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  2. …important archaeological sites when geologist Jim Bowler unearthed the remains of a young Aboriginal woman in 1968. The bones of the skeleton, referred to as Mungo Lady, had been burnt before burial, making them the world’s oldest evidence of cremation and ceremonial burial.

  3. Mar 10, 2024 · Geologist Jim Bowler was on a journey to explore the geological legacy of climatic change in ice age landscapes at what is now Lake Mungo when he saw something shining white in the sand. He brushed the sand away and saw it was the dome of a human skull exposed as wind eroded ancient layers of soil.

    • Who was Jim Bowler?1
    • Who was Jim Bowler?2
    • Who was Jim Bowler?3
    • Who was Jim Bowler?4
    • Who was Jim Bowler?5
  4. Jul 17, 2018 · Jim Bowler. Jim Bowler was the son of a Gippsland onion farmer, who grew up poor at the end of the Great Depression. As a young man he considered both taking over the family farm, and joining the priesthood, but eventually found his way to Melbourne University, where he studied Earth Sciences.

    • Who was Jim Bowler?1
    • Who was Jim Bowler?2
    • Who was Jim Bowler?3
    • Who was Jim Bowler?4
    • Who was Jim Bowler?5
  5. Also standing in the crowd was a white-haired geologist named Jim Bowler, who had first found the skeleton in the shifting sands and had lobbied to have it returned to the Aboriginal people.

    • Who was Jim Bowler?1
    • Who was Jim Bowler?2
    • Who was Jim Bowler?3
    • Who was Jim Bowler?4
    • Who was Jim Bowler?5
  6. Mar 3, 2024 · Jim Bowler, now 94, made a landmark... THE scientist who discovered Mungo Man, and consequently rewrote the timeline of human migration in Australia, has called for a year of dialogue about the nation’s past, present and future.

  7. Sep 28, 2022 · In 1968 geologist Jim Bowler discovered human bones around the now dry Lake Mungo in south-western New South Wales. Bowler and his colleagues named her Mungo Lady and discovered that she had been ritually buried.

  8. Nov 7, 2013 · Jim Bowler, an Honorary Professor at the University of Melbourne, was with the Australian National University when he came across the remains at Lake Mungo, about 700km west of Sydney. “We were then confronted by a whole new chapter in Australian history that nobody had previously anticipated,” Jim said.

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