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Cuddie Springs

Cuddie Springs is a notable archaeological and paleontological site in the semi-arid zone of central northern New South Wales, Australia, near Carinda in Walgett Shire. Cuddie Springs is an open site, with the fossil deposits preserved in a claypan on the floor of an ancient ephemeral lake. The claypan fills with water after local rainstorms and often takes months to dry, a fact which facilitated the survival of fossils over a long period of time.

Cuddie Springs
Shown within Australia
LocationCarinda, Walgett Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates30°47′13″S 147°28′41″E / 30.78694°S 147.47806°E / -30.78694; 147.47806
Length200 m (660 ft)
Width200 m (660 ft)
History
PeriodsPleistocene
CulturesPrehistoric Australia
Site notes
Excavation dates1933, 1991–2009
ArchaeologistsJudith Field
Richard Fullagar

The site provided the first unequivocal association of stone artefacts with fossil remains of Australian megafauna.[1] Cuddie Springs has been known as a fossil megafauna locality since the late 1870s, when a well was sunk into the centre of the claypan. The Australian Museum launched excavations in 1933 and while many bones were found, no archaeological discoveries were made in that initial research. More extensive excavations were conducted between 1991 and 1996 by a team from the University of New South Wales and were continued between 1997 and 2009 through the University of Sydney.

Etymology edit

It was recorded that the word 'Cuddy' in the language of the "Marra Blacks" means bad.[2] This has been interpreted as a reference to the quality of the water found in the Cuddie lake, which is alkaline with a pH between 7 and 9.[3] Despite the name, Cuddie Springs is an ephemeral lake, and not a spring.[4]

Excavation history edit

In the historic period, Cuddie Springs was known to both Aboriginal and European people as a palaeontological site. A Dreaming story about Mullyan the eaglehawk is associated to the formation of the bone deposits at the site and the formation of the Macquarie Marshes to the south and the site is also part of a Dreaming track tied to the Macquarie Marshes and the Geera waterhole on the Barwon River.[3]

Europeans first settled in the area around Cuddie Springs in the 1830s. A well was sunk into the middle of the claypan in 1876, the disused superstructure of which was still present in the 1920s. During the sinking of the well in the 1870s several large fossilised bones were recovered and were sent to the Australian Museum, some of which were later sent to Richard Owen who identified the fossils as belonging to different genus of Diprotodon, Euowenia, Nototherium, Genyornis, various Macropodidae, Megalania and at least one genus of crocodile, Pallimnarchus.[5]

Despite attempts in the 1920s to excavate it was not until 1933 that the first excavations took place at Cuddie Springs. Led by the Australian Museum, the principal researchers described the excavation thus:

We commenced our excavations about 10 yards from the well, working towards the centre, and before work was stopped, about five weeks later, the claypan resembled the fields of Flanders, with a complicated series of trenches and pits, mostly about 5 feet in depth, but in one case about 15 feet.[2]

Though a range of paleontological material was recovered from the site, no archaeological material was identified in the 1933 excavation.[3] Full scale excavations at the site recommenced in 1991 after excavations designed to test the possibility of pollen preservation at the site uncovered a high concentration of bone and a dense layer of flaked stone artefacts, indicating the site had archaeological as well as paleontological potential.[6]

The main archaeological excavations were carried out between 1996 and 2009. The majority of the excavated material is currently stored at the Australian Museum, and has featured in major exhibitions.[7]

Site setting edit

Cuddie Springs is located within the semi-arid zone, but palynological evidence indicates that 40,000 years ago there was a large permanent lake surrounded by open shrub land suitable for supporting megafauna.(Hiscock 2008, [page needed])

Evidence for human co-existence with Australian megafauna edit

The excavators of Cuddie Springs reject humans as the primary cause of megafauna extinctions. They conclude that the 10,000 years of co-habitation of humans and megafauna at Cuddie Springs suggests that climate changes that began before the human colonisation of Australia were responsible for the megafauna extinctions. Wroe and Field[8] cite the staggered extinctions that have been occurring since at least 130,000 years ago and the fact that megafauna in Tasmania do not occur after 46,000 years ago but people only arrived across a land bridge at 37,000 years ago. This staggered decline, mostly occurring in contexts independent of humans, is linked to environmental evidence for increasingly arid and erratic conditions since 400–300,000 years ago. The large body size of the megafauna suggests low fecundity and low population densities which have been argued to have made them susceptible to extinction due to habitat loss from increasing aridity.[8]

