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Picking tool from Kimberley region, Western Australia
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Insights from Australia's first scientists set in stone

17 August 2015
Aboriginal tools dating back 20,000 years celebrated at National Science Week听

Visitors can marvel at a dazzling display of ancient Aboriginal stone tools and learn how Indigenous scientific knowledge spanned the millennia at a University of Sydney talk this week.

An unidentified stone tool from Santa Teresa, Northern Territory. Image: Carlo Bento.

A rare collection of artefacts including axes, blades and grindstones, some dating back thousands of years, will be featured at the Sydney Science Festival talk, 鈥樷 on Friday 21 August.

Matt Poll, Assistant Curator of Indigenous Heritage at the University of Sydney鈥檚 Macleay Museum, will explain the scientific foundations of these objects and the wealth of knowledge they reveal about climate change, food technology and building materials amongst Australia鈥檚 first scientists.听

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to really challenge the idea that these tools were just about picking up a rock and bluntly banging it,鈥 said Poll.

鈥淭here was actually a whole school of thought attached to the science of using different stone technologies, and how they were used to sustain a culture over many tens of thousands of years. It鈥檚 really a beautiful story.

Essentially, these stone tools were no different to what we use on our building sites, camping grounds, kitchens and scientific laboratories today.
Matt Poll

Stone tools across the ages

The evolution of particular kinds of stone tools mirrored the changing climate over thousands of years. As areas of central Australia shifted from wetlands to the deserts of today, Aboriginal peoples devised new methods to thrive in their environment.

鈥淭he invention and dispersion of the tula 鈥 a small multi-purpose cutting tool 鈥 is a prime example of the innovations pioneered by Aboriginal peoples as a result of increased drought conditions,鈥 said Poll.

Ancient climate knowledge

Even subtle indicators like the reflection of the sun on certain geographic features were used as tell-tale signs of seasonal patterns, with Indigenous Australians interpreting their environment for resource scarcity. 听

鈥淎boriginal peoples matched up their stone arrangements with the alignment of the stars, using these as a signal to move to different areas or to know whether there was an abundance of certain kinds of food or plants in the region,鈥 said Poll.

鈥淭here鈥檚 very useful information embodied in these tools that really resonates with much of our current ecological thinking around sustainability and the use of resources in specific climates.鈥

Poll鈥檚 talk marks the official launch event of the Macleay Museum鈥檚 newest exhibition,听, which opens today and runs until 1 August 2016. The exhibition celebrates the pivotal importance of stone to Aboriginal culture and identity, as a long-preserved marker of oral tradition.

鈥淭he ingenuity of this scientific knowledge, passed down through generations of Aboriginal people鈥檚 oral histories, continues to resonate in Aboriginal cultural life,鈥 said Poll.

The inaugural听听runs from 13 to 23 August, as part of National Science Week. 听

Event details

奥丑补迟:听

奥丑别苍:听Friday 21 August, 5.30pm to 6.30pm

奥丑别谤别:听Old Geology Lecture Theatre, Level 1, Edgeworth David Building, University of Sydney

Cost: Free

Register:

Emily Jones

Media and PR Adviser

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