Devil's Lair
This single-chamber cave located in Western Australia is one of earliest sites of human occupation on the continent. This site is a large limestone cave first excavated by Charles Dortch in the 1970s. While there have been only a few artifacts actually recovered from the layers, the site has been an unusually rich source of information on prehistoric cultural and natural history in Western Australia. It is this site that has given archaeologists some of the biggest insights into the timing and character of the first human colonizers of Australia. Some artifacts uncovered from the site include three ground bone beads and a perforated stone object believed to be a pendant. These two items indicate early signs of human ornamentation. They are significant in demonstrating some of the earliest evidence of symbolic behavior in Australia and communicating the symbolic capacities of humans in general.
Lake Mungo Remains
The Lake Mungo remains consist of three separate sets of fossils found in the Willandra Lakes Region of New South Wales, Australia. These remains are referred to as Lake Mungo 1 (Mungo Lady), Lake Mungo 2 (LM2), and Lake Mungo 3 (Mungo Man). Discovered in 1969 by Jim Bowler, the Mungo Lady remains are not well preserved, but do hold special significance to the archaeological world. These early human inhabitant remains are some of the oldest anatomically modern human remains to be found in Australia and are the oldest evidence of ceremonial burial and cremation in ancient human societies in the world. The Mungo Lake remains are found in a vast, dry lake region, providing numerous sources of archaeological evidence for early human habitation. Excavating stone tools and objects dating back before the last ice age, this region is one of the most significant archaeological sites in the entire Australian continent.
Sunbury Earth Rings
Located on hills near Sunbury, Victoria, the Sunbury Earth Rings are prehistoric aboriginal sites first investigated in the early 1970s. The site consists of five separate "rings" created by scraping off grass and topsoil and then piling it in a circular ridge around the outside of the rings. The rings very somewhat in size (from 10 to 25 meters diameter) and are all placed on gently sloping hills. The rings were first excavated in the early 1970s by archaeologist Dr. David Frankel. He excavated one of the rings to try to determine its origin, revealing the remains of two stone cairns and several sharp stone knives. Archaeologists believe that these rings represent aboriginal ceremonial sites where ritual scarification or circumcision ceremonies took place. Some evidence suggests that these sites are over 1000 years old. While the rings hold archaeological and historical significance to the early aboriginal inhabitants of Australia, modern development has encroached on the sites significantly.
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