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The Brremangurey pearl: a 2000 year old archaeological find from the coastal Kimberley, Western Australia

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posted on 2024-11-16, 07:46 authored by Katherine Szabo, Brent Koppel, M Moore, Iain Young, Matthew Tighe, Michael Morwood
A small marine pearl was recovered at the Brremangurey rockshelter, on the Kimberley coast, from layers dating to approximately 2000 years ago. In an area famous for its pearls and history of cultured pearl production, public interest centred on whether the pearl was as old as the layer in which it was contained, or whether it was a recent cultured pearl that had infiltrated down from above. The near-spherical shape of the pearl hinted at a possible cultured origin. Owing to the uniqueness and historic cultural significance of this find, non-invasive analytical techniques were used to investigate whether the Brremangurey pearl was cultured or natural. Midden analysis was further used to assess the likely origin of the pearl within the stratified deposits. Analysis confirmed that the pearl is of natural origin and a dense midden lens of Pinctada albina shells is its likely origin.

Funding

Change and continuity: chronology, archaeology and art in the North Kimberley, Northwest Australia

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Szabo, K., Koppel, B., Moore, M. W., Young, I., Tighe, M. & Morwood, M. J. (2015). The Brremangurey pearl: a 2000 year old archaeological find from the coastal Kimberley, Western Australia. Australian Archaeology, 80 (June), 112-115.

Journal title

Australian Archaeology

Volume

80

Issue

June

Pagination

112-115

Language

English

RIS ID

101557

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