Journal article
The Moyjil site, south-west Victoria, Australia: Fire and environment in a 120,000-year coastal midden — Nature or people?
JM Bowler, DM Price, JE Sherwood, SP Carey
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria | Published : 2018
DOI: 10.1071/RS18007
Abstract
At Moyjil (Point Ritchie), a cliffed site at the mouth of the Hopkins River at Warrnambool, south-eastern Australia, an erosional disconformity of Last Interglacial age on both a rock stack and the adjacent headland represents a surface of possible human occupation. Shells of edible marine molluscs occur on the disconformity, together with a distinctive population of transported stones derived from a calcrete of MIS 7 age and bearing variable dark grey to near-black colouration suggestive of fire. Experimental fire produced similar thermal alteration of calcrete. A strong correlation exists between intensity and depth of dark staining on one hand and increased magnetic susceptibility on the ..
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