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Australiari Archaeology 33: 65 THE ARCLING CONFERENCE. ARCHAEOLOGY AND LINGUISTICS: UNDERSTANDING ANCIENT AUSTRALIA Northern Territory University, Darwin, 8-12 July 1991 Elizabeth Williams When I first mentioned the word 'Arding' to someone they thought I was talking about some obscure form of sport played in rural England, similar perhaps to 'Farnarkeling' (documented by Fred Dagg) or 'Llap Goch'the Secret Welsh Art of Self Defence. In this context however, 'Arding' is an acronym for a conference on Archaeology and Linguistics held recently at the Northern Terriiory University, Darwin. Over 100 people attended and like Famarkeling or Llap Goch, Arding was an international affair with speakers coming from Europe, North America and the Pacific. The conference was a timely one - archaeologistsare increasingly looking to linguistic research to see whether it can prwide information on past population mwements and culture change. A notable example of this cross-disciplinary approach is Cdin Renfrew's recent work linking language spread with the development of agriculture in northern Europe. A welcome feature of the conference was that neither discipline used the other as a convenient data quarry. Instead, all papers, whether given by archaeologists or linguists, were concerned with developing new, unified models of colonisation, social interaction and culture change. Papers presented at the conference covered a wide range of topics. Specific issues addressed induded: the peopling of the Americas; the colonisationof Sahul; whether the spread of new items of technology across Australia in the mid-Holocenewas linkedwith language expansion; the development of regionalism in art styles, ceremonial systems and languages in northern Australia; the antiquity of signifying systems; the spread of section systems; evidence for recent changes in ceremonial exchange networks; the use d information processing models to explain changes in social interaction; and evidence for contacts between Aboriginal people and other groups such as Macassans. The conference was a stimulating and enjoyabie one and there are plans to hold Arding 2. It is intended to publish a selection d papers from the conference. 112 Scrivener Street. O'Connor ACT 2601