• This week in Southeast Asian archaeology:⠀
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  • From Taiwan’s ocean floor to Myanmar’s quake-shaken soil—this week’s newsletter features Denisovan jawbones and newly unearthed Inwa-era ruins. Ancient stories resurface in the most unexpected ways. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
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  • Sunken ships in Vietnam, a hidden city beneath Thailand, and a newly protected stupa in Laos—this week’s Southeast Asian archaeology newsletter uncovers layers of history just beneath the surface. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
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  • Cebu Governor Garcia calls for the return of all looted church artifacts to restore the province
  • This week: Equinox at Angkor Wat lights up the skies, but shadows fall elsewhere—Boljoon’s stolen panels return, Bali battles temple theft, and a deep dive into the murky world of antiquities trafficking. #southeastasianarchaeology #freenewsletter

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  • Cambodia restores Beng Mealea Temple
  • Tamil Nadu announces deep-sea excavation between Poompuhar and Nagapattinam to explore ancient Chola maritime heritage. #southeastasianarchaeology #India #CholaDynasty

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Retracing ancient routes to Australia

2 July 2019
in Peripheral Southeast Asia, Southeast Asia
Tags: Australiahuman evolutionmigrationNature (journal)New Guinea (island)research papersSahulScientific Reports (journal)sea levels
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Retracing ancient routes to Australia

via Eureka Alerts, 20 June 2019: Demographic models explained in a couple of recent papers in Nature (see links below) posit that human migration to Australia was a deliberate a large logistical endeavour, requiring a single event of 1,300 migrants, or successive waves involving hundreds of people at each time.

The team of multidisciplinary researchers from CABAH and the CSRIO set out to establish the most likely route travelled to reach the ancient mega-continent, known as Sahul (New Guinea, Australia and Tasmania joined at times of low sea level).

“We developed demographic models to determine which island-hopping route ancient people most likely took,” said CABAH’s Professor Corey Bradshaw, from Flinders University.

“A northern route connecting the islands of Mangoli, Buru, and Seram into West Papua New Guinea would probably have been easiest to navigate and survive. This route was easiest when compared to the southern route from Timor that leads to the now-drowned Sahul Shelf in the modern-day Kimberley region.”

The researchers also used complex mathematical modelling — considering factors including fertility, longevity, past climate conditions, and other ecological principles — to calculate the numbers of people required for the population as a whole to survive.

The simulations indicate that at least 1300 people arrived in either a single migration event or smaller, successive waves averaging at least 130 people every 70 years or so, over the course of about 700 years.

Source: Retracing ancient routes to Australia | EurekAlert! Science News

See also:

  • Early human settlement of Sahul was not an accident | Nature Scientific Reports, 17 June 2019
  • The first hominin fleet | Nature Ecology and Evolution, 17 June 2019
  • Minimum founding populations for the first peopling of Sahul | Nature Ecology and Evolution, 17 June 2019

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