Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed

Australia’s rock art discovery - sailing vessels visit in mid-1600's

by ANU on 25 Jul 2010
The contact rock art at Djulirri (highlighted in inset) ANU
A team of researchers from The Australian National University and Griffith University have discovered evidence of Southeast Asian sailing vessels visiting Australia in the mid-1600s – the oldest contact rock art in Australia.

The discovery was made by the team taking part in the Picturing Change fieldwork project in the Wellington Range, Arnhem Land. The rock shelter the researchers are studying at Djulirri has nearly 1200 individual paintings and beeswax figures. It was documented by Professor Paul Taçon (Griffith University), Mr. Ronald Lamilami (Senior Traditional Owner) and Dr Sally K. May (ANU).

'This site includes at least 20 layers of art,' said Dr May. 'And importantly, it has also yielded the oldest date yet recorded for contact rock art in Australia. A yellow painted prau (Southeast Asian sailing vessel) is found underneath a large beeswax snake. This snake was radiocarbon dated by Dr Stewart Fallon at ANU to between AD1624 – 1674, meaning that this is a minimum age for the sailing vessel painting.'

While historians and archaeologists have speculated that visits to the northern parts of Australia from Southeast Asian ships have been happening for hundreds of years before European settlements, this is the first rock art evidence found that dates the visits back to the 17th century.

The ARC-funded ‘Picturing Change: 21st century perspectives on recent Australian rock art’ project highlights the importance of contact rock art as some of the only contemporary Indigenous accounts of cross-cultural encounters that took place across Australia through the last 500 years.

Between 2008 and 2010 the researchers worked with local traditional owner Mr Ronald Lamilami to document rock art sites in the Wellington Range, one of the areas of focus of for Picturing Change.

'This part of Arnhem Land is well known for its Southeast Asian heritage and extensive pioneering archaeological research undertaken by Campbell Macknight, although rock art was not a focus of his early archaeological research,' said Dr May.

'Djulirri has more diverse contact period rock art than any other site in Australia' said Professor Taçon. 'Besides the oldest dated paintings of Southeast Asian ships, there are European tall ships and many other forms of watercraft, all of which can be placed in chronological sequence'.

The research will be published in a forthcoming issue of the journal Australian Archaeology.

For more information, please go to: news.anu.edu.au
Rooster SB1 Inshore RangeVetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTERLloyd Stevenson - Catalyst Yacht Tender 1456x180px BOTTOM

Related Articles

Expanding upmarket facilities in Southeast Asia
Maldives, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Indonesia get new marinas New modern marinas are catering to globe-trotting superyachts, and driving growing interest from maritime visitors to southeast Asia's exotic and welcoming island countries as the area becomes more viable and sought out as a destination.
Posted today at 7:47 am
SB20 Worlds in Singapore Day 4
Unforgettable day for the Borghesi Family Day 4 of the SB20 World Championship had everything: shifty, light winds that tested everyone's patience, heroic efforts by the Race Committee to squeeze in two races and a truly emotional milestone for one special family.
Posted today at 6:05 am
Jérémie Beyou finishes 4th in the Vendée Globe
Emerging relieved and happy out of a dark, windy night off Les Sables d'Olonne Emerging relieved and happy out of a dark, windy night off Les Sables d'Olonne, Jérémie Beyou crossed the finish line of his fifth Vendée Globe this morning at 00:58 (UTC) to take fourth place from the record fleet of 40 starters.
Posted today at 5:41 am
Semi-Finalists set for Helly Hansen International
Cole Tapper has finished at the top of the pile CYCA's Cole Tapper has finished at the top of the pile after the qualifying stage was completed yesterday, with the United States of America, New Zealand and Great Britain joining Australia as semi-finalists.
Posted today at 12:29 am
America's Cup: CEO ousting starts War of the Roses
A strong British America's Cup effort looks to have exploded in the first salvos of an AC Civil War. Thursday's announcement of a split between the skipper and backer of the 2024 British America's Cup team has significant implications for the Cup as the lawyers get involved, once again.
Posted today at 12:28 am
Presidental meeting for Luna Rossa
Praised alongside the Italian Sailing Federation The President of the Republic, Sergio Mattarella, welcomed the Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli team and the Italian Sailing Federation (FIV) to praise their Olympic and world achievements in 2024.
Posted on 23 Jan
Mean Biscay lives up to its reputation
Vendée Globe update: Jérémie Beyou arriving in less than 12 hours Nearly one week since the Vendée Globe podium was completed by Sébastien Simon, Jérémie Beyou will lead a surge of exhausted but relieved and grateful skippers through the finish line.
Posted on 23 Jan
Zhik celebrates Yoann Richomme
A record breaking second place in the Vendée Globe Zhik is thrilled to back French skipper Yoann Richomme, whose stunning performance in the 2024 Vendée Globe earned him a record-breaking second-place finish. Richomme's remarkable achievement showcases his exceptional skill.
Posted on 23 Jan
INEOS Statement on 38th America's Cup
After parting ways with Sir Ben Ainslie INEOS will enter a challenge for the 38th America's Cup under the team name INEOS Britannia after parting ways with Sir Ben Ainslie.
Posted on 23 Jan
Clarisse Crémer in the Vendée Globe week 11
The skipper of L'Occitane en Provence is preparing to negotiate a final ridge of high pressure Clarisse Crémer continues to fight for a place in the Top 10, while every day that separates her from deliverance seems to bring a new surprise to deal with, a new obstacle to overcome.
Posted on 23 Jan