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Australia’s history is being significantly rewritten - or perhaps better said, heard. There is growing widespread understanding of the sophistication, presence and wisdom of the First Australians, and not just from the game-changing works of people like Bruce Pascoe and Bill Gammage. Now that modern Australia is looking in more of the right places, with the right mind, and with the First Australians themselves, our national - and really, human - story, is changing everywhere.
This is a story of successful continuous human migration, cultivation and livelihood, right across Australia, over many a changing climate and shifting sea level. And leading archaeology professor from UWA, Peter Veth, has been working with First Nations for over 40 years to help share this story.
Peter has just started a new dig with First Nations folk here on the North West Cape of Australia, part of the World Heritage Ningaloo Coast. It’s expected to reveal the First Nations presence in this part of the world dates back an extraordinary 60,000 years. And when pieced together with other finds and collaborations happening across Australia and the world, it changes the way we see our country, it’s people, and the human experience generally. And that, in turn, is broadening the menu of present and future possibilities enormously, at a time when this region, its people, and the world as a whole, need it most.
This conversation was recorded on the new moon of 12 May 2021.
Title slide: Cape Range, on the World Heritage Ningaloo Coast (pic: UWA).
You can see a few terrific early photographs of Peter among some of the First Nations communities we talked about on the episode web page.
Music:
By Jeremiah Johnson.
Find more:
Tune into the special extra with Peter.
On Peter Veth.
On the new Nyinggulu Archaeology Project, from ABC Pilbara, Ningaloo research to tell 60,000-year-old story as new technology uncovers deeper past.
Songlines exhibition.
Send us a text
Support the show
The RegenNarration podcast is independent, ad-free and freely available, thanks to the generous support of listeners like you. If you too value what you hear, please consider joining them.
BECOME A PAID SUBSCRIBER to connect with your host, other listeners and exclusive benefits, on:
Or DONATE:
You can also:
Thanks for your support!
5
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Australia’s history is being significantly rewritten - or perhaps better said, heard. There is growing widespread understanding of the sophistication, presence and wisdom of the First Australians, and not just from the game-changing works of people like Bruce Pascoe and Bill Gammage. Now that modern Australia is looking in more of the right places, with the right mind, and with the First Australians themselves, our national - and really, human - story, is changing everywhere.
This is a story of successful continuous human migration, cultivation and livelihood, right across Australia, over many a changing climate and shifting sea level. And leading archaeology professor from UWA, Peter Veth, has been working with First Nations for over 40 years to help share this story.
Peter has just started a new dig with First Nations folk here on the North West Cape of Australia, part of the World Heritage Ningaloo Coast. It’s expected to reveal the First Nations presence in this part of the world dates back an extraordinary 60,000 years. And when pieced together with other finds and collaborations happening across Australia and the world, it changes the way we see our country, it’s people, and the human experience generally. And that, in turn, is broadening the menu of present and future possibilities enormously, at a time when this region, its people, and the world as a whole, need it most.
This conversation was recorded on the new moon of 12 May 2021.
Title slide: Cape Range, on the World Heritage Ningaloo Coast (pic: UWA).
You can see a few terrific early photographs of Peter among some of the First Nations communities we talked about on the episode web page.
Music:
By Jeremiah Johnson.
Find more:
Tune into the special extra with Peter.
On Peter Veth.
On the new Nyinggulu Archaeology Project, from ABC Pilbara, Ningaloo research to tell 60,000-year-old story as new technology uncovers deeper past.
Songlines exhibition.
Send us a text
Support the show
The RegenNarration podcast is independent, ad-free and freely available, thanks to the generous support of listeners like you. If you too value what you hear, please consider joining them.
BECOME A PAID SUBSCRIBER to connect with your host, other listeners and exclusive benefits, on:
Or DONATE:
You can also:
Thanks for your support!
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