The 10,000 years of co-habitation of humans and megafauna at Cuddie Springs that is the foundation of Wroe and Field's argument has been the subject of intense critical examination. This critique has identified a number of details that weaken the integrity of the association between humans and megafauna. First are the finds themselves, such as relatively large number of grinding stones in Pleistocene-age layers,[9] as well as tula-adze-like flakes.[10] The Pleistocene grinding stones are notable because they imply a broad-spectrum plant-processing economy much earlier than previously known in Australia.[9] These finds are anomalous because in other parts of Australia they are restricted to late Holocene contexts.[11] Amongst the megafauna bone layers there is a tooth of a crocodile, Pallimnarchus sp., that became extinct long before 40,000 years ago.[11] The tooth is also exfoliated and heavily mineralised and the preservation is not consistent with other bone and teeth in the same level. There are stone artefacts with hair and blood adhering, but in the same layers there are megafauna bones with not even traces of protein remaining.[12][13][14][15]

These inconsistent finds suggest that the process of site formation may have involved some mixing of materials of different ages. This leads to the second important detail, the stratigraphy. Cuddie Springs is unusual in having a dense deflation pavement that separates recent materials (such as cow bones) from the Pleistocene layers. The layers above the pavement contains cow bones mixed with megafauna bones but the layers below contain no cow bones.[16] Archaeology Professor Bruno David has asked where the rocks in this pavement come from in a stone-poor riverine plain, and suggested that they may have been carried by Aboriginal people from a gibber plain 4 km from the site or by farmers during the late 19th or early 20th century to create a firm footing for people or cattle.[10] Gillespie and Brook also suggest that the stone artefacts in the pavement are unusually dense for a Pleistocene archaeological site and may have been transported during well construction or represent an in situ but late Holocene archaeological site overlaying disturbed Late Pleistocene sediments.[12] There is a long history of European activity at Cuddie Springs, with a well dug in 1876, ten metres from the 1990s excavation and trenches dug by the Australian Museum in 1933. These events likely caused disturbance of the stratigraphy. Gillespie and Brook add that cattle visiting the well may have pushed stone artefacts through the pavement into the Pleistocene layers during waterlogged conditions. Tracing the origins of the pavement is crucial to understanding the integrity of the Pleistocene layers.

Several authors have suggested that the Pleistocene stone artefacts and megafauna bones may have derived from separate contexts that have become mixed by underground water flow. Because it is a ground-fed spring and a site that is periodically inundated by rain, sediment at Cuddie Springs is highly likely to have been moved by water. The depth of the historic well suggests that the ground water level may have been near the level of the Pleistocene layers.[12] Gillespie and David suggest that the upright orientation of an unarticulated Genyornis femur in the Pleistocene layers at Cuddie Springs might be explained by sediment movement due to water flow.[11] This suggests that the megafauna bones might derive from much older sediments and have been reworked into the stone artefact bearing layers. A more direct link between the stone artefacts and the bones would be cut marks on the bones, but there are "few cut marks on any bones" at Cuddie Springs.[4] Evidence favour of an intact Pleistocene deposit comes from analysis of rare-earth elements (REE) in the megafauna bones. The REE contents of the bones suggests that each depositional unit contains fauna with a discrete chemical signature and, therefore, a discrete and distinct postdepositional history, arguing against any postdepositional movement and mixing of bone between stratigraphic horizons.[17] Gillespie and Brook comment that this still does not exclude an off-site origin of the bones (i.e. death of the animal) and subsequent fluvial transportation to Cuddie Springs.[12] Field et al. (2006)[incomplete short citation] dispute the proposal that flood movement caused the combination of megafauna and stone artefacts. They report that the sediments enclosing the bones and stones are fine-grained silts and clays resulting from a low-energy flow of water. They argue that if floods were responsible then larger sediments such as sands and gravels would have been found also.

