New Guinea II cave

Rock shelter and archaeological site in Australia
37°23′5″S 148°21′3.6″E / 37.38472°S 148.351000°E / -37.38472; 148.351000Site notesExcavation dates1980sArchaeologistsPaul Ossa

New Guinea II is a limestone cave and rockshelter on the Snowy River at the end of New Guinea Track, near Buchan, Victoria. The cave was within the country of the Krowathunkooloong clan of the Gunaikurnai nation. The deep cave system has an overhanging cliff that creates a rock shelter at the entrance facing the river. Excavations in the 1980s carried out by archaeologist Paul Ossa and a team from La Trobe University found stone artefacts, and other signs of occupation that were dated to almost 20,000 BP.

New Guinea II is one of three major cave systems that have so far been investigated in the middle Snowy River area, along with New Guinea Cave (NG-1), and Nuigini Namba Fav Cave (NG-5, NG-6. New Guinea II is largely joint-controlled, although the entrance area is formed along bedding planes and has a large chamber and passage with a perennial stream and several entrances. Finger or tool marks made in the dried mud on the cave wall are thought to be of prehistoric Aboriginal origin and are similar to those of Koonalda Cave on the Nullarbor Plain. New Guinea II is the first place where such markings have been recorded in Victoria. Animal origin has been proposed for the wall markings, although many appear to be in regular patterns, including circles and diagonal crosses. They are also generally on smoother parts of the walls and some are in now-dark and inaccessible parts of the cave.[1]

The cave is used by bent-winged bats, which congregate in the large chamber, deep inside the cave.[2]

The cave has been occupied intermittently for more than 20,000 years (21,900 +900/-800 BP and 4,660 +/- 110 BP) with a small, but constant amount of lithic material and bone artefacts, as well as evidence of a hearth on a dry floor near the stream within the cave. Vertebrate fauna remains are abundant but mostly of non-cultural origin, representing animals that used the cave at times it was vacated by humans.[3]

The artefact assemblage is similar to that at the nearby Cloggs Cave in Buchan, and in conjunction with Birrigai in the ACT they represent a general signature of human occupation and resource exploitation of the southeastern uplands during the Pleistocene. This reveals a non-intensive use of caves and shelters and consumption of local fauna. In comparison, southwestern Tasmanian Pleistocene sites appear to have a different signature of cave occupation and the primacy of a single vertebrate resource.[4]

See also

  • Cloggs Cave
  • Buchan Caves

References

  1. ^ Australia: The Land Where Time Began, A biography of the Australian continent, New Guinea 2 Cave
  2. ^ Sites of Geological and Geomorphological Significance in East Gippsland, Victoria (1981) by Neville Rosengren, M.S McRae-Williams
  3. ^ 'New Guinea II Cave: a Pleistocene site on the Snowy River, Victoria' by Paul Ossa, Papers by Paul co-authored with Brendan Marshal & Cathie Webb, Archaeology in Oceania (1995) Volume: 30, Issue: 1, Pages: 22–35.
  4. ^ Paul Ossa, Brendan Marshall, Cathie Webb 1995, New Guinea II Cave: A Pleistocene site on the Snowy River, Victoria, Archaeology in Oceania Volume 30, Issue 1, Article first published online: 14 NOV 2014
Notes
  • Josephine Flood, Archaeology of the Dreamtime, J. B. Publishing
  • Phillip J. Habgood & Natilie R. Franklin, The revolution that didn't arrive: A review of Pleistocene Sahul, Journal of Human Evolution, 55, 2008
  • v
  • t
  • e
Prehistoric cave sites, rock shelters and cave paintings
  • Paleoanthropological sites
  • Cave paintings
  • Caves containing pictograms
Europe
Austria
Belgium
Bosnia
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Finland
France
Vézère Valley World Heritage Site
Bara Bahau
Bernifal
Cap Blanc
Castel Merle
Abri Castanet
Reverdit
Les Eyzies-de-Tayac-Sireuil
Abri Audi
Abri Chadourne
Les Combarelles
Cro-Magnon
Font-de-Gaume
Laugerie-Basse
Laugerie-Haute
La Micoque
La Mouthe
Pataud
Abri du Poisson
Lascaux
La Madeleine
Rouffignac
Other World Heritage Sites
Chauvet
Other caves with decoration
Arcy-sur-Cure
Gargas
Cosquer
Cussac
Fontéchevade
La Chaire a Calvin
La Marche
Lombrives
Grotte de Gabillou
Marsoulas
Le Mas-d'Azil
Mayrières supérieure
Niaux
Pair-non-Pair
Pech Merle
Roc-aux-Sorciers
Renne
Trois Frères
Villars
Other caves
Arago
Aurignac
Azé
Balauzière
Bonne-Femme
Bouillon
Bruniquel
Calès
Cauna
La Chapelle-aux-Saints
Combe Grenal
La Ferrassie
Fées
Fontbrégoua
Lazaret
Le Moustier
Noisetier
La Quina
Raymonden
Le Regourdou
Rochereil
Vallonnet
Germany
Gibraltar
Greece
Hungary
Italy
Jersey
Luxembourg
Malta
North Macedonia
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Switzerland
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Asia
Afghanistan
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Cambodia
China
East Timor
Georgia
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Israel
Japan
Jordan
Laos
Lebanon
Malaysia
Mongolia
Myanmar
Pakistan
Palestine
Philippines
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Turkmenistan
Turkey
Uzbekistan
Vietnam
Africa
Algeria
Botswana
Cameroon
DR Congo
Egypt
Kenya
Lesotho
Libya
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Nigeria
Somaliland
South Africa
Tanzania
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
North and South America
Argentina
Aruba
Belize
Brazil
Canada
Chile
Colombia
Cuba
  • Ambrosio
  • Calero
  • Centella
  • Cura
  • Patana
  • Pluma
Curaçao
Dominican Republic
Jamaica
Mexico
Peru
Suriname
United States
Oceania
Australia
Guam
Hawaii
New Caledonia
New Zealand
Northern Mariana Islands
Papua New Guinea
Samoa
Tuvalu
  • v
  • t
  • e
Peoples
Communities
Registered Aboriginal Parties /
Land councils
Sites
See also
State organisations
Legislation
Cases:
History
By state or territory
New South Wales
Northern Territory
Queensland
South Australia
Tasmania
Victoria
Western Australia
  • v
  • t
  • e
Peoples
Individuals
Culture
Language(s)
Organisations
Land councils
Bushcraft
Arts
History
Issues