Oman Daily Observer

Humans reached Australia 65,000 years ago: Study

-

CANBERRA: The first settlers of Australia reached the continent 65,000 years ago, about 15,000 years earlier than experts previously thought, a new archaeolog­ical study revealed on Thursday.

The archaeolog­ists made the conclusion following an excavation at the Madjedbebe rock shelter near Kakadu National Park in northern Australia, one of the most important archaeolog­ical sites in the region known for its early rock paintings, reports Efe news.

The site was last excavated nearly 30 years ago by a group of archaeolog­ists, who suggested that the site was between 50,000 and 60,000 years old, considered to be one of the first human settlement­s in Australia.

Between 2012 and 2015, archaeolog­ists returned to the site to conduct new excavation­s.

The latest research included new techniques of analysis, like luminescen­ce dating — which can determine when single grains of sand were last exposed to sunlight — allowing the research team to verify the age of the sediment surroundin­g the objects.

Researcher­s were also able to retrieve several tools in three different layers of sediment, including an ax, the oldest-known grindstone in Australia, and some early paints showing minerals.

“We found there was an incredible richness of evidence of wonderful human behaviour that we didn’t really have indication­s of from earlier excavation­s,” said Chris Clarkson, project leader from the University of Queensland.

Clarkson noted that the findings of his research, published on Thursday by the journal Nature, indicated a solid cultural continuity at the site across thousands of years.

The archaeolog­ist added that this discovery could also contribute to a better understand­ing of humans’ migration from Africa to Southeast Asia. the oldest-known use of

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman