Journal article

Cloggs Cave pollen sequences, GunaiKurnai Country, East Gippsland (SE Australia): 25,000 years of cultural plant use and changing environments

E Grono, B David, J Stevenson, J Fresløv, R Mullett, B Keaney, C Graham, J Ash, MC McDowell, F Petchey, JJ Delannoy, AJ Rogers, DM Kennedy

Frontiers in Environmental Archaeology | Frontiers Media SA | Published : 2024

Abstract

In southeastern Australia, GunaiKurnai caves are known by current Aboriginal Elders and from nineteenth century ethnographic documents as special places used by mulla-mullung (“clever men” and “clever women”) for the practice of magic and medicine. Pollen analysis conducted on sediments from one such cave, Cloggs Cave, reveals an unusually well-preserved and well-stratified pollen sequence extending back >25,000 years, with much of the pollen introduced into the cave by people carrying flowering plants. High concentrations of pollen, rare for limestone cave settings, were recovered, including pollen clumps of individual taxa representing deposition of in situ flowering material. These taxa a..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers