Skip to main content
Home
Login
  • Library Home
  • My Profile
  • Links
  • Ask the Librarian
  • About
  • New Titles

Full Record

Back to Search Results
Early man gets much older
Record no:
38133
Call no:
RP10161
Author:
Amalfi, Carmelo
Citation:
THE WEST AUSTRALIAN. 2002 Wed. May 8 : p. 7;
Year:
2002
Subject:
Australian Aborigines - Western Australia, Southwestern - Stone tools;
Devil's Lair (W.A.);
Dortch, Charles E.;
Akerman, Kim, 1947-2024;
Type:
Reprint
Item availability
{ 1 } items found
Result
Links
Location
Library
Shelf no
Status
Year
Volume
Copy
1
Archives room
Western Australian Museum
Reprint boxes
On Shelf
Similar Items
Time mining
Devil's Lair, an example of prolonged cave use in south-western Australia
Human occupation of Devil's Lair, Western Australia during the Pleistocene / C.E. Dortch and D. Merrilees. A human tooth from Devil's Lair / Peter L. Davies.
Apparent association of bryozoan chert artefacts and quartz geometric microliths at an open-air site, Arumvale, southwestern Australia
Australia's oldest known ornaments
A twelve thousand year old occupation floor in Devil's Lair, Western Australia
A salvage excavation in Devil's Lair, Western Australia
Two engraved stone plaques of late Pleistocene age from Devil's Lair, Western Australia
Geometric microliths from a dated archaeological deposit near Northcliffe, Western Australia
Late Quaternary mammal remains, spanning about 30,000 years, from excavations in Devils Lair, Western Australia
royal society

Government of Western Australia crest.

Social Media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Footer menu

  • Accessibility
  • Contact us
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer
  • Home
  • Privacy
All content copyright Government of Western Australia, All rights reserved.