Abstract

Land use and economy have been the focus of much research in Tasmanian prehistory. A recent summary of prehistoric archaeology in Tasmania (Bowdler 1982) indicates that discussion falls into three main areas. These are: (a) t h e nature of Pleistocene economies and land use; (b) changing economic strategies in the Holocene in relation to environmental change; and (c) issues of spatial analysis especially in relation to site placement in an environmental context. This report is primarily concerned with spatial analysis and its implications for prehistoric land use patterns.

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