Overview
Background
I research animal skeletal remains at archaeological sites to reconstruct patterns in past diet to understand how people responded to large-scale climate, environmental and cultural change.
I completed my BSc in archaeology and zoology in 1997 at James Cook University, followed with honours in archaeology in 1998. My honours project focused on the animal remains from the Pleistocene- and Holocene-aged of Noala Cave, a rockshelter on the Montebello Islands off the Pilbara coast in Western Australia. Following this, I moved to North America and completed a MSc in marine geology at the University of Miami (2003) and a PhD in anthropology (archaeology) at the University of Arizona (2010). My PhD research focused on reconstructing past diet of peoples occupying the Upper Palaeolithic site of Vale Boi in southern Portugal. In 2012 I returned to Australia and Australian archaeology. My main research project seeks to understand the motivations behind the initial colonisation of northern Australia and New Guinea and the manner in which people subsequently navigated large-scale shifts in climate and local environment.
Availability
- Associate Professor Tiina Manne is:
- Available for supervision
Qualifications
- Masters (Coursework) of Science, University of Miami
- Doctor of Philosophy, University of Arizona
Research interests
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50,000 years of human subsistence behaviour in northern Australia
For over 40 years archaeologists have debated the nature of initial colonisation of Australia and how people subsequently coped with large-scale climate change. This study systematically examines variation in human subsistence behaviour and animal community structure across northern Australia. Through analyses of archaeofaunas from key archaeological sites, this project will test assumptions of why and how northern Australia was first occupied and the manner in which people responded to dramatic environmental shifts. An additional outcome of this project is insight into the causes of fragmentation in Australian fauna assemblages.
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The Barrow Island Archaeology Project: the dynamism of maritime societies in northern Australia
The Barrow Island Archaeology Project examines an exceptional record of Indigenous occupation on one of the largest islands lying off the northwest coast of Australia. The island and sites on it are optimally located to register first coastal occupations. Peoples' responses to changes in sea level, climate and isolation from critical resources on the mainland will be mapped, with predicted abandonment 7,400 years ago. The Project will study the nature of a cultural landscape that represents a 'time-capsule' sealed in the early Holocene. Important climate and ecological records will be reconstructed from the contents of caves. The labour history of Indigenous people and pearling will also be profiled.
Works
Search Professor Tiina Manne’s works on UQ eSpace
2006
Conference Publication
Evidence for bone grease rendering during the Upper Paleolithic at Vale Boi (Algarve, Portugal)
Manne, Tiina H., Stiner, Mary C. and Bicho, Nuno F. (2006). Evidence for bone grease rendering during the Upper Paleolithic at Vale Boi (Algarve, Portugal). IV CAP: Congresso de Arqueologia Peninsular 2004, Faro, Portugal, 14-19 September, 2004. Faro, Portugal: Faculdade de Ciencias Humanas e Sociais, Universidade do Algarve.
Funding
Current funding
Supervision
Availability
- Associate Professor Tiina Manne is:
- Available for supervision
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Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Aboriginal and Environmental Interactions in Northern Australia: A faunal analysis of Malangangerr
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Alison Crowther
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Doctor Philosophy
The Importance of Place: Exploring the Intersection of Climate Change, Cultural Heritage Resource Management Laws, and Indigenous Identity
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Kim de Rijke, Associate Professor Allison Fish
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Doctor Philosophy
A Zooarchaeological Analysis and Interpretation of the Comoros Islands
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Alison Crowther
Completed supervision
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2025
Master Philosophy
Foundations for Imperium: Evaluating the influence of neighbouring mortar traditions on the development of Imperial-era Italian waterproof lining technology
Principal Advisor
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2025
Doctor Philosophy
A question of balance: A multi-method zooarchaeological study of food and identity (re)creation in migrant communities in late 19th to early 20th century Queensland
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Caitlin D'Gluyas
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2025
Doctor Philosophy
Characterising damage to bone by Sarcophilus harrisii and Dasyurus maculatus in archaeological and palaeontological assemblages from Sahul
Principal Advisor
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2024
Doctor Philosophy
Quantitative methods for the taxonomic identification of marsupial postcrania from Australian archaeological sites
Principal Advisor
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2019
Doctor Philosophy
Worn to the Bone: Use-wear of bone points from the Madjedbebe rockshelter, Arnhem Land
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Alison Crowther
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2022
Doctor Philosophy
At Home on the Goldfield: A Domestic Archaeological Investigation of Identity at Ravenswood, North Queensland.
Associate Advisor
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2021
Master Philosophy
Coastal Caprines: Using ZooMS to Trace the Spread of Domesticates in Coastal Eastern Africa
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Alison Crowther
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2020
Master Philosophy
Pieces of a ground stone puzzle: experimental studies of seed-grinding in traditional Aboriginal Australia
Associate Advisor
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2019
Doctor Philosophy
Identifying Prehistoric Interaction on Rapa Nui (Easter Island): Modelling the Development of Social Complexity in Extreme Isolation
Associate Advisor
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2018
Doctor Philosophy
The relevance of basic science to stone tool use and meat eating: Standardisation of bone surface modification methods and interpretations
Associate Advisor
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2017
Doctor Philosophy
An "out-of-the-way little place": Historical archaeology and globalisation at St Lawrence, Queensland, Australia
Associate Advisor
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2014
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding Australia's Cultural History Through Archaeological Geophysics
Associate Advisor
Media
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