New research has uncovered internationally significant rock art sites in Arnhem Land were far from random and instead “chosen” for the critical vantage points they provided.
The Flinders University research team, working in collaboration with the Njanjma Rangers and Erre Traditional Owners, used aerial and drone surveys, subsurface imaging and elevation data to create the first high-resolution modelling to help understand 103 separate rock art sites in the region’s rich Red Lily Lagoon area.
What this innovative research has done is statistically model what the environmental conditions were like 15,000-28,000 years ago – when even the floodplain floor was 7-15 metres lower than where it sits today.
Flinders Associate Professor Ian Moffat says the research findings better informs how the sites would have been used, their accessibility and visibility – what the Traditional Owner artists would have been looking at, watching out for and why.
“When archaeologists interpret rock art, they often assume the landscape hasn’t changed since the art was first inscribed which certainly isn’t the case at Red Lily Lagoon,” he explains. “This landscape has changed dramatically from being on the coast, a swamp, woodlands and freshwater – and sometimes in just one lifetime.
“Our innovative research approach adds new information to understand the rock art in a fundamentally different way.
“Modelling the changes in environmental conditions over time sheds new light on the locations, where they were in in these landscapes, how they were selected and used, and the roles they held in community and clan life.”
This area of western Arnhem Land contains internationally renowned archaeological records, including Australia’s oldest known archaeological site, and at the same time it has experienced colossal environmental landscape changes generated mostly by changing sea levels.
Associate Professor Moffat says the research identifies these changes include the coastline moving from 100s of kilometres away to coming right up against the cliffs in the Red Lily region, before retreating northwards, about 50kms to its current position.
He says the Flinders research traces the transformational impact rising sea levels had on the sandstone cliffs and flat floodplains terrain – changing its open savanna to mudflats, to mangrove swamp, before evolving into the seasonally inundated freshwater wetlands of today. These changes would have had profound implications for people, how they moved, interacted and what they recorded at these locations.
“Our research has enabled a clearer understanding of the placement of rock art sites that goes beyond relying on today’s landscape as a reference point which is significant.
Dr Jarrad Kowlessar says this research identifies rock art production was most active, diverse in style, and covered most of the plateau area during a period when mangroves completely covered the floodplains – approximately 6,000 years ago.
“This may be because the mangroves provided abundant resources to sustain a large and stable human population at the time, or because the land had simply contracted so much due to the rising sea level that more people were in closer proximity,” says Dr Kowlessar.
“Interestingly most sites during this time were selected with views specifically overlooking mangrove areas.