Appendix 1
Brockwell, Sally (2013). “Deadmen and dreamings”: Some reflections on An-barra archaeology. In Geoff Bailey, Karen Hardy and Abdoulaye Camara, eds. Shell Energy: Prehistoric Coastal Resource Strategies, 287–98. Oxford: Oxbow.
Brockwell, Sally, Betty Meehan and Betty Ngurrabangurraba (2005). The Anbarra archaeological project: A progress report. Australian Aboriginal Studies 1: 84–9. Fullagar, Richard, Betty Meehan and Rhys Jones (1999). Residue analysis of ethnographic plant-working and other tools from northern Australia. In Patricia Anderson, ed. Prehistory of Agriculture: New Experimental and Ethnographic Approaches, 15–25. Monograph 40. Los Angeles: Institute of Archaeology, University of California.
Glasgow, Kathleen (1994). Burarra Gun-artpa Dictionary with English Finder List: Based on the Language Shared by Speakers of the An-barra, Martay and Gun-artpa Dialects. Darwin: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
Gurrmanamana, Frank, Les Hiatt and Kim McKenzie (2002). People of the Rivermouth: The Joborr Texts of Frank Gurrmanamana. Canberra: National Museum of Australia and Aboriginal Studies Press.
Hamilton, Annette (1981). Nature and Nurture: Aboriginal Child-Rearing in North- Central Arnhem Land. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Hiatt, Lester (1965). Kinship and Conflict: A Study of an Aboriginal Community in Northern Arnhem Land. Canberra: Australian National University.
Jones, Rhys (2000). Gun-gugaliya Rrawa, place, ochre and death: A perspective from Aboriginal Australia. In Stephen Aldhouse-Green, ed. Paviland Cave and the “Red Lady”: A Definitive Report, 247–64. Bristol: Western Academic and Specialist Press.
Jones, Rhys (1990). Hunters of the Dreaming: Some ideational, economic and ecological parameters of the Australian Aboriginal productive system. In Doug Yen and Janine Mummery, eds. Pacific Production Systems: Approaches to Economic Prehistory, 25–53. Occasional Papers in Prehistory, No.18. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. Jones, Rhys (1984). Prehistory in the Australian tropics. In Brian Hughes and John Eedle, eds. Northern Studies: Report of a Workshop, 73–91. Darwin: Northern Territory University Planning Authority.
Jones, Rhys (1983). Arnhemland: Life on the edge of the water. In Robert Brissenden, Rosemary Brissenden and Jutta Hosel, eds. Gift of the Forest, 102–5. Sydney: Australian Conservation Foundation.
Jones, Rhys (1981). Hunters of Arnhemland: A perspective from the Pleistocene to the present. Union International de Ciencias Prehistoricas y Protohistoricas.. (Miembro del Consejo International de Filosofia y de las Ciencias Humanas de la Unesco, Paris), X Congreso, Mexico, October 19–24. Resumenes de Comunicaciones, Seccion 1V, Paleolitico Superior, 90–1.
Jones, Rhys (1980a). Cleaning the country: The Gindjingali and their Arnhemland environment. BHP Journal 1: 10–15.
Jones, Rhys (1980b). Hunters in the Australian coastal savanna. In David Harris, ed. Human Ecology in Savanna Environments, 107–46. London: Academic Press. Jones, Rhys (1975). The Neolithic Palaeolithic and the hunting gardeners: Man and land in the antipodes. In R. Patrick Suggate and M.M. Cresswell, eds. Quaternary Studies, 21–34. Wellington: Royal Society of New Zealand.
Jones, Rhys and Jim Bowler (1980). Struggle for the savanna: Northern Australia in ecological and prehistoric perspective. In Rhys Jones, ed. Northern Australia: Options and Implications, 3–31. Canberra: Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.
Jones, Rhys and Betty Meehan (1997). Balmarrk wana: Big winds of Arnhem Land. In Eric Webb, ed. Windows on Meteorology: Australian Perspective, 14–19. Canberra: CSIRO.
Jones, Rhys and Betty Meehan (1989). Plant foods of the Gidjingarli: Ethnographic and archaeological perspectives from northern Australia on tuber and seed exploitation. In David Harris and Gordon Hillman, eds. Foraging and Farming: The Evolution of Plant Exploitation. London: Unwin Hyman.
Jones, Rhys and Betty Meehan (1977). Floating bark and hollow trunks. Hemisphere 21: 16–21.
McKenzie, Kim (1980). Waiting for Harry. Documentary. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Meehan, Betty (1995). The Anbarra Archaeological Project 1970 – present. In Iain Davidson, Christine Lovell-Jones and Robyne Bancroft, eds. Archaeologists and Aborigines Working Together, 38–40. Armidale: University of New England Press.
Meehan, Betty (1994). Introduction. In Claudia Haagen, ed. Bush Toys: Aboriginal Children at Play, vii–ix. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press.
Meehan, Betty (1991). Wetland hunters: Some reflections. In Christopher Haynes, Michael Ridpath and Martin Williams, eds. Monsoonal Australia: Landscape, Ecology and Man in the Northern Lowlands, 197–206. Rotterdam: A.A. Balkema. Meehan, Betty (1989). Plant use in contemporary Aboriginal communities and prehistoric implications. In Wendy Beck, Anne Clarke and Lesley Head, eds. Plants in Australian Archaeology, 14–30. Tempus 1. Archaeology and Material Culture Studies in Anthropology. St Lucia: University of Queensland.
