1994
DOI: 10.1080/03122417.1994.11681528
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The Great ‘Intensification Debate’: Its History And Place In Australian Archaeology

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Cited by 57 publications
(40 citation statements)
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References 65 publications
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“…But when each piece of evidence is examined individually, the apparent pattern becomes blurred (White 1994:225). explicit and implicit, have increasingly been incorporated into normative accounts of Australian archaeology (Lourandos and Ross 1994). However, by emphasising supraregional trajectories of change, some advocates of intensification devalued the importance of local and subregional trajectories as a primary locus of change, instead amalgamating diverse sequences from widely separated regions to define overarching patterns.…”
Section: The Continental Narrativementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…But when each piece of evidence is examined individually, the apparent pattern becomes blurred (White 1994:225). explicit and implicit, have increasingly been incorporated into normative accounts of Australian archaeology (Lourandos and Ross 1994). However, by emphasising supraregional trajectories of change, some advocates of intensification devalued the importance of local and subregional trajectories as a primary locus of change, instead amalgamating diverse sequences from widely separated regions to define overarching patterns.…”
Section: The Continental Narrativementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A significant archaeological database accumulated during the 1970s, but it was the early 1980s that signalled a major turning point in the development of Australian archaeology. Heated debate during this period, labelled by Lourandos and Ross (1994) as the 'Intensification Debate', focussed critical attention on issues of change, particularly during the late Holocene. Although major recent change was recognised from the earliest excavations undertaken in Australia (e.g.…”
Section: The Continental Narrativementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The 'intensification debate' (Lourandos 1985, Lourandos andRoss 1994) characterises late Holocene increases in the number of sites and changes in their uses. A number of researchers have explored the archaeological evidence for Holocene demographic and technological changes in a range of different environments (e.g.…”
Section: Diachronic Variation In the Art Of The Sydney Basinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1) subsequently have been reworked to include a more nuanced understanding of "the filling of the continent" (p. 453 in ref. 15) as variably dependent on a matrix of biogeographic (16), ecological/climatic (17), and sociological/technological (18,19) facilitators of-or barriers to-dispersal from an initial point of entry in the north (20). The vast interior of the continent is now viewed as a mosaic of potential oases, corridors, and barriers, with the viability of a specific region for occupation or transit also depending on the trajectories of environmental change (21)(22)(23)(24).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%