Devil's Lair

Coordinates: 34°4′3.3″S 115°6′23.5″E / 34.067583°S 115.106528°E / -34.067583; 115.106528
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Devil's Lair
Map
LocationLeeuwin-Naturaliste National Park, Western Australia
Coordinates34°4′3.3″S 115°6′23.5″E / 34.067583°S 115.106528°E / -34.067583; 115.106528
GeologyKarst cave
Registry6WI-61[1]

Devil's Lair is a single-chamber

Southwest Australia
50,000 years before the present day.

Excavations

Devil's Lair has been the subject of scientific research since the 1970s by

Excavations have recovered stone artefacts, numerous animal bone remains, hearths, bone artefacts and human skeletal remains.[3][4]

Preservation of cultural materials has been very good and a long, well dated cultural sequence has been documented. The diversity and productiveness of the evidence from Devil's Lair make it unusually valuable as a source of information on cultural and natural history in the extreme southwest of Australia since the first colonisation of the continent.[5][6]

The site is named for the remains of the locally extinct

Fulbright scholar researching mammalian Pleistocene fauna in Western Australia. A review of tooth specimens of kangaroo species collected at the site discovered a human tooth was included and the archaeological significance of Devil's Lair prompted intense interest in that field.[7]

Archaeological significance

Devil's Lair is important as one of the earliest sites of human occupation in Australia, a site with very early human ornaments and an unusually rich source of information for prehistoric cultural and natural history in the southwest of Western Australia.[8][9]

Dating

Several different techniques of dating have been used at Devil's Lair to show that human occupation began at around 48,000 years. This makes it rank among the earliest sites in Australia and so an important source of information about the timing and character of the first human colonizers of Australia.[10]

Excavations at Devil's Lair have yielded early human ornaments in the form of three ground bone beads dating to 19,000–12,700 years BP. These beads were made from the limb-bones of macropods and were manufactured by cutting the bone shafts into short segments and grinding them smooth on abrasive stone. A deliberately perforated but otherwise unmodified stone object with wear patterns suggestive of its use as a pendant dated to 14,000 year BP has also been recovered from Devil's Lair.[11]

These artefacts are some of the earliest evidence of symbolic behaviour in Australia and are internationally significant for understanding the timing and character of the emergence of symbolic capacities in humans.

References

  1. ^ "Australian Karst Index Database". Australian Speleological Federation. 2007. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  2. ^ Balme, J., D. Merrilees and J. K. Porter (1978). "Late Quaternary mammal remains spanning about 30,000 years from excavations in Devil's Lair, Western Australia". Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia 60 (2):33-65.
  3. ISSN 0728-4896
  4. ^ Balme, Jane (March 1980), "Some archaeological studies on a bone accumulation from Devil's Lair, Western Australia", Newsletter (Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies) (13): 49–51, retrieved 22 October 2016
  5. ^ Dortch, C. (1979). "Devil's Lair, an Example of Prolonged Cave Use in South-Western Australia". World Archaeology 10(3):258-279.
  6. .
  7. ^ Dortch, C. E. (16 July 1979). "33,000 Year Old Stone and Bone Artifacts from Devil's Lair, Western Australia" (PDF). Western Australian Museum Records and Supplements. 7 (4): 329–367. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  8. ISSN 0312-2417
  9. .
  10. ^ *Bednarik, R. (1997). "Pleistocene stone pendant from Western Australia". Australian Archaeology 45:32-34.*Dortch, C. E. (Charles Eugene); Australia. Department of Aboriginal Affairs. Western Australian Office (1975), Archaeology : Devils Lair, retrieved 22 October 2016