Meehan, Betty (1988a). Changes in Aboriginal exploitation of wetlands in northern Australia. In Deborah Wade-Marshall and Peter Loveday, eds. Floodplains Research, vol. 2, Northern Australia: Progress and Prospects, Appendix 2, 1–23. Darwin: North Australia Research Unit, Australian National University.
Meehan, Betty (1988b). The “dinner time” camp: Its uses and abuses in archaeological interpretation. In Betty Meehan and Rhys Jones, eds. Archaeology with Ethnography: An Australian Perspective, 171–81. Proceedings of the 1983 Australian Archaeological Association Conference in Canberra. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.
Meehan, Betty (1986). The dreaming shellfish. Hilton Australia 1(5): 52–5. Meehan, Betty (1985). Bandeiyama: She keeps going. In Isobel White, Diane Barwick and Betty Meehan, eds. Fighters and Singers: The Lives of Some Aboriginal Women, 200–13. Melbourne: Allen & Unwin.
Meehan, Betty (1983). A matter of choice? Some thoughts on shell gathering strategies in northern Australia. In Juliet Clutton-Brock and Caroline Grigson, eds. Animals and Archaeology: Shell Middens, Fishes and Birds, 3–17. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.
Meehan, Betty (1982a). Shell Bed to Shell Midden. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Meehan, Betty (1982b). “Ten fish for one man”: Some Anbarra attitudes towards food and health. In Janice Reid, ed. Body, Land and Spirit: Health and Healing in Aboriginal Society, 96–120. St Lucia: Queensland University Press.
Meehan, Betty (1980a). Nutrition and storage: Some further notes on Aboriginal use of Pandanus in northern Australia. Occasional Papers in Anthropology 10: 23–4. St Lucia: University of Queensland.
Meehan, Betty (1980b). A return to the land and traditional life. Uniterra: United Nations Environment Programme 5(4): 4–5.
Meehan, Betty (1980c). Who feeds the multitude? The contribution women make to the diet of Aborigines in tropical Australia. Women in Food Chains, 13–19. Melbourne Food Justice Centre of Friends of the Earth.
Meehan, Betty (1977a). Hunters by the seashore. Journal of Human Evolution 6(4): 363–70.
Meehan, Betty (1977b). Man does not live by calories alone: The role of shellfish in a coastal cuisine. In Jim Allen, Jack Golson and Rhys Jones, eds. Sunda and Sahul: Prehistoric Studies in Southeast Asia, Melanesia and Australia, 493–531. London: Academic Press.
Meehan, Betty (1977c). The role of seafood in the economy of a contemporary Aboriginal society in coastal Arnhem Land. Joint Select Committee on Aboriginal Land Rights in the Northern Territory. Hansard, 1085–95. Canberra: Government Printer.
Meehan, Betty (1975) Shell Bed to Shell Midden. Unpublished PhD thesis, Canberra: Australian National University.
Meehan, Betty and Rhys Jones (2005). Stone tool use in land with no stone: Ethnographic notes from the Gu-jinarliya. In Ingereth MacFarlane, Mary Jane Mountain and Robert Payton, eds. Many Exchanges: Archaeology, History, Community and the Work of Isabel McBryde, 147–69. Aboriginal History Monograph 11. Canberra: ANU Press.
Meehan, Betty and Rhys Jones (1986a). From Anadjerramiwa to Canberra. In Stephen Wild, ed. Rom: An Aboriginal Ritual of Diplomacy, 3–31. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Meehan, Betty and Rhys Jones (1986b). Hunter-gatherer diet: An archaeological perspective and ethnographic method. In T. Geoffrey Taylor and N.K. Jenkins, eds. Proceedings of the XIII International Congress of Nutrition, 951–5. London: John Libbey.
Meehan, Betty and Rhys Jones (1982). Ngatja: The role of the toxic plant Cycas media in Aboriginal secular and ceremonial life. Toxicon 20: 40. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
Meehan, Betty and Rhys Jones (1980). The outstation movement and hints of a white backlash. In Rhys Jones, ed. Northern Australia: Options and Implications, 131–57. Canberra: Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.
Meehan, Betty and Rhys Jones (1978). An-barra concept of colour. In Lester Hiatt, ed. Australian Aboriginal Concepts, 20–39. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Meehan, Betty, Rhys Jones and Annie Vincent (1999). Gula-kula: Dogs in Anbarra Society, Arnhem Land. In Luise Hercus and Grace Koch, eds. Sally White Commemorative Edition. Aboriginal History 23: 83–106. Canberra: School of Humanities, Australian National University.
Meehan, Betty, Prue Gaffey and Rhys Jones (1979). Fire to steel: Aboriginal exploitation of Pandanus and some wider implications. Occasional Papers in Anthropology 9: 73–96. St Lucia: University of Queensland.
White, Neville and Betty Meehan (1994). The importance of traditional ecological knowledge (TEK): A lens on time. In Nancy Williams, ed. Ecologies for the Twenty-First Century: Traditional Ecological Knowledge. Gland: International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.
White, Neville, Betty Meehan, Lester Hiatt and Rhys Jones (1990). Demography of contemporary hunter-gatherers: Lessons from central Arnhem Land. In Neville White and Betty Meehan, eds. Hunter-Gatherer Demography: Past and Present, 171–85. Oceania Monograph 39. Sydney: Sydney University Press.