Some of the first human beings to arrive in Tasmania, over 41,000 years ago, used fire to shape and manage the landscape, ...
Analysis of ancient mud reveals a sudden increase in charcoal around 41,600 years ago, indicating fire use by early ...
Over 41,000 years ago, Tasmania's first human inhabitants, the Aboriginal Tasmanians, utilized fire to manage and modify ...
Over 41,000 years ago, some of the first humans to arrive in Tasmania used fire to shape and manage the landscape—2,000 years ...
Uncle Jim, supported by the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre and the Bob Brown Foundation, says colonial Australia has no jurisdiction to charge or try him for defending Palawa law.
Tasmania has been cultivated with fire for thousands of years longer than previously thought, in an “affirmation” Indigenous ...
communities eventually reached Tasmania (known to the Palawa people as Lutruwita), it was the furthest south humans had ever settled. These early Aboriginal communities used fire to penetrate and ...
The results found the first Tasmanian Aboriginal people (Palawa) arrived more than 41,600 years ago, almost 2,000 years earlier than previously documented. Pollen from laymina paywuta. Picture ...
Over time, the first Palawa/Pakana communities, the ancestors of Tasmania’s Indigenous people, settled in Tasmania (known to the Palawa people as Lutruwita), the southernmost point of human ...