Australia’s archaeological landscape is a palimpsest: the deep imprint of First Peoples layered beneath the more recent markers of colonial contact and modern urban life. Archaeological data indicates human presence on the continent for tens of thousands of years (for example, Willandra Lakes and Lake Mungo), with cultural traditions, rock art, and seasonal mobility shaping long-term land use. By 2000 CE the island continent hosted a complex mosaic of Indigenous nations with persistent local knowledge, alongside settler communities formed since European colonization (post-1788).
For the Modern_Australia dataset the temporal focus is 2000 CE — a snapshot of contemporary populations rather than prehistoric demography. While archaeological evidence anchors deep continuity, modern material culture and stratified historic sites (ports, colonial buildings, industrial layers) document rapid cultural and demographic change in the last two centuries. Limited evidence in a modern-sample dataset points to the need to interpret ancestry in light of both millennia of Indigenous occupation and the pronounced effects of recent migration and admixture. Archaeology provides the spatial and cultural context — sites, place names, and continuity of practice — that must be paired with genetic data to tell a population’s full story.