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Management Team
Alexander Molyneux Non-Executive Chairman
Alexander Molyneux is an experienced mining industry executive and is the co-founder and chairing member of Azarga Resources Group. He serves in non-executive chairman positions at Azarga Metals Group and Argosy Minerals Ltd, and was previously executive chairman of Azarga Uranium Corp.
PARIS, Feb 24 A kangaroo painting created over 17,000 years ago by Aboriginal artists has been identified with a little help from some ancient wasps as Australia’s oldest intact rock art. The two-metre-long (six-feet) artwork on the sloped ceiling of a rock shelter in Western.
Scientists date Australia s oldest rock shelter painting
23 Feb 2021 | 3 mins
A multidisciplinary team of scientists from The University of Western Australia and The University of Melbourne, working with Aboriginal Traditional Owners, has successfully dated a 17,000 year old kangaroo rock painting in the Kimberley region of Western Australia.
The rock painting, found on the Unghango clan estate in Balanggarra Country in the north-eastern Kimberley, is the oldest known painting still on the wall of a rock shelter in Australia.The dating results were published in
Dating the Aboriginal rock art sequence of the Kimberley in NW Australia.
Researchers are aiming to develop a time scale for Aboriginal rock art in the Kimberley.UWA archaeologists Sven Ouzman, Peter Veth and Sam Harper are working in partnership with Balanggarra Aboriginal Corporation and the Kimberley Land Council, and dating specialists from the Universities of Melbourne, Wollongong, Manchester and the Australian Nati
Urban design, wild nature meets human dwellings, lasting interdependence in our biodiversity hotspot - Understorey interviews Tuan Ngo, a Perth architect who focused on biophilic design in his Masters research at Curtin University, and wishes to see this nature-embracing concept in all future planning considerations; and we meet Rachel Pemberton, who s been participating in the nuts and bolts of foundational processes of biophiliac design at the council level of government in Fremantle the last ten years.
How can we develop our capacity for change and adaptation, and help plan urban landscapes that will weather coming climate events much better than before? And can our urban design even improve things beyond our human requirements, to support the wellbeing our non-human neighbours? Listen in, and connect with Understorey, weekly at 10.30am Wednesdays on RTRFM.
Updated:
The team dated 27 mud wasp nests around 16 different paintings from eight rock shelters
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A montage of photographs of the 17,300-year-old kangaroo rock painting (left) and an illustration of the artwork (right). Credit: Damien Finch et al
The team dated 27 mud wasp nests around 16 different paintings from eight rock shelters A kangaroo painting created over 17,000 years ago by Aboriginal artists has been identified with a little help from some ancient wasps as Australia s oldest intact rock art.
The two-metre-long (six-feet) artwork on the sloped ceiling of a rock shelter in Western Australia s Kimberley region was painted in an early naturalistic style, which often features life-sized renderings of animals, according to research published Monday.