Bruno David Bruno David i(11963064 works by)
Gender: Male
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1 Archaeology Is Unravelling New Stories about Indigenous Seagoing Trade on Australia’s Doorstep Chris Urwin , Alois Kuaso , Bruno David , Henry Auri Arifeae , Robert Skelly , Misha Ketchell (editor), 2019 single work essay
— Appears in: The Conversation , 11 April 2019;

It has long been assumed that Indigenous Australia was isolated until Europeans arrived in 1788, except for trade with parts of present day Indonesia beginning at least 300 years ago. But our recent archaeological research hints of at least an extra 2,100 years of connections across the Coral Sea with Papua New Guinea.

Over the past decade, we have conducted research in the Gulf of Papua with local Indigenous communities.

During the excavations, the most common archaeological evidence found in the old village sites was fragments of pottery, which preserve well in tropical environments compared to artefacts made of wood or bone. As peoples of the Gulf of Papua have no known history of pottery making, and the materials are foreign, the discovered pottery sherds are evidence of trade.

Source: The Conversation

1 [Review Essay] Yorro Yorro, Everything Standing up Alive : Spirit of the Kimberley Bruno David , 1994 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 1 1994; (p. 75-76)

One day in 1980, David Mowaljarlai, a Ngarinyin elder, walked into the office of one of Jutta Malnic's co-workers. He was seeking assistance to help him record cultural places in his home country in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Jutta Malnic was at the time writing a book about the rock pictures of Australia, and was looking for assistance from Aboriginal custodians of the Kimberley region. Her book was published in 1982, but the greater outcome of her associations with David Mowaljarlai was Yorro Yorro. ' (Introduction)

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