Seascapes of 'Submarine Squatters': Commercial Dugong fisheries of North Queensland
Seascapes of 'Submarine Squatters': Commercial Dugong fisheries of North Queensland
Submarine squatting, dugong fishing on the Queensland (Australia) coast during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, is a poorly understood livelihood. This study provides a fine-grained interpretation to expand our knowledge of the operation of commercial dugong fisheries through the practices of two commercial dugong fishers, John Lionel Ching and Daniel Dewar, operating in the Newry Island Group. Archaeological surveys of the Newry Island Group and nearby Stewarts Peninsula have highlighted the ephemeral nature of the commercial dugong industry in the seascape today. Despite this ephemeral landscape, contextualising the archival and archaeological research within a seascape framework has enriched our understanding of the daily lives of the commercial dugong fishers. It is important to acknowledge that a seascape approach is rarely applied to non-Indigenous archaeological contexts in Australia. The seascape approach used here has been successful in encompassing Western systems of maritime knowledge.
Archaeology, Commercial dugong fisheries, Maritime industries, Queensland, Seascapes
95-116
Russell, Timothy
7e8f3165-2fc8-45e2-886a-c3e8e06c07fc
Fowler, Madeline
12991e11-03f8-4f22-9612-6dafb0cf832b
1 March 2020
Russell, Timothy
7e8f3165-2fc8-45e2-886a-c3e8e06c07fc
Fowler, Madeline
12991e11-03f8-4f22-9612-6dafb0cf832b
Russell, Timothy and Fowler, Madeline
(2020)
Seascapes of 'Submarine Squatters': Commercial Dugong fisheries of North Queensland.
Journal of Maritime Archaeology, 15 (1), .
(doi:10.1007/s11457-019-09251-y).
Abstract
Submarine squatting, dugong fishing on the Queensland (Australia) coast during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, is a poorly understood livelihood. This study provides a fine-grained interpretation to expand our knowledge of the operation of commercial dugong fisheries through the practices of two commercial dugong fishers, John Lionel Ching and Daniel Dewar, operating in the Newry Island Group. Archaeological surveys of the Newry Island Group and nearby Stewarts Peninsula have highlighted the ephemeral nature of the commercial dugong industry in the seascape today. Despite this ephemeral landscape, contextualising the archival and archaeological research within a seascape framework has enriched our understanding of the daily lives of the commercial dugong fishers. It is important to acknowledge that a seascape approach is rarely applied to non-Indigenous archaeological contexts in Australia. The seascape approach used here has been successful in encompassing Western systems of maritime knowledge.
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Accepted/In Press date: 30 November 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 December 2019
Published date: 1 March 2020
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
Keywords:
Archaeology, Commercial dugong fisheries, Maritime industries, Queensland, Seascapes
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 438696
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/438696
ISSN: 1557-2285
PURE UUID: 7f8809de-e2f2-44d9-a495-b8377e22006f
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Date deposited: 23 Mar 2020 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 06:02
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Author:
Timothy Russell
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