The possibility of mixed Pleistocene deposits is also suggested by some interpretations of the chronology of the site, a third focus of the critiques (figure 6). So far, there are 20 radiocarbon dates and seven luminescence dates published for Cuddie Springs.[12] Statistical analysis by Gillespie and Brook (2006) of the 16 radiocarbon dates from the Pleistocene layers (ranging from 28 to 33,000 years ago) suggest that they do not increase in age as depth increases. They interpret this to mean that the sediments have been disturbed since they were first deposited. The luminescence dates also suggest mixing, with Roberts et al. (2001) finding that the sediments sampled for dating have multiple palaeodose[clarification needed] populations, suggesting that sediments in the same sample were deposited at different times, rather than all at the same time.[18] As mentioned above, the megafauna bones contain undetectable amounts of protein, so direct dating of the bones has so far been unsuccessful.[19][13]

The uniqueness of archaeological and palaeontological finds from Cuddie Springs and its unusual stratigraphy have attracted detailed critiques that cast doubt on the integrity of the human-megafauna coexistence. Despite these problems, Cuddie Springs is uniquely significant as a major focus of research into the question of how the Australian megafauna became extinct.

References edit

  1. ^ Field, Judith; Wroe, Stephen; Trueman, Clive N.; Garvey, Jillian; Wyatt-Spratt, Simon (8 February 2013). "Looking for the archaeological signature in Australian Megafaunal extinctions". Quaternary International. Peopling the last new worlds: the first colonisation of Sahul and the Americas. 285: 76–88. Bibcode:2013QuInt.285...76F. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2011.04.013. ISSN 1040-6182.
  2. ^ a b Anderson & Fletcher 1934, 152–158.
  3. ^ a b c Furby 1995.
  4. ^ a b Field, Judith; Fullagar, Richard; Lord, Garry (December 2001). "A large area archaeological excavation at Cuddie Springs". Antiquity. 75 (290): 696–702. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00089195. ISSN 0003-598X. S2CID 133361571.
  5. ^ Field 2006, 9–20.
  6. ^ Dodson et al. 1993, 94–99.
  7. ^ McBride; Smith, Laura; Mariko (30 August 2021). "The Australian Museum's Unsettled exhibition". Australian Museum. from the original on 7 June 2021. Retrieved 14 February 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b Wroe & Field 2006.
  9. ^ a b Fullagar & Field 1997.
  10. ^ a b David 2002.
  11. ^ a b c Gillespie & David 2001.
  12. ^ a b c d e Gillespie & Brook 2006.
  13. ^ a b Coltrain et al. 2004.
  14. ^ Dodson et al. 1993.
  15. ^ Garling 1998.
  16. ^ Field & Dodson 1999.
  17. ^ Trueman et al 2005.
  18. ^ Roberts, Richard G.; Flannery, Timothy F.; Ayliffe, Linda K.; Yoshida, Hiroyuki; Olley, Jon M.; Prideaux, Gavin J.; Laslett, Geoff M.; Baynes, Alexander; Smith, M. A.; Jones, Rhys; Smith, Barton L. (8 June 2001). "New Ages for the Last Australian Megafauna: Continent-Wide Extinction About 46,000 Years Ago". Science. 292 (5523): 1888–1892. Bibcode:2001Sci...292.1888R. doi:10.1126/science.1060264. PMID 11397939. S2CID 45643228.
  19. ^ Clarke 1999.

