1 April 2026 The Future is the Product of the Past

Oldest Aboriginal pottery discovered in Far North Queensland

More than 2000 years ago, Aboriginal Australians were producing ceramics on a secluded island about 35 kilometers off the coast of Queensland. This discovery of the oldest pottery in Australia has challenged “colonialist stereotypes” according to researchers.

Archaeologists found 82 pieces of pottery shards dating between 2000 and 3000 years old on the Lizard Island Group (Jiigurru), off the Far North Queensland coast.

Archaeologists excavated the 2.4-meter-deep midden over two years to discover evidence of occupation, such as the remains of shellfish and fish collected and eaten by people on the island. Less than a meter below the surface, the team found dozens of pottery sherds dating between 2000 and 3000 years old—the oldest pottery ever discovered in Australia.

The site provides evidence of human habitation for about 6,000 years, revealing Jiigurru as the earliest known offshore island occupied on the northern Great Barrier Reef.

Pottery fragments are the earliest securely dated, locally produced pottery found in Australia that pre-dates the arrival of Europeans. This discovery overturns the long-held belief that the first Australians did not produce ceramics or did not have the maritime technology to produce ceramics for long periods.



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



In their paper in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews, the researchers argue that the discovery shows that Aboriginal people on Jiigurru (Lizard Island) were not only aware of pottery thousands of years before European colonization but were making it themselves.

Some of the pottery pieces excavated at Jiigurru (Lizard Island). Photo: Steven Morton
Some of the pottery pieces excavated at Jiigurru (Lizard Island). Photo: Steven Morton

Pottery fragments from the Aboriginal people who lived on the island could open up “a whole new chapter in Australia’s history,” according to Ian McNiven, a Monash University professor of Indigenous archaeology and one of the paper’s first authors.

“These findings not only open a new chapter in Australian, Melanesian, and Pacific archaeology but also challenge colonialist stereotypes by highlighting the complexity and innovation of Aboriginal communities,” Professor McNiven said.

Geological analysis indicated the pottery was locally produced using clays from the island.

Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (CABAH) chief investigator Sean Ulm said the discovery revealed Aboriginal communities in north Queensland had connections with pottery-making communities of New Guinea.

Despite the difficulty in identifying the sherds, Ulm says they are probably small pots.

The researchers ended up excavating a midden on Lizard Island in search of pottery. Photo: Sean Ulm
The researchers ended up excavating a midden on Lizard Island in search of pottery. Photo: Sean Ulm

“The thin-walled sherds could indicate that the vessels [are] plain globular pots, with either everted rim or out curving rim, which usually thicken at the rim/neck/shoulder and gradually thin toward the base.

“However, as the sample size is quite small and the pieces highly fragmented, this would need further investigation to confirm.”

“We estimate the orifice of one is a little more than 20 cm, however, given the rim sherd comprises less than 3% of the total rim, this is only an approximation.”

Ancient Aboriginal people are known for technologies like fish traps, fire management, and the bark canoe.

“[But] nobody thought that Aboriginal people made pottery,” Professor McNiven said.

“Australia seemed to be the only continent in the world that never had a pottery tradition.”

Despite the discovery, however, others query why Aboriginal people would have needed pottery.

The researchers say the discovery reveals that the Aboriginal communities in North Queensland had connections with the pottery-making communities of New Guinea.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2024.108624

Cover Photo: Sean Ulm

Related Articles

The migration movement that started from Siberia 30,000 years ago may have shaped Göbeklitepe

24 June 2022

24 June 2022

Professor Semih Güneri, retired faculty member from Dokuz Eylul University (DEU) Caucasus Central Asia Archeology Research Center, stated that they...

1419-year-old Islamic inscription found in Saudi Arabia

13 June 2022

13 June 2022

Saudi Arabia has announced a new archaeological discovery in Makkah. The Islamic inscription found dates back 1419 years to the...

Medieval ‘Testicle Dagger’ Unearthed at Swedish Fortress

19 May 2025

19 May 2025

Archaeologists in Gothenburg, southwestern Sweden, have made a rather striking discovery at the site of the ancient Gullberg Fortress: a...

Hungary’s Hill of Hoards: 3,000-Year-Old Metal Finds Illuminate the Bronze and Iron Age Transition

5 May 2025

5 May 2025

A treasure trove of ancient metal artifacts, dating back over 3,000 years, has been unearthed at Somló Hill in western...

Naked Venus statue discovered in a Roman garbage dump in France

29 March 2023

29 March 2023

Archaeologists from the French National Institute for Preventative Archaeological Research (Inrap) has been uncovered a trove of artifacts, including two...

From Destruction to Discovery: Ancient Greek Tombstone Discovered in Libya After Storm ‘Daniel’

2 March 2025

2 March 2025

The Libyan Antiquities Authority has officially confirmed that an ancient artifact uncovered in the torrents caused by Storm “Daniel” in...

A Christian monastery, possibly pre-dating Islam, found in UAE

6 November 2022

6 November 2022

A Christian monastery has been discovered on the island of Siniyah off the coast of the United Arab Emirates (UAE),...

15,000-Year-Old Ice Age Female Figurine Finally Returns Home to Switzerland

18 March 2026

18 March 2026

A tiny prehistoric object—just 2.8 centimetres tall—is now at the centre of a significant cultural decision in Switzerland. A 15,000-year-old...

Mystery of the ‘Deserted Castle’ Unraveled: Austria’s First Roman Bridgehead Fort Discovered

18 April 2025

18 April 2025

Researchers have identified the first confirmed Roman bridgehead fort in Austria, located near Stopfenreuth on the Lower Austrian Danube floodplains....

Hittite-Style Carvings and Cuneiform Found in a Czech Cave: An Archaeological Puzzle from Kateřinská Cave

20 December 2025

20 December 2025

An officially documented discovery in Kateřinská Cave reveals a stone fragment with Hittite-style carvings and cuneiform script—an object seemingly out...

3D Scans reveal details of ‘unusual’ Roman burial ritual

6 June 2023

6 June 2023

Archaeologists at the University of York, have used 3D scans to study the Roman burial practice of pouring liquid gypsum...

Symbol of Eternal Loyalty Found on Rare Medieval Sword in the Netherlands

14 June 2025

14 June 2025

A remarkable medieval sword, dating back nearly 1,000 years, has been discovered in the Dutch province of Utrecht bearing a...

Archaeologists Discover Assyrian-Style Leather Armor 2,700 Years Old in China

11 December 2021

11 December 2021

The new research shows that the unique leather armor found in a horse rider’s tomb in Northwest China was made...

Buried Treasure of Trajan’s Forum: Colossal Marble Head Discovered

23 June 2025

23 June 2025

A remarkable archaeological discovery has emerged from the heart of imperial Rome. During recent excavations on Via Alessandrina—funded by Italy’s...

A first-of-its-kind Ayyanar stone idol found in Vellore, India

25 June 2022

25 June 2022

An Ayyanar stone idol, the first of its kind in Vellore, was discovered at Thandalai Krishnapuram (TK Puram) in Tamil...