Across the low, braided river plains and ephemeral lakes of south‑western New South Wales, human presence in the Late Holocene reads like a palimpsest of campfires, tool scatters and seasonal pathways. Archaeological data indicates that communities occupying the Barham Forest/Koondrook‑Perricoota corridor (Murray River floodplain) and the Willandra Lakes Region continued long traditions of exploiting wetlands, reedbeds and lunettes well into the centuries before European contact (roughly 400 CE to 1788 CE for the samples considered here).
Environmental shifts—changing lake levels in the Willandra basin and fluctuations in river flow along the Murray—shaped mobility, site placement and resource calendars. Material culture recovered from open camps and hearth sites points to continuity in stone tool manufacture, ochre use and complex landscape knowledge. While deep time in this region extends back tens of thousands of years, the archaeological signature for the 400–1788 CE window is one of resilient adaptation: people woven into riparian ecologies, practicing seasonal rounds that balanced hunting, fishing and plant processing.
Limited evidence suggests local groups maintained enduring place‑based identities, with trade and exchange connecting river corridors to upland zones. Because only two genetic samples accompany these archaeological contexts, any narrative that links specific genetic lineages to detailed cultural practices must remain cautious and provisional.