Sources

  • Anderson, Charles; Fletcher, H. O. (1934). "The Cuddie Springs Bone Bed". The Australian Museum Magazine: 152–158.
  • Clarke, S. J. (1999). The application of the amino acid racemisation geochronological technique to the Australian megafaunal locality, Cuddie Springs (BSc Hons). University of Wollongong.
  • Coltrain, J. B.; Field, J.; Cosgrove, R.; O'Connell, J. (2004). "Stable isotope and protein analyses of Cuddie Springs Genyornis [Research Reports]". Archaeology in Oceania. 39 (1): 50–51. doi:10.1002/j.1834-4453.2004.tb00557.x.
  • David, B. (2002). Landscapes, Rock-art and the Dreaming: an archaeology of preunderstanding. London: Leicester University Press.
  • Dodson, John R.; Fullagar, Richard; Furby, Judith Heather; Jones, Robert; Prosser, Ian P. (1993). "Humans and megafauna in a Late Pleistocene environment at Cuddie Springs, northwestern New South Wales". Archaeology in Oceania. 28 (2): 93–99. doi:10.1002/j.1834-4453.1993.tb00320.x.
  • Field, Judith H. (2006). "Trampling through the Pleistocene: Does taphonomy matter at Cuddie Springs?". Australian Archaeology. 63: 9–20. doi:10.1080/03122417.2006.11681834. S2CID 142595932.
  • Field, J.; Dodson, J. R. (1999). "Late Pleistocene megafauna and archaeology from Cuddie Springs, southeastern Australia". Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 65: 275–301. doi:10.1017/s0079497x00002024. S2CID 131617908.
  • Fullagar, R.; Field, J. H. (1997). "Pleistocene seed-grinding implements from the Australian arid zone". Antiquity. 71 (272): 300–307. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00084921. S2CID 163872586.
  • Furby, Judith Heather (1995). Megafauna under the microscope: archaeology and palaeoenvironment at Cuddie Springs (PhD). University of New South Wales. School of Geography.
  • Garling, S. J. (1998). "Megafauna on the menu? Haemoglobin crystallisation of blood residues from stone artefacts at Cuddie Springs". In R. Fullagar (ed.). A Closer Look: Recent Australian Studies of Stone Tools. Archaeological Methods Series. Vol. 6. pp. 29–48. ISBN 1864513659.
  • Gillespie, R.; Brook, B. W. (2006). "Is there a Pleistocene archaeological site at Cuddie Springs?". Archaeology in Oceania. 41 (1): 1–11. doi:10.1002/j.1834-4453.2006.tb00600.x.
  • Gillespie, R.; David, B. (2001). "The importance, or impotence, of Cuddie Springs". Australasian Science. 22 (9).
  • Hiscock, Peter (2008). Archaeology of Ancient Australia. [full citation needed]
  • Trueman, Clive N. G.; Field, Judith H.; Dortch, Joe; Charles, Bethan; Wroe, Stephen (2005). "Prolonged coexistence of humans and megafauna in Pleistocene Australia". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 102 (23): 8381–8385. Bibcode:2005PNAS..102.8381T. doi:10.1073/pnas.0408975102. PMC 1149406. PMID 15928097.
  • Wroe, Stephen; Field, Judith (2006). "A review of the evidence for a human role in the extinction of Australian megafauna and an alternative interpretation". Quaternary Science Reviews. 25 (21–22): 2692–2703. Bibcode:2006QSRv...25.2692W. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2006.03.005.

Further reading edit

  • Brook, B. W.; Bowman, D. M. J. S. (2000). "Megafauna mix-up – Fresh evidence indicates that humans were responsible for the extinction of Australia's megafauna". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 99 (23): 14624–14627. doi:10.1073/pnas.232126899. PMC 137468. PMID 12417761.
  • Brook, B.; Gillespie, R.; Martin, P. (2000). "Explaining the Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions: Models, chronologies, and assumptions". Australasian Science. 27 (5): 35–37.
  • Duncan, J. (2001). "Megafauna at Keilor and the timing of their extinction". Australian Archaeology. 53: 16–22. doi:10.1080/03122417.2001.11681717. S2CID 146921842.
  • Field, Judith H.; Dodson, John R.; Prosser, Ian P. (2002). "A Late Pleistocene vegetation history from the Australian semi-arid zone". Quaternary Science Reviews. 21 (8–9): 1023–1037. Bibcode:2002QSRv...21.1023F. doi:10.1016/S0277-3791(01)00057-9.
  • Field, J. H.; Fullagar, R.; Lord, G. (2001). "A large area archaeological excavation at Cuddie Springs". Antiquity. 75 (290): 696–702. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00089195. S2CID 133361571.
  • Field, J.; Wroe, S.; Fullagar, R. (2006). "Blitzkrieg: Fact and Fiction at Cuddie Springs". Australasian Science. 27 (6).
  • White, J. P.; Flannery, T. F. (1995). "Late Pleistocene fauna at Spring Creek, Victoria: A re-evaluation". Australian Archaeology. 40: 13–16. doi:10.1080/03122417.1995.11681541.

