Skip to content
Indigenous, Research Development

Monash University Professor awarded prestigious research fellowship to support Gunaikurnai archaeological discoveries

Monash University 2 mins read

Professor Bruno David from the Monash Indigenous Studies Centre has been awarded an Australian Research Council (ARC) Industry Laureate Fellowship to research coastal archaeological sites and preserve Indigenous cultural heritage with the Gunaikurnai Land and Waters Aboriginal Corporation (GKLaWAC).

 

Professor David is just one of eight new Fellows announced by the ARC across Australia, and one of only two Monash academics to receive the accolade. 

 

The Fellowship, 'Katungal: Managing archaeological sites threatened by sea level rise’, investigates coastal archaeological sites and landforms on GunaiKurnai Country that are endangered by sea level rise. The project aims to generate new knowledge on the distribution, characteristics and antiquity of archaeological sites in vulnerable landforms of the Gippsland coast. 

 

The project is based on an extensive co-design process with GunaiKurnai Traditional Owners,  working in partnership to protect the cultural landscape by uncovering stories left by GunaiKurnai Ancestors for countless generations. Building the capacity of community members is a permanent feature of GKLaWAC’s Whole-of-Country approach to managing GunaiKurnai Sea Country (Katungal).

 

Professor David said he was honoured to be awarded the Fellowship to research in culturally appropriate ways and support knowledge-sharing  of GKLaWAC staff.

 

"I feel incredibly privileged to receive this Fellowship, which underscores the importance of collaborative efforts in Indigenous archaeology,” Professor David said. 

 

“Through the 'Katungal' project, we aim to not only preserve coastal archaeological sites but also to empower Indigenous communities in managing their cultural heritage in the face of environmental challenges. None of the work I have done to date would be possible without the insight and support from GKLaWAC and the GunaiKurnai Elders and community."

 

Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Professor Katie Stevenson, congratulated Professor David on his Fellowship and well-deserved recognition for his academic efforts and ongoing collaboration with local Indigenous communities in the Gippsland region. 

 

“Professor David has worked for decades in the field of Indigenous archaeology and has pioneered approaches that integrate archaeological-geomorphological methods to reveal how landscape features were actively formed by people as they socially engaged with their surroundings.

 

“This is a career-defining moment for Professor David that will also have a lasting impact on preserving important sites and landscapes of great importance to GunaiKurnai Traditional Owners. Monash University is privileged to have such a dedicated academic committed to his work and to the community,” Professor Stevenson said. 

 

Through the Fellowship with GKLaWAC, Professor David will work to develop a new, nationally and internationally applicable method to predict and monitor the susceptibility of coastal archaeological sites to erosion, and the training of a generation of GunaiKurnai Traditional Owners in land-and-sea Country research, monitoring and management. This approach will provide significant benefits for the self-determining management of coastal archaeological sites and landscapes by Indigenous organisations for future generations.

 

 -    ENDS   -

 

MEDIA ENQUIRIES

 

Kim Loudon – Media and Communications Manager
E: kim.loudon@monash.edu

T: +61 458 281 704


For general media enquiries please contact:
Monash Media
E: media@monash.edu
T: +61 (0) 3 9903 4840

For more Monash media stories, visit our news and events site  

More from this category

  • Environment, Indigenous
  • 13/12/2024
  • 10:01
Save our Songlines

Media release: Murujuga traditional custodian and North West Shelf appellant responds to WA government approval for biggest gas plant in Southern Hemisphere

High-quality, high-resolution photos and vision of Raelene Cooper at the North West Shelf facility and its impacts on Murujuga rock art is available here (credit: Save our Songlines) Responding to the WA government’s approval for a 50-year North West Shelf extension to enable Woodside’s Burrup Hub to expand until 2070, Mardudhunera woman Raelene Cooper said: “This is such a special place and it is really unbelievable to me that Woodside is allowed to destroy it. Murjuga is my country and it holds my songlines - the rock art is sacred to my people. This project is going to wreck all…

  • Environment, Indigenous
  • 12/12/2024
  • 17:39
Save our Songlines

Media release: Murujuga traditional custodian and North West Shelf appellant responds to WA government approval for biggest gas plant in Southern Hemisphere

High-quality, high-resolution photos and vision of Raelene Cooper at the North West Shelf facility and its impacts on Murujuga rock art is available here (credit: Save our Songlines) Responding to the WA government’s approval for a 50-year North West Shelf extension to enable Woodside’s Burrup Hub to expand until 2070, Mardudhunera woman Raelene Cooper said: “This is such a special place and it is really unbelievable to me that Woodside is allowed to destroy it. Murjuga is my country and it holds my songlines - the rock art is sacred to my people. This project is going to wreck all…

  • COVID19, Indigenous
  • 12/12/2024
  • 11:33
Pfizer Australia

Empowering First Nations communities with culturally appropriate COVID-19 resources to improve awareness of antiviral treatments

● Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are 60% more likely to die from COVID-19 than non Indigenous people.1 ● Older Aboriginal and Torres…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.