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The Rugby Championship 2021: How Wallabies bolter Rob Leota turned back on French deal
smh.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from smh.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Friday essay: how our new archaeological research investigates Dark Emu s idea of Aboriginal agriculture and villages
theconversation.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theconversation.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Anna Florin, Andrew Fairbairn, Chris Clarkson, James Shulmeister, Nicholas R Patton, Patrick Roberts
S. Anna Florin., Author provided
Archaeological research provides a long-term perspective on how humans survived various environmental conditions over tens of thousands of years.
In a paper published today in Nature Ecology and Evolution, we’ve tracked rainfall in northern Australia’s Kakadu region over the past 65,000 years. We wanted to know how major changes in rainfall may have affected the region’s Aboriginal communities through time.
Our findings suggest the Kakadu region wasn’t as prone to dry spells as surrounding areas and it likely functioned as a place of refuge for early Australians as they struggled through harsh and arid conditions.
Date Time
Ancient food scraps provide clues to past rainfall in Australia’s Northern Territory
These pandanus trees, on Australia’s Magela Creek floodplain near the archaeological site of Madjedbebe, are the subject of new research involving the University of Washington.Florin et al., 2021, Nature Ecology and Evolution
Ancient food scraps found at Australia’s earliest site of human occupation, in the Kakadu region of the Northern Territory, are helping researchers generate rainfall records dating back 65,000 years.
A new study led by the University of Queensland and involving the University of Washington provides a glimpse into the region’s climate at the time when people first entered the Australian continent from the north.
Visit Sunshine Coast sees engagement lift with martech overhaul
Regional tourism body employs new marketing automation stack and segmentation approach to personalise content to consumers
Visit Sunshine Coast says it’s continuing to gain insights around audiences interests to personalise content and digital experiences after deploying a marketing automation platform and strategy this year.
The regional tourism organisation previously used simplified, standalone systems in place to orchestrate marketing and engagement activities, resulting in data siloes and a lack of omni-channel sophistication and personalisation. The team was also unable to understand how people were interacting with its advertising, digital assets and communications.
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