External links edit

  • "Cuddie Springs Archaeological Site, New South Wales", Australian Museum
  • Why did Australia's giant marsupials go extinct?
  • by Judith Furby, December 1996

cuddie, springs, notable, archaeological, paleontological, site, semi, arid, zone, central, northern, south, wales, australia, near, carinda, walgett, shire, open, site, with, fossil, deposits, preserved, claypan, floor, ancient, ephemeral, lake, claypan, fill. Cuddie Springs is a notable archaeological and paleontological site in the semi arid zone of central northern New South Wales Australia near Carinda in Walgett Shire Cuddie Springs is an open site with the fossil deposits preserved in a claypan on the floor of an ancient ephemeral lake The claypan fills with water after local rainstorms and often takes months to dry a fact which facilitated the survival of fossils over a long period of time Cuddie SpringsShown within AustraliaLocationCarinda Walgett Shire New South Wales AustraliaCoordinates30 47 13 S 147 28 41 E 30 78694 S 147 47806 E 30 78694 147 47806Length200 m 660 ft Width200 m 660 ft HistoryPeriodsPleistoceneCulturesPrehistoric AustraliaSite notesExcavation dates1933 1991 2009ArchaeologistsJudith FieldRichard Fullagar The site provided the first unequivocal association of stone artefacts with fossil remains of Australian megafauna 1 Cuddie Springs has been known as a fossil megafauna locality since the late 1870s when a well was sunk into the centre of the claypan The Australian Museum launched excavations in 1933 and while many bones were found no archaeological discoveries were made in that initial research More extensive excavations were conducted between 1991 and 1996 by a team from the University of New South Wales and were continued between 1997 and 2009 through the University of Sydney Contents 1 Etymology 2 Excavation history 3 Site setting 4 Evidence for human co existence with Australian megafauna 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEtymology editIt was recorded that the word Cuddy in the language of the Marra Blacks means bad 2 This has been interpreted as a reference to the quality of the water found in the Cuddie lake which is alkaline with a pH between 7 and 9 3 Despite the name Cuddie Springs is an ephemeral lake and not a spring 4 Excavation history editIn the historic period Cuddie Springs was known to both Aboriginal and European people as a palaeontological site A Dreaming story about Mullyan the eaglehawk is associated to the formation of the bone deposits at the site and the formation of the Macquarie Marshes to the south and the site is also part of a Dreaming track tied to the Macquarie Marshes and the Geera waterhole on the Barwon River 3 Europeans first settled in the area around Cuddie Springs in the 1830s A well was sunk into the middle of the claypan in 1876 the disused superstructure of which was still present in the 1920s During the sinking of the well in the 1870s several large fossilised bones were recovered and were sent to the Australian Museum some of which were later sent to Richard Owen who identified the fossils as belonging to different genus of Diprotodon Euowenia Nototherium Genyornis various Macropodidae Megalania and at least one genus of crocodile Pallimnarchus 5 Despite attempts in the 1920s to excavate it was not until 1933 that the first excavations took place at Cuddie Springs Led by the Australian Museum the principal researchers described the excavation thus We commenced our excavations about 10 yards from the well working towards the centre and before work was stopped about five weeks later the claypan resembled the fields of Flanders with a complicated series of trenches and pits mostly about 5 feet in depth but in one case about 15 feet 2 Though a range of paleontological material was recovered from the site no archaeological material was identified in the 1933 excavation 3 Full scale excavations at the site recommenced in 1991 after excavations designed to test the possibility of pollen preservation at the site uncovered a high concentration of bone and a dense layer of flaked stone artefacts indicating the site had archaeological as well as paleontological potential 6 The main archaeological excavations were carried out between 1996 and 2009 The majority of the excavated material is currently stored at the Australian Museum and has featured in major exhibitions 7 Site setting editCuddie Springs is located within the