The archaeological record of pre‑European New South Wales is a landscape written in stone, shell and hearth-scars. Sites sampled for this dataset include riverine deposits at Barham Forest / Koondrook‑Perricoota (near the Murray River) and lake margins within the Willandra Lakes Region — a wide basin of ephemeral lakes and lunettes in western NSW. Radiocarbon contexts for the two genomic samples span roughly 400 CE to the eve of sustained European colonization in 1788 CE, situating them in the Late Holocene.
Archaeological data indicates persistent hunter‑gatherer lifeways adapted to river and lake ecosystems: curated stone tools, hearth features, and seasonal use of aquatic resources. Oral traditions and ethnographic records point to long continuity of custodial relationships with country; ancient DNA from human remains offers an independent line of evidence that can be compared to these cultural records.
Caveats are essential. Only two genomic samples underpin this cultural identifier, so patterns of population movement, kinship networks or demographic change remain tentative. Limited evidence suggests maternal continuity in this part of NSW through the presence of mtDNA haplogroup S in both individuals, but this must be tested with larger, ethically conducted sampling and strong collaboration with Traditional Owners.
Bulleted lines of ancestry are still being drawn: the material traces speak of deep time across rivers and lakes, while the genetic traces whisper of maternal lineages that endured into the recent past.