Friday, 28 March 2025

How Aboriginal People Survived The Last Ice Age

Found on Sovereign Union's Facebook Page here: https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1083452677155134&set=a.642304697936603



A 2013 published study revealed how First Nations people coped with the last Ice Age, roughly 20,000 years ago.

"Population numbers plummeted due to harsh conditions at the peak of the last Ice Age", says the study.

Researchers say that when the climate cooled dramatically, Aboriginal groups sought refuge in well-watered areas, such as along rivers, and populations were condensed into small habitable areas.

Professor Sean Ulm, lead author of the research at James Cook University in Townsville, says the vast majority of Australia was simply uninhabitable at this time. "Forests disappeared, animals went extinct; major areas of Australia would have been deprived of surface water."

To understand how Aboriginal people responded to the conditions, a team of experts from Australia, England, and Canada used the radiocarbon dates of thousands of archaeological sites to study the distribution of people across the landscape over time.

The findings, published recently in The Journal of Archaeological Science[1], suggest that about 21,000 years ago, almost all people in modern-day Australia migrated into smaller areas, abandoning as much as 80 per cent of the continent.

"In Lawn Hill Gorge in northwestern Queensland, at the coldest point of the last glacial period, all of the stone, raw materials and food remains are exclusively from the Gorge area," says Sean. "This indicated very limited or no use of the surrounding broader landscape."

This massive consolidation had drastic effects on the population as well. "There was likely a birth rate decline of over 60 per cent," says Alan Williams, a PhD student at the Australian Nation University who worked on the study. "It would have been very ugly."

Can humans cope with climate change?

Sean says the next step would ideally be to study the resulting cultural shifts, however, this may prove to be difficult given that close to one third of what was Australia at the time of the Ice Age is now underwater. "By 10,000 years ago, sea levels were visibly rising, sometimes on a daily basis," says Sean.

Extreme changes in the environment continued for thousands of years, and Aboriginal life readjusted in the process. Sean says this makes it unlikely that researchers will ever know the full societal ramifications of the Ice Age.

What the study does reveal, however, is that humans have withstood massive climate change on this continent in the past, and this might prove vital for preparing for future events.

"A lot of the current climate reports that we read about in Australia...their records only go back a couple of hundred years," says Sean. "That's a very short time span to base our model for future climate change on."

Sean adds that, thanks to studies like this, archaeologists may soon have the potential to extend these data sets.

- Article - Reasearch Paper review by Wes Judd 'Australian Geographic' 27 September 2013

[1] RESEARCH PAPER: 'Human refugia in Australia during the Last Glacial Maximum and Terminal Pleistocene: a geospatial analysis of the 25–12 ka Australian archaeological record'

- By ALAN N.WILLIAMS James Cook University,
- ANDREW R.COOK University of New South Wales;
- MICHELLE C. LANGLEY University of Oxford, UK;
- MARK COLLARDE Human Evolutionary Studies Program and Department of Archaeology, British Columbia, Canada:

[ Academic Paper: https://bit.ly/34Atr6L ]

IMAGES:
Top: Southeast Asia and Australia during the last Ice Age.
Bottom: Estimations the areas in which Aboriginal groups congregated during the last Ice Age. (Source of both images - the above academic article)

Wednesday, 12 March 2025

Prehistoric civilisations - wiped out in the Younger Dryas?

An intriguing video on the evidence for much older civilisations that may have been wiped out in a global cataclysm some 12,900 years ago.