A vast coastline of mangroves, reefs and tidal flats frames the human story of Queensland’s pre‑European era. Archaeological deposits at places such as Flinders Island (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park) and coastal Cape York localities near Mapoon preserve shell middens, fish bone concentrations and hearths that attest to long‑standing marine adaptation. Radiocarbon dates for the samples discussed here span 410 CE to the eve of sustained European colonisation in 1788 CE, situating them in the late Holocene cultural landscapes of northern Australia.
These communities are part of the broader Aboriginal Australians of Queensland cultural tradition, which emerged from the deep peopling of Sahul (the Pleistocene landmass joining Australia and New Guinea). Limited evidence suggests strong local continuity: the repeated presence of maternal lineage mtDNA P across four samples points to enduring maternal ancestries in these coastal populations. However, only four genetic samples underpin these observations, so interpretations about population movement, contact, or replacement must remain tentative.
Archaeological data indicates sophisticated coastal economies—seasonal movement between islands and mainland, specialized fishing and shellfish gathering, and landscape knowledge encoded in stone arrangement, camp placement and oral geographies. When paired with genetic data, these material traces begin to outline kinship networks that sustained communities along Queensland’s seaboard for centuries.