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Early art, culture and occupation along the northern route to Australia. This project aims to uncover archaeological evidence for early humans in Indonesia's northern island chain (from Borneo to West

Griffith University — Discovery Projects
Amount
Up to $965,163
Closes
Sunday 20 June 2027
Status
unknown
Type
open opportunity
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Description

Early art, culture and occupation along the northern route to Australia. This project aims to uncover archaeological evidence for early humans in Indonesia's northern island chain (from Borneo to West Papua). This poorly known region harbours the world's earliest known figurative cave art (>45,500 years old), and it is also the most likely maritime route used by modern humans during the initial peopling of Australia ~65,000 years ago. The project aims to use cave excavations and rock art dating to fill the 20,000 year gap between the earliest known archaeological evidence from these islands and the oldest human site in Australia. Expected outcomes include new insight into the ancient past of Indonesia and a greatly improved understanding of the art and cultural lifeways of the ancestors of the First Australians.. Scheme: Discovery Projects. Field: 2101 - Archaeology. Lead: Prof Maxime Aubert

Categories
arts
Target Recipients
researchersuniversities

Foundations Supporting This Area

Discovery method: arc-grants
Last verified: Monday 2 March 2026
Added: Saturday 28 February 2026