The Curious History of the Talgai Skull

In the Australian winter of 1886 William Naish, a shearer in summer and a fencing contractor in the winter, erected a farm fence along Dalrymple Creek on East Talgai Station, c.125 km southwest of Brisbane. Work was interrupted by six days of torrential rain. On r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jim Allen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2010-11-01
Series:Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/12
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spelling doaj-378ac2637d6e4502857c061a4ec4c2d12020-11-24T23:25:19ZengUbiquity PressBulletin of the History of Archaeology1062-47402047-69302010-11-0120241210.5334/bha.2020211The Curious History of the Talgai SkullJim AllenIn the Australian winter of 1886 William Naish, a shearer in summer and a fencing contractor in the winter, erected a farm fence along Dalrymple Creek on East Talgai Station, c.125 km southwest of Brisbane. Work was interrupted by six days of torrential rain. On returning to the site Naish found that the rain had extended an erosion channel which he now had to cross walking to work, and from the extended section he retrieved a skull, heavily encrusted in carbonate, but clearly of human origin. Although it would take three decades to recognise and a further five to confirm, Naish had discovered the first direct proof of the Pleistocene antiquity of humans in Australia. Details of this history of Talgai are taken principally and extensively from Macintosh (1963, 1965, 1967a, 1967b, 1969), Elkin (1978), Gill (1978) and Langham (1978).http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/12human remainsskeletonskullaborigine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jim Allen
spellingShingle Jim Allen
The Curious History of the Talgai Skull
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
human remains
skeleton
skull
aborigine
author_facet Jim Allen
author_sort Jim Allen
title The Curious History of the Talgai Skull
title_short The Curious History of the Talgai Skull
title_full The Curious History of the Talgai Skull
title_fullStr The Curious History of the Talgai Skull
title_full_unstemmed The Curious History of the Talgai Skull
title_sort curious history of the talgai skull
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
issn 1062-4740
2047-6930
publishDate 2010-11-01
description In the Australian winter of 1886 William Naish, a shearer in summer and a fencing contractor in the winter, erected a farm fence along Dalrymple Creek on East Talgai Station, c.125 km southwest of Brisbane. Work was interrupted by six days of torrential rain. On returning to the site Naish found that the rain had extended an erosion channel which he now had to cross walking to work, and from the extended section he retrieved a skull, heavily encrusted in carbonate, but clearly of human origin. Although it would take three decades to recognise and a further five to confirm, Naish had discovered the first direct proof of the Pleistocene antiquity of humans in Australia. Details of this history of Talgai are taken principally and extensively from Macintosh (1963, 1965, 1967a, 1967b, 1969), Elkin (1978), Gill (1978) and Langham (1978).
topic human remains
skeleton
skull
aborigine
url http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/12
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