semi arid zone but palynological evidence indicates that 40 000 years ago there was a large permanent lake surrounded by open shrub land suitable for supporting megafauna Hiscock 2008 page needed Evidence for human co existence with Australian megafauna editThe excavators of Cuddie Springs reject humans as the primary cause of megafauna extinctions They conclude that the 10 000 years of co habitation of humans and megafauna at Cuddie Springs suggests that climate changes that began before the human colonisation of Australia were responsible for the megafauna extinctions Wroe and Field 8 cite the staggered extinctions that have been occurring since at least 130 000 years ago and the fact that megafauna in Tasmania do not occur after 46 000 years ago but people only arrived across a land bridge at 37 000 years ago This staggered decline mostly occurring in contexts independent of humans is linked to environmental evidence for increasingly arid and erratic conditions since 400 300 000 years ago The large body size of the megafauna suggests low fecundity and low population densities which have been argued to have made them susceptible to extinction due to habitat loss from increasing aridity 8 The 10 000 years of co habitation of humans and megafauna at Cuddie Springs that is the foundation of Wroe and Field s argument has been the subject of intense critical examination This critique has identified a number of details that weaken the integrity of the association between humans and megafauna First are the finds themselves such as relatively large number of grinding stones in Pleistocene age layers 9 as well as tula adze like flakes 10 The Pleistocene grinding stones are notable because they imply a broad spectrum plant processing economy much earlier than previously known in Australia 9 These finds are anomalous because in other parts of Australia they are restricted to late Holocene contexts 11 Amongst the megafauna bone layers there is a tooth of a crocodile Pallimnarchus sp that became extinct long before 40 000 years ago 11 The tooth is also exfoliated and heavily mineralised and the preservation is not consistent with other bone and teeth in the same level There are stone artefacts with hair and blood adhering but in the same layers there are megafauna bones with not even traces of protein remaining 12 13 14 15 These inconsistent finds suggest that the process of site formation may have involved some mixing of materials of different ages This leads to the second important detail the stratigraphy Cuddie Springs is unusual in having a dense deflation pavement that separates recent materials such as cow bones from the Pleistocene layers The layers above the pavement contains cow bones mixed with megafauna bones but the layers below contain no cow bones 16 Archaeology Professor Bruno David has asked where the rocks in this pavement come from in a stone poor riverine plain and suggested that they may have been carried by Aboriginal people from a gibber plain 4 km from the site or by farmers during the late 19th or early 20th century to create a firm footing for people or cattle 10 Gillespie and Brook also suggest that the stone artefacts in the pavement are unusually dense for a Pleistocene archaeological site and may have been transported during well construction or represent an in situ but late Holocene archaeological site overlaying disturbed Late Pleistocene sediments 12 There is a long history of European activity at Cuddie Springs with a well dug in 1876 ten metres from the 1990s excavation and trenches dug by the Australian Museum in 1933 These events likely caused disturbance of the stratigraphy Gillespie and Brook add that cattle visiting the well may have pushed stone artefacts through the pavement into the Pleistocene layers during waterlogged conditions Tracing the origins of the pavement is crucial to understanding the integrity of the Pleistocene layers Several authors have suggested that the Pleistocene stone artefacts and megafauna bones may have derived from separate contexts that have become mixed by underground water flow Because it is a ground fed spring and a site that is periodically inundated by rain sediment at Cuddie Springs is highly likely to have been moved by water The depth of the historic well suggests that the ground water level may have been near the level of the Pleistocene layers 12 Gillespie and David suggest that the upright orientation of an unarticulated Genyornis femur in the Pleistocene layers at Cuddie Springs might be explained by sediment movement due to water flow 11 This suggests that the megafauna bones might derive from much older sediments and have been reworked into the stone artefact bearing layers A more direct link between the stone artefacts and the bones would be cut marks on the bones but there are few cut marks on any bones at Cuddie Springs 4 Evidence favour of an intact Pleistocene deposit comes from analysis of rare earth elements REE in the megafauna bones The REE contents of the bones suggests that each depositional unit contains fauna with a discrete chemical signature and therefore a discrete and distinct postdepositional history arguing against any postdepositional movement and mixing of bone between stratigraphic horizons 17 Gillespie and Brook comment that this still does not exclude an off site origin of the bones i e death of the animal and subsequent fluvial transportation to Cuddie Springs 12 Field et al 2006 incomplete short citation dispute the proposal that flood movement caused the combination of megafauna and stone artefacts They report that the sediments enclosing the bones and stones are fine grained silts and clays resulting from a low energy flow of water They argue that if floods were responsible then larger sediments such as sands and gravels would have been found also The possibility of mixed Pleistocene deposits is also suggested by some interpretations of the chronology of the site a third focus of the critiques figure 6 So far there are 20 radiocarbon dates and seven luminescence dates published for Cuddie Springs 12 Statistical analysis by Gillespie and Brook 2006 of the 16 radiocarbon dates from the Pleistocene layers ranging from 28 to 33 000 years ago suggest that they do not increase in age as depth increases They interpret this to mean that the sediments have been disturbed since they were first deposited The luminescence dates also suggest mixing with Roberts et al 2001 finding that the sediments sampled for dating have multiple palaeodose clarification needed populations suggesting that sediments in the same sample were deposited at different times rather than all at the same time 18 As mentioned above the megafauna bones contain undetectable amounts of protein so direct dating of the bones has so far been unsuccessful 19 13 The uniqueness of archaeological and palaeontological finds from Cuddie Springs and its unusual stratigraphy have attracted detailed critiques that cast doubt on the integrity of the human megafauna coexistence Despite these problems Cuddie Springs is uniquely significant as a major focus of research into the question of how the Australian megafauna became extinct References edit Field Judith Wroe Stephen Trueman Clive N Garvey Jillian Wyatt Spratt Simon 8 February 2013 Looking for the archaeological signature in Australian Megafaunal extinctions Quaternary International Peopling the last new worlds the first colonisation of Sahul and the Americas 285 76 88 Bibcode 2013QuInt 285 76F doi 10 1016 j quaint 2011 04 013 ISSN 1040 6182 a b Anderson amp Fletcher 1934 152 158 a b c Furby 1995 a b Field Judith Fullagar Richard Lord Garry December 2001 A large area archaeological excavation at Cuddie Springs Antiquity 75 290 696 702 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00089195 ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 133361571 Field 2006 9 20 Dodson et al 1993 94 99 McBride Smith Laura Mariko 30 August 2021 The Australian Museum s Unsettled exhibition Australian Museum Archived from the original on 7 June 2021 Retrieved 14 February 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Wroe amp Field 2006 a b Fullagar amp Field 1997 a b David 2002 a b c Gillespie amp David 2001 a b c d e Gillespie amp Brook 2006 a b Coltrain et al 2004 Dodson et al 1993 Garling 1998 Field amp Dodson 1999 Trueman et al 2005 Roberts Richard G Flannery Timothy F Ayliffe Linda K Yoshida Hiroyuki Olley Jon M Prideaux Gavin J Laslett Geoff M Baynes Alexander Smith M A Jones Rhys Smith Barton L 8 June 2001 New Ages for the Last Australian Megafauna Continent Wide Extinction About 46 000 Years Ago Science 292 5523 1888 1892 Bibcode 2001Sci 292 1888R doi 10 1126 science 1060264 PMID 11397939 S2CID 45643228 Clarke 1999 Sources Anderson Charles Fletcher H O 1934 The Cuddie Springs Bone Bed The Australian Museum Magazine 152 158 Clarke S J 1999 The application of the amino acid racemisation geochronological technique to the Australian megafaunal locality Cuddie Springs BSc Hons University of Wollongong Coltrain J B Field J Cosgrove R O Connell J 2004 Stable isotope and protein analyses of Cuddie Springs Genyornis Research Reports Archaeology in Oceania 39 1 50 51 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4453 2004 tb00557 x David B 2002 Landscapes Rock art and the Dreaming an archaeology of preunderstanding London Leicester University Press Dodson John R Fullagar Richard Furby Judith Heather Jones Robert Prosser Ian P 1993 Humans and megafauna in a Late Pleistocene environment at Cuddie Springs northwestern New South Wales Archaeology in Oceania 28 2 93 99 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4453 1993 tb00320 x Field Judith H 2006 Trampling through the Pleistocene Does taphonomy matter at Cuddie Springs Australian Archaeology 63 9 20 doi 10 1080 03122417 2006 11681834 S2CID 142595932 Field J Dodson J R 1999 Late Pleistocene megafauna and archaeology from Cuddie Springs southeastern Australia Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 65 275 301 doi 10 1017 s0079497x00002024 S2CID 131617908 Fullagar R Field J H 1997 Pleistocene seed grinding implements from the Australian arid zone Antiquity 71 272 300 307 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00084921 S2CID 163872586 Furby Judith Heather 1995 Megafauna under the microscope archaeology and palaeoenvironment at Cuddie Springs PhD University of New South Wales School of Geography Garling S J 1998 Megafauna on the menu Haemoglobin crystallisation of blood residues from stone artefacts at Cuddie Springs In R Fullagar ed A Closer Look Recent Australian Studies of Stone Tools Archaeological Methods Series Vol 6 pp 29 48 ISBN 1864513659 Gillespie R Brook B W 2006 Is there a Pleistocene archaeological site at Cuddie Springs Archaeology in Oceania 41 1 1 11 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4453 2006 tb00600 x Gillespie R David B 2001 The importance or impotence of Cuddie Springs Australasian Science 22 9 Hiscock Peter 2008 Archaeology of Ancient Australia full citation needed Trueman Clive N G Field Judith H Dortch Joe Charles Bethan Wroe Stephen 2005 Prolonged coexistence of humans and megafauna in Pleistocene Australia Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 102 23 8381 8385 Bibcode 2005PNAS 102 8381T doi 10 1073 pnas 0408975102 PMC 1149406 PMID 15928097 Wroe Stephen Field Judith 2006 A review of the evidence for a human role in the extinction of Australian megafauna and an alternative interpretation Quaternary Science Reviews 25 21 22 2692 2703 Bibcode 2006QSRv 25 2692W doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2006 03 005 Further reading editBrook B W Bowman D M J S 2000 Megafauna mix up Fresh evidence indicates that humans were responsible for the extinction of Australia s megafauna Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 99 23 14624 14627 doi 10 1073 pnas 232126899 PMC 137468 PMID 12417761 Brook B Gillespie R Martin P 2000 Explaining the Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions Models chronologies and assumptions Australasian Science 27 5 35 37 Duncan J 2001 Megafauna at Keilor and the timing of their extinction Australian Archaeology 53 16 22 doi 10 1080 03122417 2001 11681717 S2CID 146921842 Field Judith H Dodson John R Prosser Ian P 2002 A Late Pleistocene vegetation history from the Australian semi arid zone Quaternary Science Reviews 21 8 9 1023 1037 Bibcode 2002QSRv 21 1023F doi 10 1016 S0277 3791 01 00057 9 Field J H Fullagar R Lord G 2001 A large area archaeological excavation at Cuddie Springs Antiquity 75 290 696 702 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00089195 S2CID 133361571 Field J Wroe S Fullagar R 2006 Blitzkrieg Fact and Fiction at Cuddie Springs Australasian Science 27 6 White J P Flannery T F 1995 Late Pleistocene fauna at Spring Creek Victoria A re evaluation Australian Archaeology 40 13 16 doi 10 1080 03122417 1995 11681541 External links edit Cuddie Springs Archaeological Site New South Wales Australian Museum Why did Australia s giant marsupials go extinct Dinnertime at Cuddie Springs hunting and butchering megafauna by Judith Furby December 1996 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cuddie Springs amp oldid 1144744513, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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