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- Q5451268 subject Q7483660.
- Q5451268 subject Q8276086.
- Q5451268 subject Q8330088.
- Q5451268 subject Q8946458.
- Q5451268 abstract "Fire-stick burning, a term coined by Australian archaeologist Rhys Jones in 1969, describes the practice of Indigenous Australians who regularly used fire to burn vegetation to facilitate hunting and to change the composition of plant and animal species in an area.Fire-stick farming had the long-term effect of turning dry rainforest into savanna, increasing the population of nonspecific grass-eating species like the kangaroo. One theory of the extinction of Australian megafauna implicates the ecological disturbance caused by fire-stick farming.In the resultant sclerophyll forests, fire-stick farming maintained an open canopy and allowed germination of understory plants necessary for increasing the carrying capacity of the local environment for browsing and grazing marsupials.It may be argued that Aboriginal people were able to aim the burning of the scrub to avoid growing areas. It is also thought that there may have been a ritual taboo against burning certain areas of jungle.This type of farming also directly increased the food supply for Aboriginal people, by promoting the growth of bush potatoes and other edible ground-level plants.".
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q1017324.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q11107732.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q1134228.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q170355.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q1807448.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q18537.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q192864.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q193838.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q23498.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q25336.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q2589818.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q2591752.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q287854.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q3239189.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q422666.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q42320.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q45256.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q49367.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q5070208.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q511668.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q5451644.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q59099.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q6065260.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q622543.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q7321796.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q7483660.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q766271.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q8276086.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q8330088.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q866283.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q8946458.
- Q5451268 wikiPageWikiLink Q905495.
- Q5451268 comment "Fire-stick burning, a term coined by Australian archaeologist Rhys Jones in 1969, describes the practice of Indigenous Australians who regularly used fire to burn vegetation to facilitate hunting and to change the composition of plant and animal species in an area.Fire-stick farming had the long-term effect of turning dry rainforest into savanna, increasing the population of nonspecific grass-eating species like the kangaroo.".
- Q5451268 label "Fire-stick farming".