Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past

Pictures of Time Beneath examines three celebrated heritage landscapes: Adelaide’s Hallett Cove, Lake Callabonna in the far north of South Australia, and the World Heritage listed Willandra Lakes Region of New South Wales. It offers philosophical insights into significant issues of heritage management, our relationship with Australian landscapes, and an original perspective on our understanding of place, time, nation and science.

Glaciers in Adelaide, cow-sized wombats, monster kangaroos, desert dunes littered with freshwater mussels, ancient oases and inland seas: a diverse group of deep-time imaginings is the subject of this ground-breaking book. Ideas about a deep past in Australia are central to broader issues of identity, belonging, uniqueness, legitimacy and intellectual community. This journey through Australia’s natural histories examines the way landscapes and landforms are interpreted to realise certain visions of the land, the nation and the past in the context of contemporary notions of geological heritage, cultural property, cultural identity and antiquity.

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Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past

Pictures of Time Beneath examines three celebrated heritage landscapes: Adelaide’s Hallett Cove, Lake Callabonna in the far north of South Australia, and the World Heritage listed Willandra Lakes Region of New South Wales. It offers philosophical insights into significant issues of heritage management, our relationship with Australian landscapes, and an original perspective on our understanding of place, time, nation and science.

Glaciers in Adelaide, cow-sized wombats, monster kangaroos, desert dunes littered with freshwater mussels, ancient oases and inland seas: a diverse group of deep-time imaginings is the subject of this ground-breaking book. Ideas about a deep past in Australia are central to broader issues of identity, belonging, uniqueness, legitimacy and intellectual community. This journey through Australia’s natural histories examines the way landscapes and landforms are interpreted to realise certain visions of the land, the nation and the past in the context of contemporary notions of geological heritage, cultural property, cultural identity and antiquity.

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Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past

Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past

by Kirsty Douglas
Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past

Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past

by Kirsty Douglas

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Overview

Pictures of Time Beneath examines three celebrated heritage landscapes: Adelaide’s Hallett Cove, Lake Callabonna in the far north of South Australia, and the World Heritage listed Willandra Lakes Region of New South Wales. It offers philosophical insights into significant issues of heritage management, our relationship with Australian landscapes, and an original perspective on our understanding of place, time, nation and science.

Glaciers in Adelaide, cow-sized wombats, monster kangaroos, desert dunes littered with freshwater mussels, ancient oases and inland seas: a diverse group of deep-time imaginings is the subject of this ground-breaking book. Ideas about a deep past in Australia are central to broader issues of identity, belonging, uniqueness, legitimacy and intellectual community. This journey through Australia’s natural histories examines the way landscapes and landforms are interpreted to realise certain visions of the land, the nation and the past in the context of contemporary notions of geological heritage, cultural property, cultural identity and antiquity.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780643101944
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING
Publication date: 04/27/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Kirsty Douglas is a heritage specialist with a background in geology and history. She has been an ARC Postdoctoral Fellow in the History Program of the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University and completed her PhD in environmental history at the same institution in 2004.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Science, landscape, heritage and the uses of the deep past
Part One. ‘Like a precious cameo’: Hallett Cove, geological heritage and the glaciological imagination
Treading on classic ground
Chapter 1. Preservation and change in an ‘outdoor museum’: a modern diorama
Chapter 2. ‘Bent upon covering the whole continent with ice’: glacial studies in the nineteenth century
Chapter 3. The Battle for Hallett Cove
Hallett Cove and geological knowledge
Part Two. Dirt, bones and the Diprotodons of Lake Callabonna: discovering the lost worlds of vertebrate palaeontology
1892
Chapter 4. The lost worlds of Lake Callabonna, 160 000 000 BP – 1970
Chapter 5. ‘A world previous to ours’, 1795–1892
Chapter 6. Finding Lake Callabonna, 1892–1901
Chapter 7. Finding Lake Callabonna again, 1913–1970
Skeletons in the cabinet and the lost world of Lake Callabonna
Part Three. Lake Mungo, human antiquity and the watered inland: reading the scripture of the landscape
Beginnings
Chapter 8. Arid glaciation and the land of lakes
Chapter 9. Human antiquity and the scripture of the landscape
‘The desired future’
Afterword. Quaternary science, landscape and the deep human past
Endnotes
References
Index
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