Aboriginal Use of Fire in a Landscape Context: Investigating Presence and Absence of Heat-Retainer Hearths in Western New South Wales, Australia
Authored by Benjamin Davies, Simon J Holdaway, Patricia C Fanning
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1086/691436
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
A case study from western New South Wales, Australia, illustrates the
age, preservation, and distribution of late Holocene heat-retainer
hearths that are abundant in the semiarid archaeological record in the
region. These hearths were constructed as underground ovens with stone
heat retainers. They appear archaeologically as eroded concentrations of
heat-fractured stone sometimes protecting charcoal deposits. We explore
geomorphic processes influencing hearth temporal and spatial
distributions using a neutral agent-based model. Parallels between model
outcomes and the distribution of hearths in space and time suggest that
processes of sediment erosion and deposition are having complex effects
on hearth survivorship and therefore on patterns of hearth frequency. We
consider the various processes that explain why hearths were made in the
past and how they manifest in the present. Despite the relatively recent
age of the hearths when compared with evidence for fire use in the
Paleolithic record, the presence and absence of these fire features
reflect the outcome of a large number of processes interacting together,
not all of them related to human behavior. We use the results of the
case study to comment on current behavioral models for the presence and
absence of fire use in the distant past.
Tags
Land-use
human-environment interactions
rangelands
Site
Surface archaeological record
Cooking
Earth
Rock
Occupation
Chronology