
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1007/s11759-020-09411-w
    Note
    This publication has been entered into Griffith Research Online as an Advanced Online Version.
    Subject
    Archaeology
    Heritage, archive and museum studies
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/399871
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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    Tagline

    • Gold Coast
    • Logan
    • Brisbane - Queensland, Australia
    First Peoples of Australia
    • Aboriginal
    • Torres Strait Islander