Find could rewrite Australian human history

Find could rewrite Australian human history

by Joseph Anthony
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A supplied image shows Elspeth Hayes talking with Mark Djandjomerr and traditional owner May Nango as she extracts comparative samples at a cave near the Madjedbebe site located in the Kakadu region in northern Australia, July 14, 2017 which has revelead that humans reached the country at least 65,000 years ago – up to 18,000 years earlier than archaeologists previously thought

Axeheads and grinding stones from a cave in Australiaโ€˜s far north suggest humans arrived on the continent about 65,000 years ago, or 18,000 years earlier than previously thought, according to research published on Thursday.

A technique called luminescence dating was used to date the ancient tools which were found in a rock shelter at the bottom of a cliff, on the edge of a sandy savannah plain some 300 km (186 miles) east of Darwin. Finding of a new minimum age for the arrival of humans in Australia pushes back the origins of aboriginal culture, the worldโ€™s oldest continuous civilisation, from a previously agreed consensus of around 47,000 years ago.

It also changes scientific understanding of the date humans migrated out of Africa, the studyโ€™s lead author Chris Clarkson told Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio.

Scientists believed that humans first left Africa some time between 100,000 years ago and 60,000 years ago, Clarkson said.

โ€œBecause Australia sits at the end of this migration route, we can now use this as a benchmark, and use it to say that people must have left Africa earlier than this,โ€ he said.

Clarksonโ€™s paper was published in the journal Nature, which last month turned the understanding of human origins on its head, with a study showing fossils discovered in Morocco to be 300,000 years old, about 100,000 years older than any other human remains previously found.

The Australian study used both radio-carbon dating, which reaches its limits at around 50,000 years, and luminescence, which uses laser beams, to date 28,500 individual grains of sand from the site, which sits on a Rio Tinto uranium mining lease in the Northern Territory.

โ€œPrevious excavations, they didnโ€™t have the access to the dating methods that we do these days to actually confirm that the deposits and the archaeology really were that old,โ€ said Andy Herries, Associate Professor of Palaeoanthropology and Geoarchaeology at La Trobe University in Melbourne, who was not part of the study.

โ€œThe problem previously was that there was some old dates and stones but it was just a couple of them, whereas this research shows a significant occupation,โ€ he said.

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